A Uncle George: Adventures in the Philippines Story We meet up with our hapless hero, Uncle George again. The plot and characters are completely different, and not connected to other Uncle George stories. In this story, horny younger girls see older men, including Uncle George, as the cure to their perpetually aroused condition. Uncle George has to deal with a whole different set of issues and problems. As usual, he digs a deep hole for himself. Will Uncle George overcome the problems he's made for himself? Will the girls find satisfaction?
Two families living on a sleepy cul-de-sac know that the arrival of new neighbors is going to bring change into their lives, but they have no idea how much change is heading their way. Long hidden secrets, misunderstandings, and longings will come to light. What the long term residents don't realize is that their new neighbors didn't just happen to buy at random. They saw how beautiful Austin, Danielle and their daughters were before purchasing a house on this particular cul-de-sac.
Brad is a respectable forty-year-old banker in the circus wintering town of Peru, Indiana, but he has a hankering for fourteen-year-old boys. He's working, in postwar 1949, on a scheme to "adopt," with fake papers, one of three boys he covers from a German male brothel, when, in Peru, he happens to come onto a knife-thrower's assistant, fourteen-year-old Alfonso, who has tried to drown himself in the Wabash River.
Beautiful blond, blue-eyed, fourteen-year-old German boy, Stefan, is taken on a business trip to Portugal by his stepfather, Baron Manfred von Althaus, who is negotiating a deal to provide fighting bulls to Portuguese bullfighting impresario Luis Nuncio of the premier Lisbon bullring, the Camp Pequeno. Nuncio has met Stefan in Germany and wants him as part of the deal. Nuncio is old, fat, and ugly. In stark contrast, the matadors in Portugal are handsome, brave, virile, and vigorous.
It's a fight for the innocence of fourteen-year-old Erick against the randy and determined Hulk in a dungeon, a fight that it's guaranteed the boy will lose-or so it seems.