A pulp fiction classic, lost for over 60 years.Seemingly frigid college professor Claire Frazier learns about love during a torrid summer of sex in Rome... then returns to her Georgetown campus as a new woman with a raging sensuality that radiates from her eyes, her walk, the sway of her body. She quickly seduces psychology professor Wayne Kincaid and young football star Jerry Arnold. She's happy keeping them both on the hook to slake her desperate needs. But then her wild, erotic campus escapades are exposed and she's caught in a whirlwind of passion, violence, and despair that could destroy her.

Decades before The Love Boat and Dr. Odyssey, there was Ship's Doctor, lost for nearly 70 years.
Love means everything to Jacqueline Shannon. But her husband is too old, and too tired, meet her raging lust...so she turns to other men. But even that is not enough. She's driven by a seething, emotional hunger that has tortured her all of her life. It drove one lover away, another to brand her as insane, and another to violence, physical and psychological, against her. And now her morbid love-frenzy, a woman trapped by the desperate demands of her body, could destroy her.
Kitty Grey is a young, conniving private nurse who married her much-older patient -- a rich, pudgy, hotel magnate in poor health who was desperate for a wife. She loves his money, his mansion and his servants, but he can't satisfy her raging, physical needs...and she's not willing to wait until he dies to to get what she wants. So she seduces Mike Callahan, an ex-GI with a criminal past, and convinces her husband to hire him as their driver, creating a deadly triangle of passion, betrayal and greed.
Four lesbian pulp fiction classics, scandalous and salacious novels in their day, back-in-print for the first time in sixty years!
"With colorful characters and multi-faceted, interlocking storylines, John B. Thompson creates a whirlwind novel ripe with violence and racial unrest. Fans of Charles Williams, Harry Whittington, and Erskine Caldwell should find plenty to like." Paperback Warrior