A story of how one of my cuckold erotica books was blocked (banned) by Amazon, and what I did to fix it!
If you are here as a reader: yes, the book is back!
Match Day Hotwife: He Lets His Pub Mates Share His Wife is back on Amazon as an eBook, with a cleaner title, a safer cover, tighter consent, no real football trademarks, and a revised version built to sit properly inside the Cuckold Tales series.
If you are here as an author: this post is also a practical warning about what not to do when publishing adult erotica through Amazon KDP.
There are a lot of myths around Amazon, Kindle Unlimited, erotica, adult content, and what triggers a block. Sometimes Amazon tells you exactly what the issue is. Sometimes it does not. Sometimes you can guess. Sometimes you are left staring at a vague content or metadata warning, wondering which of twenty possible things caused the problem.
This book gave me a crash course in all of that.
Part One: Why Match Day Hotwife Is Back on Amazon
Match Day Hotwife: He Lets His Pub Mates Share His Wife is book 15 in my ongoing series of standalone Cuckold Tales erotica books. The series is built around hotwives, cuckold husbands, stag and vixen dynamics, wife sharing, erotic humiliation, and explicit adult relationship fantasies, all written for readers who know exactly what they are looking for when they browse Kindle late at night.
This particular book follows Dan and Holly, a married couple from North London whose ordinary match day routine changes when Dan takes his wife to watch football with his pub mates. What starts as banter, flirting, and match day dares becomes a much darker, hotter, more intense cuckold arrangement. Dan thinks he is making a mistake when he brings Holly to the pub. Instead, it becomes the thing that unlocks both of them.
That is the fantasy at the heart of the book: a husband who realises he is turned on by watching, a wife who discovers how much she enjoys being desired, and a group of confident men who enjoy match nights far more once Holly becomes part of the ritual.
The book is still very much hardcore cuckold erotica. It is still written for adult readers who enjoy hotwife stories, wife sharing, humiliation, voyeurism, group scenes, and the emotional punch of a husband realising he wants something he never thought he would admit.
But the new Amazon version has been revised with KDP safety in mind.
The Original Problem: Why I THINK the First Version Was Blocked
The original version of this book had a much harsher title. It leaned heavily into the nastier end of the cuckold genre, and while that worked for the target readers, it was probably not the smartest metadata choice for Amazon.
The original main title was:
Match Day Slut
That title may work as a blunt genre signal on an author site, in a mailing list, or on certain adult storefronts. On Amazon, however, it may be too much. KDP has rules around offensive, explicit, misleading, or overly sexual metadata. Erotica is allowed, but the title and subtitle still have to live on a mainstream retail platform. I believe ‘SLUT’ was killing me here – to much.
A title can imply the genre. It should not look like it is trying to shock the store into rejecting it.
So the book became:
Match Day Hotwife: He Lets His Pub Mates Share His Wife
That title is still clear. It still signals hotwife, cuckold, wife sharing, and group dynamics. But it does so in a more Amazon-compatible way. It reads like a book title rather than a red flag.
Removing Trademark Risk: No Real Club Branding
Another possible problem was the use of real football branding throughout the book.
The original draft used a real Premier League football club heavily in the match scenes. There were repeated references to real team names, fan culture, colours, locations, and match day identity. The fictional pub was also strongly themed around that real club.
In the revised version, the football world has been fictionalised. The team is now North London’s The Reds, and the cover uses plain red and white kits with no trademarked logos, sponsors, badges, slogans, or protected branding.
That matters.
Fiction can mention real brands in some contexts, but when a whole erotic book is built around a real club’s identity, and the cover or metadata appears to lean on that brand recognition, you may be inviting trouble. Even if the story is not claiming endorsement, a retailer or rights holder may still see the metadata, cover, or repeated references as a potential issue.
The new version keeps the football pub atmosphere, the North London match day energy, and the laddish ritual of watching the game with mates. It simply removes the real-world trademark risk.
Consent Had to Be Crystal Clear
Erotica readers understand fantasy. Amazon, however, reviews books through policy.
That means you cannot rely on genre convention alone. In erotica, ALL scenes must be consensual, the text needs to make that clear. Especially in adult books involving power exchange, group dynamics, humiliation, or dominant men. While Dark Romance can get away with dub-con – Erotica cannot, as it is only written to titillate. Erotica cannot get away with things that ‘Romance’ can!
