Skin Contact : 'The hottest, sluttiest book of the summer' Alice Slater - Elisa Faison

Skin Contact : 'The hottest, sluttiest book of the summer' Alice Slater - Elisa Faison

Elisa Faison

£18.99

Pages

Publication Date

Genre

A razor-sharp exploration of intimacy, non-monogamous desire, and motherhood'A grieving woman opens her marriage after the death of her mother. It goes mostly well - until her husband falls in love with someone else...' New York Times, The Novels Everyone Will Be Reading This Summer'Deeply readable, this will be the hottest sluttiest book of the summer'Alice Slater, author of Let the Bad Times RollUnmoored by her mother's sudden death, Frances has never felt so diminished, or so old. She's painfully aware that strangers no longer look at her the same way - and that she's now, at thirty-two, older than the great aunt for whom she was named, who was killed in the seventies under mysterious circumstances involving an extramarital affair. Her husband, Ben, will do anything to help Frances regain her vivacity and sense of purpose. So when Frances suggests that they open their marriage, Ben complies. Over the next two years, they explore their sexualities and latent kinks; they navigate jealousy, betrayal, desire, and obsession; they defend their choices - and their new identities - to confused friends. They do all of this together, as a team. But when Ben finds himself falling in love with another woman, just as Frances realizes she's ready to settle down and have a baby, they are forced to confront the consequences of their experiment. 'Sexy and self-assured, Skin Contact is irresistible'Ada Calhoun, author of Crush'This book is the party of the year and I wanted to join in, opening the next door and the next, getting a bit of gossip, sharing just one more story, stealing one more kiss. An absolute knockout of a debut.'Gwen Kirby, author of Shit Cassandra Saw'Elisa Faison's enthralling and unflinching Skin Contact gives us an intimate view of an intricately bound cast of characters, finding the hidden places where the real story lies [. . .] Faison has crafted a story that surprises us with its honesty, its passion, and its intensity.'Kevin Wilson, author of Nothing to See Here