New Book: The Blonde in 3C

First original book in far too long is finally out. It’s been so long, in fact, that I barely remember how to wrote a blog post on here! Bear with me, we’ll get through this (and by we, I mean me). In the meantime, you can check the book out on Amazon. It’ll be up later on other sites.

Here’s the blurb:

From neighbor to friend to wife to… hotwife?

Cooper always had a crush on Annika, the blonde in apartment 3C. She was friendly. She was pretty. Best of all, she had loud sex with her boyfriend, Brett, that Cooper could hear through the floorboards. He never thought that one day, he would marry that sexy blonde.

But first impressions are hard to shake, and Cooper’s first impression of his future bride was of an insatiable woman he could never fully satisfy. He was always waiting for the other shoe to drop, for a new man to take his place, for him to lose it all. A hotwife fantasy was born and it grew with their marriage.

The things that Annika did for love always surprised her, but that was just who she was. She gave all of her energy to a relationship. She’d done some wild things for her hedonistic former boyfriend, Brett. She was still trying to figure out Cooper.

When they attend Brett’s wedding, Annika and Cooper are put to the test. Will Annika be tempted by the past? Will Cooper’s repressed fantasy explode into the open?

Find out in The Blonde in 3C.

I’m on Medium

Not to bury the lead, but I set up a Medium account, where I’ll post some short stories (some old, some new). Check it out at kennywriter.medium.com, and definitely follow it, please. The good stuff will start flowing once I hit 100 Followers.

But that’s not all this post is about. I wanted to give a few shout-outs to other authors in the genre, and some of the great news that’s happening. First, to continue with the Medium theme, here’s some quick bullet points:

Speaking of Ben Boswell, he’s recently started a Patreon account. Currently, I believe it’s free as he builds his critical mass. If you like what he does and want to see more of it, definitely head over there to support him.

Finally (at least finally in terms of plugs), hotwifebooks.com, which you may have noticed hasn’t been updated in a while, should be making a comeback soon, only now, it’ll become the home to all the #ACHE writers. The hope is that it’ll be a searchable resource for people looking for hotwife (and cuckold) themed erotica books. Keep an eye out for that!

Take care, all, and if you’ve got a moment, please follow me on Medium. Would be hugely appreciative.

New book: I Married a Party Girl

After a long drought, I’ve finally got a new book out! This one, like the last, is a collaboration with another fantastic writer, Ben Boswell (we wrote the Parallel Lines books together). I’ll write about how these collaborations work in another post (hopefully sooner rather than later), but the end result is great.

I Married a Party Girl will be published in two parts (the first is out now, the other will be out in a few weeks).

Kenzie and Ashley were quite the pair back in the day, desired by men, envied by women, and always the life of the party. But then they grew up… or did they?

A business trip and some unexpected revelations bring past and present into contact in a silly, sexy romp that that will answer that eternal question: What happens when you marry a Party Girl?

Party Girl, Book 1, is currently available at:

Keep checking the book details page for more (it’s coming to Apple Books, may even be there now but I can’t dig up a link).

Update:

The second (and final) book is available now! I Married a Party Girl 2 picks up right where the first book left off. We deal with Deshawn, Kenzie’s old coworker and boss, and how he brings out Kenzie’s party girl past, in ways that her best friend, Ashley, never could.

Currently available at:

New book out now!

Max Sebastian and I wrote a thing! If you’ve been reading my books over the years, you’ll know that I work with a small group of other authors, bouncing ideas off one another.

Recently, Max has been focused on trying to find the (hotwife) silver-lining in this horrific pandemic. After he released A Lockdown Affair, we got to talking. Talking turned into writing. Writing turned into The Wife I Didn’t Know.

Here’s the blurb:

When Damien Sullivan woke from a COVID-19 induced coma, he couldn’t remember the last twenty years of his life. He didn’t recognize the world around him. He couldn’t remember the huge house he lived in or the successful career that he’d built. And most surprising of all, he couldn’t remember the woman he married.

Dana Sullivan is smart, successful, and gorgeous. Out of the nightmare of his memory loss, she is a dream come true. They explore one another anew, closer than strangers, fresh like new lovers.

And then Damien discovers that Dana hides a secret life of dark desires and sordid fantasies—one that even the old Damien didn’t know about. One that involved Dana stepping out with other men. One that, Damien realizes, turns him on.