In the earlier version, there were moments that may have been read as dubious consent. A private room door being locked, for example, may be a tiny atmospheric detail in a dark erotica scene, but to a content reviewer it can suggest restriction or coercion. Likewise, a female character’s internal thoughts can create problems if she seems afraid, trapped, pressured, or unable to refuse.
So the revised version makes Holly’s consent much clearer.
She is not drunk. She is not confused. She is not trapped. She is not forced. She wants what happens. She is eager, responsive, and repeatedly given opportunities to stop or step away. The power dynamic remains filthy and intense, because this is cuckold erotica, but the sexual agency is much clearer.
For adult fiction on Amazon, especially erotica, that distinction matters enormously.
Alcohol Was Reduced for Safety
The original pub setting naturally included drinking. It is a British football pub story, so pints, match day rounds, and pub culture are part of the atmosphere.
But adult scenes and alcohol can create risk in erotica, especially if the main female character appears drunk or less able to consent.
So Holly now mostly drinks Diet Coke, partly framed as her “watching her figure,” and the text avoids any suggestion that she is tipsy, impaired, or being taken advantage of. The lads may drink, the pub may still feel like a pub, but Holly’s choices are not blurred by alcohol.
That makes the consent line cleaner.
It also makes the story hotter in a different way. Holly is not doing what she does because she is drunk. She is doing it because she wants to.
A New Cover, A Safer Title, A Cleaner Package
The new version has a brand new cover. No real club logos. No sponsor marks. No trademarked kits. No official football branding. The visual language is still clear: football, hotwife, cuckold, red and white match day atmosphere, adult intrigue.
The title has also been changed to something that is genre accurate but not needlessly risky. The subtitle sells the trope without turning into a keyword-stuffed mess.
The new package does what a good erotica package should do:
- Cover signals the genre
- Title intrigues
- Subtitle sells the trope
- Blurb teases the fantasy
- Content delivers what the reader came for
That is the correct order.
Readers click because of the cover, title, and subtitle. The blurb seals the deal. The sample confirms the tone. The book itself must then satisfy the promise.
What do Do Once Book is Fixed
From my research, the way to get the book re-published is fairly simple once you’ve fixed the issues you think it might have – unfortunately Amazon won’t often tell you – you need to work it out based on all the warnings in this article:
- Archive the old blocked book – that’s not going anywhere!
- Create a new book listing – with new title, new cover, new contents etc
- At the top of the blurb text – put this very clearly:
- “NOTE: Previously published in an earlier edition by Chris P. Rider under ASIN: B0GM85SXLY. This revised edition has been retitled with completely revised & edited content and cover.“
Continue as normal to publish the ‘new’ book.
Kindle Unlimited Status
At the moment, the book has returned to Amazon as an eBook.
It will return to Kindle Unlimited once I am fully satisfied it has been delisted from other retailers and distributors. Amazon’s KDP Select programme requires eBook exclusivity. That means if a book is enrolled in KU, the digital edition cannot remain available through Draft2Digital, Smashwords, Kobo, Apple Books, Google Play, or any other non-Amazon store.
Paperback is different. Print editions are not covered by the same eBook exclusivity rule.
So the plan is:
- eBook back on Amazon first
- Paperback edition any moment now
- Kindle Unlimited once exclusivity is safely clearer
That way the book can sit properly with the rest of the Cuckold Tales series again.
What Erotica Authors Should Avoid When Publishing on Amazon KDP
The second half of this post is purely for writers who wish to publish their books on KDP.
If you publish erotica, smut, hotwife fiction, cuckold stories, taboo romance, or any fiction deemed ‘Erotica’ on Amazon KDP, you need to understand something important:
Amazon does allow erotica, but it does not allow everything, and metadata mistakes can get a book blocked even if the manuscript itself is fixable.
Here is what I learned, and what I would tell any adult author before uploading to KDP.
1. Do Not Use Overly Explicit Words in the Main Title
Erotica titles need to sell the fantasy, but Amazon metadata has limits.
Avoid putting the harshest sexual words directly in the main title. Some words may be fine inside the book, but risky in the title, subtitle, series name, or cover text.
Be especially careful with titles that include blunt terms for:
- Sexual body parts
- Explicit sex acts
- Degrading labels
- Incest terms
- Non-consent implications
- Underage implications
- Extreme fetish terms
- Slurs or hate language
A title should feel like a commercial book title, not a content warning.
