Remember back when women traded on their beauty and men traded on their wealth and power? Well, the times, they are a changin’. As women grow more successful and financially independent, they are abandoning their mothers’ “marry rich” mantra in favor of “it’s as easy to fall in love with a handsome man as an ugly one.” In this book, the sensational Cyndi Targosz teaches women of all ages the ins and outs of these lusty, and surprisingly long-lasting, affairs. Sprinkled with real-life stories of successful alliances, readers learn the truth about relationships with the sometimes younger, always sexier, hunky men women increasingly love to call their own.
In Australia, a schoolteacher falls in love with a youth, 20 years her junior. The heroine is Aly, 36, a divorced woman, while he is Tom, 16. He is the son of her best friend. When the community discovers their affair it turns against her.
If you accidentally bang your best friend’s younger brother, here are a few important tips . . . One: Do not brag to your friend about how well-endowed her brother is. Two: Do not go back for seconds (or thirds). Three: Do not let him see your muffin top or jiggly behind. And definitely don’t let him feed you cookies in bed. Cookies are bad. Remember that. Four: Act like a damn grown-up and apologize for riding him like a bull at the rodeo. And do not flirt with him when he laughs at said apology. Five: This one is crucial, so pay attention. Do not, under any circumstances, fall in love with him.
More than half the American women who marry for the second time choose younger men. Based on her own experience and numerous interviews, Houston, happily married to a man nine years her junior, explains why this revolutionary trend is so successful--and rewarding.
'This easy-to-read chick lit novel is dripping in wry wit.' InStyle When Abby enjoys a memorable night with a delicious 22-year-old, she easily waves him out of her life the next morning. She doesn't have time for these sorts of distractions. And he's only 22, after all! A child. But the charming young Marcus isn't going to let her get away that easily. He knows what he wants and takes it upon himself to prove that age is irrelevant where the heart is concerned. Abby, though, isn't convinced. She feels certain she should be with someone her own age, someone more impressive, someone more . . . settled. Surely nothing can ever come of this relationship? 'Funny, sweet and entirely lovable' Sunday Mail
Is he for real or Too Good to Be True? Since Stacy's marriage failed, she hasn't had much luck with dating. However, she has a great job, wonderful friends, and a huge stack of romance novels to get lost in. What more does she really need? When she's asked to train her boss's nephew, she expects him to be no different from her other trainees. She certainly didn't expect him to be a hot, younger man like the hero in her current book club pick... Nick moved from Florida to Michigan to take a temporary job working for his aunt. He doesn't intend on staying, and he certainly didn't intend to fall for the older woman who was assigned to train him. If only she'd stop fighting their attraction and give him a chance... Stacy desperately tries to convince herself that Nick isn't the guy for her. Besides being her boss's nephew and several years younger than her, he's only in Michigan temporarily. What good would it do to get involved with him? Never mind that he's sweet, sexy, and smart, and he makes her toes curl. Just like the heroes in her romance novels, he must be...Too Good to Be True. Too Good to Be True, an older woman younger man romance, is book one of the Kiss & Tell Book Club series.
There's a creature stalking the urban jungle - the cougar. She's an attractive woman over 30 who has the confidence to date younger men. This book offers the information the aspiring cougar needs to know about how to be a successful, sexy predator.
The young are often accused of being thoughtless, rash, and unwilling to be advised.That the former of these charges is in a great measure just, is not denied. Indeed, what else could be expected? They are thoughtless, for they are yet almost strangers to the world, and its cares and perplexities. They are forward, and sometimes rash; but this generally arises from that buoyancy of spirits, which health and vigor impart. True, it is to be corrected, let the cause be what it may; but we shall correct with more caution, and probably with greater success, when we understand its origin.That youth are unwilling to be advised, as a general rule, appears to me untrue. At least I have not found it so. When the feeling does exist, I believe it often arises from parental mismanagement, or from an unfortunate method of advising.The infant seeks to grasp the burning lamp;—the parent endeavors to dissuade him from it. At length he grasps it, and suffers the consequences. Finally, however, if the parent manages him properly, he learns to follow his advice, and obey his indications, in order to avoid pain. Such, at least, is the natural result of rational management. And the habit of seeking parental counsel, once formed, is not easily eradicated. It is true that temptation and forgetfulness may lead some of the young occasionally to grasp the lamp, even after they are told better; but the consequent suffering generally restores them to their reason. It is only when the parent neglects or refuses to give advice, and for a long time manifests little or no sympathy with his child, that the habit of filial reliance and confidence is destroyed. In fact there are very few children indeed, however improperly managed, who do not in early life acquire a degree of this confiding, inquiring, counsel-seeking disposition.