Are these just fantasies? Find out in Kenny Wright and Max Sebastian’s latest book, The Wife I Didn’t Know.

Right now, it’s just available on Amazon and Smashwords, but we’ll publish on all the other book platforms once I get a few things in order.

I have other books in the works, including another collaboration (this one with Ben Boswell), and a guest spot on Kirsten McCurran’s upcoming book (a spiritual successor to Annie’s Affair, if you will). Lots of fun to be had, but let’s start with The Wife I Didn’t Know.

On writing an erotic book series

I’ve now written a couple of these things—the Training to Love It series and, just recently, the Bull’s Eye series (not to mention a few of the two-book affairs that I don’t think count). I’m by no means an authority on the subject—other phenomenal erotica authors out there have a lot more under their belt (K.T. Morrison, for example)—but here are a few thoughts I have on them, while they’re still fresh.

First, the not-so-good stuff. Writing a good story, with a solid arc and characters that both feel real and grow throughout, is already challenging. To stretch this out over the course of three or five or whatever books adds another layer of difficulty to the task.

Additionally, as with any story series, there’s a pressure to top the previous book—the drama needs to be higher, the action more intense, and, because this is erotica we’re talking about, the sex needs to be more extreme. Or at least it needs to feel more fresh, and honestly the easiest way to do this is to push more boundaries.

Finally, there’s the sales side of things. People are less interested in jumping into a long series, especially when all they’re looking for is a quick, hot story. Sales of each new book start tailing off. There’s less return on the investment of time, and as I said before, often times that last book is the hardest, longest one to write. Luckily for me, I’m fortunate enough to be in a place where I mostly write for the enjoyment of writing. If a story is going to require five books, that’s what’s going to happen.

That leads nicely into why I write them, actually. Sometimes, the scope of a story just demands it. Training to Love It, for example, needed a trilogy to properly follow the evolution of a “normal” couple into a hotwife relationship. Bull’s Eye could have been a single, stand-alone book, if I just wrote a story from the bull’s perspective (my initial thought). But I knew from the beginning that this was, in fact, a love story between two unlikely characters, and in order for that love story to feel authentic, it was going to take more than a single book to tell.

As a reader and consumer of media, I love immersing myself in a good series. I love to get lost in the characters and the world that the author has crafted, and I’m always sad to see it end. I’ve found that I’d rather watch a well-produced television show than watch a movie. I get more satisfaction out of them. I get drawn in much deeper.

Will there be more series from Kenny Wright? Of course. Not every story needs multiple books to tell, but the ones that do will get the time. Just don’t hold your breath for any in the immediate future. Bull’s Eye took years to write (between other projects). Training to Love It was a similar endeavor. And right now, I’ve got a number of semi-complete single books in the works. You’ll have to be content with those.

How about you? Do you enjoy reading a series of books, or just one-offs? Read any other good erotica series? Share them here!

(And as another plug, definitely check out Bull’s Eye and Training to Love It if you haven’t yet.)

And their story is done…

I published book four of Bull’s Eye on May 4, 2020. I just published the final book last night, November 26, 2020. For those counting, that’s 204 days between the books. This is exactly what I was worried about when I started publishing the series before I’d finished the ending, but I was honestly hoping the pressure of publication would help me write faster. Ha!

As I wrote in my last post, endings are hard. They’re even harder when I’m trying to end a longer series like this with a cast of characters who I’ve grown with. Anyone who’s read a few of my books (or followed this blog) knows that I’m a romantic at heart, and as unconventional as this story may be for most of my readers, at its core, this is a romance. And romances live and die by their endings.

Without spoiling anything, I should clarify one thing. This is an ending, not the final ending. Not all loose ends are tied up. Not all story lines have the most satisfying of conclusions. Life is messy that way, even in this fictional world. But it’s the ending for now. What happens next is in the minds of you, the reader (and, I suppose, my muse and whether inspiration strikes next).

Enjoy, everyone, and I hope you had a wonderful day of thanks, wherever you’re from.

(Bull’s Eye 5 is available now on Smashwords, and should hit Amazon later today.)

Endings are hard

Very small update, but I’m trying to be better about that sort of thing. Endings are hard. I usually always struggle with them. This isn’t because I’m necessary bad at writing them or that I don’t know how to write them. It’s more of a motivation thing. I swear I’ve written this before, but when I get to the end of a book or a series about characters that I’ve grown attached to, then writing their endings is a bit like saying goodbye.