For example, Match Day Hotwife is much safer than a more extreme title that uses a harsher sexual insult. It still signals the hotwife and cuckold trope, but in a way that can live on a mainstream platform.
2. Do Not Keyword-Stuff Your Title or Subtitle
Amazon does not want titles or subtitles packed with search terms.
A bad subtitle looks like this:
Hotwife Cuckold Wife Sharing Group Men Alpha Bull Humiliation Creampie Erotica
That is not a subtitle. That is keyword spam.
A better subtitle reads like a real book title:
He Lets His Pub Mates Share His Wife
That subtitle tells the reader the trope. It signals hotwife, cuckold, wife sharing, and multiple partners, but it does so in a sentence that belongs on a book cover.
Your title and subtitle should be:
- Human-readable
- Relevant to the actual story
- Not stuffed with repeated keywords
- Not misleading
- Not full of unrelated tropes
- Not using competitor author names
- Not using terms like “bestseller” unless permitted and accurate
- Not using promotional claims such as “free” or “Kindle Unlimited” in the title field
Use your seven keyword boxes for keywords. Use your title and subtitle for selling the book.
3. Search Amazon for Duplicate Titles Before Publishing
Book titles are generally not copyrighted in the same way a full manuscript is. That does not mean you should ignore duplicate titles.
Before you publish, search Amazon for your proposed title.
Look for:
- Exact title matches
- Similar titles in the same genre
- Similar subtitles
- Similar cover concepts
- Similar author names
- Similar series branding
If another erotica book already has a similar title, subtitle, and cover, be careful. Amazon may see your book as confusingly similar or potentially impersonating another product.
This is especially important in niche erotica, where a lot of titles use the same trope words. If there is already a book called something very close to yours in the cuckold, hotwife, or taboo category, adjust yours.
Ways to make a title more unique:
- Add a character name
- Add a location
- Add a distinctive setting
- Add a series-specific hook
- Use a unique phrase from the story
- Use a setting readers will remember
For example, instead of a generic title like Shared Wife, a more distinctive title might include a character, town, pub, hotel, holiday, workplace, or other story-specific hook.
Unique is safer. Unique is also better branding.
4. Be Very Careful With Trademarks
Do not build your erotica metadata or cover around trademarks you do not own.
This includes:
- Football club names
- Sports team badges
- Kit designs
- Sponsors
- League names
- Brand logos
- Music artists
- Film franchises
- TV shows
- Game titles
- Real company logos
- Famous slogans
You can often mention real-world things casually inside fiction, depending on context, but using them as a major selling point is risky.
For a football erotica book, a safer approach is:
- Fictional team name
- Fictional pub
- Fictional league context
- Generic colours
- No official badges
- No sponsors
- No real club slogans
- No protected chants or branding on the cover
Readers understand what kind of world you are evoking. You do not need to use real club IP to sell the fantasy.
In Match Day Hotwife, switching to North London’s The Reds solved a lot of potential risk while keeping the match day atmosphere intact.
5. Consent Must Be Obvious, Especially in Erotica
This is one of the most important rules.
If you are writing adult erotica for Amazon, especially in darker or more intense subgenres, consent must be clear. Do not leave the reviewer guessing.
Avoid scenes where a sexual partner appears:
- Too drunk to consent
- Drugged
- Asleep or unconscious
- Trapped
- Physically unable to leave
- Blackmailed
- Threatened
- Coerced by fear
- Pressured into sex while saying no
- Forced by authority, employment, family, or dependency
Even if your intention is consensual fantasy, the text needs to show that the adult character wants it.
For power exchange, cuckold, humiliation, BDSM, rough sex, or group erotica, add clear signals:
- Eager internal thoughts
- Verbal agreement
- Active participation
- The ability to stop
- No locked doors implying captivity
- No intoxication undermining consent
- No threats
- No punishment for refusal
- Enthusiastic body language
- Aftercare or emotional affirmation where appropriate
For a hotwife book, this is easy to do. The wife can be flirtatious, excited, teasing, hungry, and in control of her choices. That is hotter than ambiguity anyway.
6. Do Not Make Alcohol the Reason a Character Has Sex
If your adult scene depends on a character being drunk, you are creating risk.
