“A witty and entertaining look at our dark sides.”
—Kirkus ReviewsRobert Saunders is a newspaper editor with a Volvo, a place in the suburbs, and a marriage that’s getting dull.
Kathy Becker, who works at the same newspaper, has no doubt that Robert deserves a better wife. Her. Kathy is smart, focused, and pretty. Robert hardly knows what hits him, especially when Kathy starts seducing him in secluded corners of their building.
Soon Robert knows he’s in love. He’s ready for a hot new marriage. But Anne Saunders isn’t going to give up her husband that easily. And though she’s not usually the kind to take desperate measures, she decides to defend what is hers.
Suspenseful and harrowing, sometimes funny and often sexy,
Too Easy is the “unwed mother of all page-turners…. So well written it’s frightening” (Kinky Friedman, author of
Elvis, Jesus & Coca-Cola). It’s a stylish psychological thriller about the bad decisions we make in life and love.
Spirited sex replaces sound judgment in this erotic thriller about a woman who tries to take another woman's husband--an explicit and shrewd exploration into the realm of Fatal Attraction.
“Certainly, this is a man who has female friends: his girl talk is top class…. The film contract is probably already on his agent’s desk.
Too Easy the movie could have been made in gritty and glamorous 1940s black-and-white, with Ann Baxter as Anne, Kirk Douglas as Robert and Joan Crawford as Kathy….The point of the story is how easy – too easy – it is to slip from wanting something badly to doing bad things in order to get it.”