Heather, instead of finishing her final term of school, is wrongly convicted of a crime and absorbed into a USA Justice System that has recently been revised to not only ease the pressure on over-crowded jails, but to actually allow convicted felons to make a positive contribution to society. Her contribution will be earned in the household of Ethan Chandler where she is contracted to supply some very unusual services after he leases her from the State. Chandler, for his part, must ensure that she’s always managed in accordance with State Guidelines, particularly as far as security and ‘dress code’ are concerned even if those guidelines seem unreasonable. Conditions prove trying for a young woman when family, church, and State all seem to turn against her, but her new life does bring its own compensations. This is a novel of 108000 words and contains graphic scenes that are only suitable for an adult readership. ...Paul Enock is an Engineer and Inventor by day and an author in the evenings now living in the wilds of Worcestershire in the UK.
Born in Sussex, UK a long time ago… He studied engineering at Bath and worked for British Aerospace and the MOD for 23 years designing bits for planes and controlling WMDs. In the 90’s he left BAe and became the Development Manger for a company producing rotary aero engines and in 2000 became a self-employed engineer. For the next 10 years, he designed and tried, with patchy success, to finance a ceramic rotary engine. The engine has yet to be made, but he’s currently consulting on a related project in the USA. He now lives in the Forest of Dean in Gloucestershire, UK, and does as he pleases: working for pocket money as an electrician and, in the absence of a consenting partner, living his fantasies through his writing.
My Amazon Review: This is a nice little story, with what seem to be typical Enock features: Woman mistakenly falling under a corrupt and perverted justice system. I can see the Badger Therese influence, as a previous reviewer noted. And as that reviewer also noted, Therese is much better at it. Still, as borderline erotica, it's fun to read. The characters are well defined and, given the story they're living in, pretty believable. And, come on! Hucows and ponygirls in the same novel, every erotica fan's dream! Actually, I found Enoch's ponygirl race scenes kind of tedious. But then, again, I don't get why ponygirls are a thing. On the whole, a pretty good and entertaining little story.
I read all the book however it was really slow and I expected more. There's 2 books of Paul Enock I read regularly and one I hope will come out on Amazon reads but this one I won't read again, disappointed.