A pub setting is fine. Characters having a drink is fine. But if someone is slurring, unsteady, confused, forgetting things, or making choices they would not make sober, and then sex happens, that can look like impaired consent.
For erotica on KDP, especially if the woman is the focus of the fantasy, avoid:
- “She was too drunk to know what she was doing”
- “She would never have done it sober”
- “He took advantage while she was tipsy”
- “She woke up and realised what happened”
- “The alcohol made her agree”
Better:
- She is sober
- She chooses it
- She is excited
- She knows what she is doing
- She returns to it willingly
- She talks about wanting it
That is why Holly’s revised version makes her mostly a Diet Coke drinker during the relevant scenes. The fantasy becomes cleaner and stronger: she wants it without needing alcohol as an excuse.
7. Avoid Illegal Content Completely
This should be obvious, but it needs saying.
Do not publish erotica involving illegal sexual content. Do not hint at it in the title, subtitle, cover, blurb, keywords, or manuscript.
Avoid anything involving:
- Minors or underage characters
- Ambiguous ages
- School settings that imply underage characters
- Incest involving real family relations
- Bestiality
- Non-consensual sex presented erotically
- Sexual exploitation
- Sexualised violence without clear adult consent
- Real person sexual fantasy without permission
- Illegal coercion or trafficking themes
- Sexual content involving incapacitation
All sexual characters should be clearly adults. If there is any possible doubt, state ages clearly.
Erotica authors sometimes try to be edgy. Do not be edgy with legality. It is not worth it.
8. Be Careful With Taboo Tropes in Metadata
Some adult tropes can exist in fiction but become much riskier when placed in the title, subtitle, cover, blurb, or keywords.
Metadata is more visible than manuscript content. It is what Amazon uses to classify, review, and display your book. It is also what customers see before they choose to click.
Be cautious with metadata around:
- Extreme humiliation terms
- Non-consent language
- Incest-coded words
- Step-family tropes
- Forced language
- Degrading labels
- Bodily fluid fetishes
- Age gap language that sounds underage
- Pregnancy or breeding language if it implies non-consent or deception
- Blackmail themes
- Public exposure themes
- Revenge porn or distribution of sexual images
You can often signal a trope more safely with softer language.
For cuckold erotica, words like hotwife, cuckold, wife sharing, humiliation, voyeur husband, and alpha male are usually clearer and more market-appropriate than harsher alternatives.
9. Be Wary of Watersports as a Main Selling Point
Watersports and urine fetish content can be especially risky on mainstream platforms, depending on how prominent it is and how it is presented.
If you include it at all, be careful.
Do not make it:
- The main title hook
- The cover concept
- The entire subtitle
- The first line of the blurb
- The main keyword strategy
- The dominant trope of the whole book
If a book contains watersports as a minor adult fetish moment, it is safer not to build the whole product page around it. Keep the book’s public-facing positioning focused on broader accepted genre tropes, such as cuckold, hotwife, BDSM, dominance, submission, or humiliation, where relevant.
Also, do not use metadata to hide prohibited content. If you think the entire book may violate a platform rule, do not try to sneak it through with vague wording. Write something else for that platform and save riskier material for places that explicitly allow it.
10. Covers Must Be Genre-Relevant and Platform-Safe
Covers sell books. In erotica, they also signal subgenre instantly.
Before designing a cover, look at the top 50 books in your genre and subgenre. Not to copy them, but to understand the visual language readers already respond to.
Ask:
- What colours dominate?
- Are the covers photographic, illustrated, or typographic?
- Are faces shown?
- Are couples shown?
- How explicit are the poses?
- How much skin is visible?
- What fonts are common?
- Are the books dark, glossy, romantic, gritty, or pulpy?
- Does the cover signal the correct kink or trope?
A cover for hotwife cuckold erotica should not look like cosy romance. A dark romance cover should not look like comedy. A high fantasy cover should not look like sci-fi. A football-themed cuckold cover should suggest match day atmosphere without using real club IP.
Readers decide in seconds.
Cover is king. Title intrigues. Subtitle sells the genre and trope. Blurb seals the deal.
If your cover sends the wrong signal, the right readers will scroll past. If your cover violates platform rules, the book may not even go live.
11. Avoid Explicit Nudity or Graphic Sexual Imagery on Covers
Erotica covers can be sexy. They should not look pornographic on Amazon.
