This trio of stories is a fine sampling of Hank’s writing talents. I’ve enjoyed and reviewed the first two separately, so I’ll just include excerpts from my reviews here.
A Hotwife Playa Cabana:
It seems that the hotwife genre has exploded over the last year or so. But as more authors write more of it, it becomes harder and harder to find something new and interesting to enjoy. Lusty wives (with their husband’s utterly enthusiastic encouragement) working their way through every combination of hubby’s friends, the guys at work, at the gym, at the grocery store… it starts to get stale.
As I hit the 30% mark of Hank Dolworth’s contribution to the Ultimate Hotwife Summer collection, I was afraid that Hank, too, had penned one for the day-old shelf. But he’s not disappointed me in the past, and I so pressed on. And I’m glad I did as this book, like those that came before it, delivers.
A Hotwife Doppleganger:
This story pulled me in for a one-siting read. Strong, well-written lead up to the action. Good character development—I could empathize with both Veona and Jarrod in their work-a-day lives. And the magical mirror and lusty doppelgänger were a fun, unique way to break the ice and introduce the couple to hotwifing.
A Hotwife Spring Training:
*****
A first time hotwife and a set of twins, what’s not to like?
Jason takes girlfriend Andi to training camp in AZ where twins Ethan and Carter show her a baseball bat is not the only wood they know how to swing.
I passed on this one when it released, because sports stories just aren’t my jam. Won’t make that mistake again. Hank could deliver a smoking hot story with shuffleboard or checkers as a backdrop.
Dolworth builds his stories from a gentle simmer to a rolling boil, gives us characters that sexy and believable, and lets them feel all their feels. And once things heat up it’s Texas fire.
The story ends on a high note with the promise of another adventure with this group. And while I’m still not much of a baseball fan, I’ll be reading all about it.
I received a free copy of this book via Booksprout and am voluntarily leaving a review.