I also don’t like saying goodbye.

I have written half of this story, all the way to the first major turn of the plot. It’s good. I’ve revised it some, but it’s mostly staying in place. I’ve had to scrap all that I’ve written in the second—even some really fun scenes with cool cameos from other books—because it wasn’t feeling right. The end of Heather and Paul’s story must feel right.

I have restarted the second half, though, and I believe I’ve got it worked out. These pieces coming together feel better. Hopefully we’ll have a solid book soon.

Thank you all for your patience. This was my biggest fear when I started publishing these books. I had the first four largely complete, and hadn’t started on the fifth. Even with all that buffer, I wasn’t able to deliver, but believe me, I’m writing.

Erotica in a woke world

I never thought that I’d have anything in common with Jerry Falwell Jr., and then news hit that he (most likely) enjoys watching his wife sleep with other men. That news has also cast the fantasy into the mainstream spotlight, and while my life is mostly filled up with other noise (kids back in virtual school, still living a life mostly quarantined at home while trying to keep a business afloat in a world where companies aren’t buying things like they used to), one article from the Washington Post did catch my attention: “Why conservative men are more likely to fantasize about sharing their wives”.

Kirsten McCurran sent it to me, and after I got past the shock of thinking she was calling me a conservative, I actually read it, and it resonated with a lot of things that I’ve been thinking about lately. The gist of the article is that we want what we’re told we can’t/shouldn’t want. We’re drawn to taboo. As the article references, the “erotica equation” is:

Attraction + Obstacles = Excitement

As an erotica author in this woke era, there’s a lot to tackle, and there’s this precariously line to walk between our dirty fantasies and promoting harmful mindsets. I’ve been doing a lot of thinking about the #metoo movement and how the words I write could potentially contribute to that harmful perspective. Similarly, Black Lives Matter, which I support, has me considering the crassness of some interracial themes and tropes that are often featured in hotwife erotica. Is Mason Coles reinforcing racial stereotypes, for example? What about Heather Kingsley-Fletcher/Manhattan and her wild past?

I’d like to use this internal debate as a reason for the slowdown in my writing. Maybe it has something to do with it, who knows, but it’s largely just all those other things that are going on in my life. In the end, this is what I tell myself: I try to write characters that feel real and complex, and just as I struggle with these things and how to be a good person, so do my characters.

We are drawn to what we shouldn’t want. I am. You are, as readers. My characters are, too, and that erotica equation is at the heart of what drives a good story. Hopefully, in that process, it’s not a harmful one.

Friday Update on Sunday

So I’m off to a bad start already. I said I’d post updates on Fridays, and now I’m too days late for my very first of these. Okay, better late than never?

First, let’s get one thing out of the way: I’m still working on Bull’s Eye 5, but it’s not quite done. This was my fear when I started publishing this series. I had four written and was working on the fifth. I was afraid that even with a lead time of a few months, I wouldn’t be able to get the finale completed in time. I ended up editing and revising the first four books more than I’d anticipated, and now here we are.

That said, I really am working on this final book. I’d say I’m about a third to a half in, but have most of it plotted out (as much plotted as I ever do). It’s just down to time and execution. I’m happy with what I’ve written so far, though, and fans of the first four should enjoy this last.

In other news, I’ve started a collaboration with the talented Max Sebastian. Inspired by his recent pandemic book, A Lockdown Affair, we got to talking about other pandemic-related hotwife plots this weird new and scary world has opened up. What we landed on was a classic tale of a man waking with amnesia, with a coronavirus twist. I’ll leave it at that for now and tease it out in other updates (hopefully on Fridays).

Bonus, though, Max is a machine when it comes to writing. We have already written twice as much in that collaboration than I have with Bull’s Eye 5. Good things are coming your way. Hang in there, everyone.

And stay safe!

Bull’s Eye 4, now available!

Fourth book in this series is now live on Amazon and Smashwords (with more retailers to come). And just to set expectations, this book is almost entirely about Heather (aka Manhattan), told from her perspective.

Like book 4 of Stephen King’s Dark Tower series (not that I’m anywhere in the realm of that man), we dive into the past so that we can understand the future. The main plot doesn’t advance very much, but I feel that it’s important to understand Heather as we launch into the finale.

Also, if you’re looking for a more straight-forward hotwife book, this one should scratch that itch.