The Pool boy Makes me a Hotwife
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Olivia J. Cross
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
A marriage built on perfection. A summer built on heat. One reckless choice that shatters the illusion of control.
In The Pool Boy Makes Me a Hotwife, a forty-two-year-old suburban woman finds herself suffocating inside the life she once worked desperately to achieve. Her house is flawless. Her cul-de-sac is silent. Her swimming pool is engineered to perfection. Her marriage to Mark—steady, prosperous, and orderly—has become a place where nothing truly happens anymore.
Set during an oppressive mid-July heatwave, the novel opens on a landscape of cut grass, chlorine, and asphalt—suburbia rendered as both sanctuary and prison. The protagonist has lived boldly in her twenties, responsibly in her thirties, and now, in her forties, realizes she has disappeared inside routine. She is no longer living her life so much as maintaining it.
The arrival of Tyler, the young pool boy hired for his low cost and convenience, introduces disruption into this carefully controlled world. Tyler is all the things her life is not: young, unpolished, impulsive, and alive. To her husband, he is invisible. To her, he becomes a symbol of movement, disorder, and a past self she believes she has lost.
As the summer stretches on, small transgressions accumulate—lingering glances, casual conversations, intentional proximity. What begins as harmless attention evolves into a dangerous fantasy: that desire can function as escape, that youth can be reclaimed, that intensity can substitute for meaning.
When the affair finally occurs, it is not romantic or transformative. It is rushed, awkward, and stripped of illusion. What follows is not liberation, but collapse. Reduced to “Mrs. H” in Tyler’s story, the protagonist is forced to confront the most devastating truth of all: she was never seen, only used—and she willingly allowed it.
The aftermath leaves her facing a deeper reckoning. The affair did not break her marriage; it exposed the quiet erosion that had been happening for years. Shame, resentment, and self-disgust mingle with an unbearable clarity: the emptiness she tried to outrun still lives inside her carefully curated life.
The Pool Boy Makes Me a Hotwife is a sharp, psychologically rich exploration of desire, aging, and self-betrayal. It is not a story about sex as salvation, but about the tragedy of mistaking intensity for identity—and the painful recognition of becoming a cliché you once believed you were immune to.
Provocative, unsettling, and emotionally honest, this novel will resonate with readers drawn to intimate portraits of marriage, female desire, and the quiet crises hidden behind perfect suburban doors.