Avoid:
- Visible genitals
- Explicit sexual acts
- Bodily fluids
- Overly exposed breasts
- Spread-leg poses
- Images that look like porn thumbnails
- Real trademarks on clothing
- Suggestive school uniforms
- Anything implying minors
- Non-consensual imagery
- Extreme humiliation text on the cover
A good erotica cover implies the fantasy. It does not need to show the whole act.
For Match Day Hotwife, the safer cover direction is suggestive football culture, red and white kit colours, adult bodies, wife-sharing tension, and a hotwife/cuckold mood, without official logos or explicit imagery.
12. Choose Relevant Categories Only
Do not pick random categories because they are less competitive.
Amazon categories should match the book. If you write explicit cuckold erotica, do not shove it into unrelated romance, fantasy, sports non-fiction, or general fiction categories just because the rank might be easier.
Wrong categories create problems:
- Readers get annoyed
- Reviews suffer
- Amazon may suppress or reclassify the book
- The algorithm struggles to find the right audience
- You risk looking deceptive
Pick categories that reflect what the book actually is.
For erotica, that usually means relevant adult fiction categories. If your book has romance elements, only use romance categories if it genuinely meets reader expectations for that romance subgenre. A hardcore cuckold novella with a dark erotic ending is probably not a standard contemporary romance, even if the couple stay together.
Do not trick the store. Find the right readers.
13. Do Not Make the Blurb Too Explicit for Amazon
Your Amazon blurb should entice, not violate the shop window.
For erotica, the blurb can be spicy, but it should not read like a graphic scene. Save the explicit detail for the book itself or your own website.
A good Amazon blurb should:
- Establish the fantasy
- Introduce the characters
- Signal the trope
- Create tension
- Tease escalation
- Make the reader want to sample
- Avoid listing every explicit act
- Avoid extreme language
- Avoid sounding like a porn tube title
- Avoid giving away the entire ending
For example, say:
Dan takes his wife to the football pub, and the lads quickly realise she is the real lucky charm.
That is better for Amazon than a graphic list of every act in the book.
Your own website can be hotter. Amazon’s product page should be commercially seductive but not reckless.
14. Do Not Summarise the Entire Book in the Blurb
A blurb is not a synopsis.
The reader does not need every plot point, every scene, every twist, and every final outcome. They need enough to click buy.
A strong erotica blurb should answer:
- Who is the fantasy about?
- What is the forbidden hook?
- What trope am I getting?
- Why is it hot?
- What emotional kink is being explored?
- How far might it go?
It should not answer everything.
Leave the reader hungry.
For a cuckold book, the blurb should tease the husband’s mistake, the wife’s transformation, the other men’s confidence, and the husband’s growing arousal. It should not necessarily detail the final group scene, the exact ending, or every humiliation beat.
Entice. Intrigue. Convert.
15. Keep Your Series Branding Clean and Consistent
If you publish a long-running erotica series, series consistency matters.
Readers should be able to recognise:
- Author name
- Series name
- Cover style
- Tone
- Trope family
- Heat level
- Book length
- Standalone status
But consistency should not become repetition or confusion. If every title in the series looks too similar, Amazon or readers may struggle to distinguish them. If a new book resembles another author’s series too closely, you may create problems.
For my own books, Cuckold Tales tells readers what broad territory they are in, but each book still needs a unique hook: a pub, a holiday, a neighbour, a boss, a gym, a stag do, a wedding, a football night.
A series should feel branded, not cloned.
16. Understand Kindle Unlimited Exclusivity
If you enrol an eBook in KDP Select, which makes it available in Kindle Unlimited, Amazon requires digital exclusivity.
That means the eBook cannot be sold or distributed elsewhere while enrolled.
Before re-enrolling a book in KU, make sure it is removed from:
- Draft2Digital
- Smashwords
- Kobo
- Apple Books
- Google Play
- Barnes & Noble
- Any direct sales platform offering the eBook
- Any bundle site
- Any subscription platform
- Any old distributor feed
Be patient. Delisting can take time. Some stores remove books quickly. Others take longer.
Do not assume that clicking “delist” on one dashboard means the book has vanished everywhere instantly.
Paperback and hardback editions are separate. KU exclusivity applies to the digital edition.
17. Do Not Try to Trick Amazon
This is probably the biggest lesson.
If your content, title, subtitle, cover, or blurb is likely to be a problem, do not try to sneak it through.
Do not:
- Use coded titles to hide banned material
- Upload one version for review and swap files later
- Put prohibited content behind vague metadata
- Use misleading categories
- Pretend an erotica book is non-erotic romance
- Use a harmless cover for extreme content that violates policy
- Re-upload blocked content repeatedly without meaningful changes
- Keyword spam unrelated searches
- Use trademarked brands as bait
- Copy another author’s branding
Amazon is not perfect, but it has systems, reviewers, and customer reporting. If you build your publishing business on trying to dodge rules, you are building on sand.
The smarter approach is to make the book, packaging, and metadata genuinely compliant for that platform.
18. Build Different Marketing for Amazon and Your Own Website
Your Amazon page and your own website do not need to be identical.
Amazon needs a safer retail blurb.
Your own website can be more direct, more detailed, and more SEO-rich, provided it complies with your hosting and payment processor rules.
For erotica authors, this is a useful split:
Amazon blurb
- Cleaner
- Teasing
- Less explicit
- Retail safe
- Focused on trope and tension
Author website blurb
- Spicier
- More detailed
- SEO-focused
- Clearer about content
- Written for readers who already want the niche
That is why Match Day Hotwife can have an Amazon-safe product description while also having a richer author-site post explaining the hotwife, cuckold, wife sharing, football pub, and erotic humiliation elements in more detail.
Use each platform properly.
19. A Practical Pre-Publish Checklist for Erotica Authors
Before you hit publish on Amazon KDP, ask yourself:
Title and subtitle
- Does it read like a real book title?
- Is it free of keyword stuffing?
- Does it avoid overly explicit shock words?
- Is it unique enough in the genre?
- Does it avoid trademarks?
- Does it accurately reflect the story?
Cover
- Does it match the genre?
- Would readers immediately understand the subgenre?
- Is it free of explicit nudity?
- Does it avoid real logos, sponsors, badges, or trademarks?
- Does it look professional at thumbnail size?
- Does it fit alongside the top 50 in the category?
Blurb
- Does it entice rather than summarise?
- Is it spicy but not graphic?
- Does it avoid prohibited themes?
- Does it clearly signal the trope?
- Does it make the reader want to click the sample?
Manuscript
- Are all sexual characters clearly adults?
- Is consent clear?
- Is no one too drunk or impaired to consent?
- Are dark dynamics clearly consensual?
- Are any taboo elements legal and platform-appropriate?
- Are real trademarks used safely, if at all?
- Does the book deliver what the packaging promises?
Metadata
- Are categories relevant?
- Are keywords accurate?
- Are you avoiding competitor names?
- Are you avoiding misleading claims?
- Is the series name correct?
- Is the adult content box selected where required?
Distribution
- If using KU, is the eBook removed everywhere else?
- Have you waited for delisting to propagate?
- Are print and eBook rights handled separately?
- Are you keeping records of where the book is live?
This checklist will not guarantee approval, but it will reduce obvious risks.
Final Thoughts: What Match Day Hotwife Taught Me
Match Day Hotwife is back because the book was revised properly. Not watered down into something bland, but repackaged and edited so it works better for Amazon.
The core fantasy remains:
A husband takes his wife to watch the match with his pub mates.
The lads notice her.
She enjoys the attention.
He realises he enjoys watching.
Their marriage changes into something dirtier, stranger, and much hotter than either of them expected.
That is still the book.
But now it has:
- A safer, stronger title
- A cleaner subtitle
- A new cover without trademark risk
- Fictionalised football branding
- Clearer consent
- No drunk-wife ambiguity
- Better KDP positioning
- A clearer place inside the Cuckold Tales series
For readers, it means the book is back where it belongs.
For authors, the lesson is simple: write the heat, but package it smartly.
Amazon is not your private author site. It is a huge mainstream retailer with rules, automated systems, human review, customer complaints, trademark concerns, and category expectations. If you want to sell erotica there, especially through Kindle Unlimited, you have to respect the platform while still serving your readers.
Do that well and you can publish hot, filthy, trope-driven adult fiction that readers love.
Do it carelessly and you may find your book blocked before it ever gets a chance to sell.
Match Day Hotwife: He Lets His Pub Mates Share His Wife is back on Amazon eBook now, returning to Kindle Unlimited once exclusivity is fully cleared. Links to get your copy here.
For Dan and Holly, match day will never be the same again.
