Her treatment went far beyond her duties--beyond decency, too.
Beautiful, statuesque Frieda was bred as a sleep-in nurse to service an entire household. This she did with a skill and gusto that left everyone breathlessly satisfied. Her bedside manner was all to be desired by men--and women. But Frieda had a plan, and what she did with her fantastic body was just a part of that plan.
Along with the name Dallas Mayo, Kimberly Kemp was a pseudonym used by Gilbert Fox, who authored a number of lesbian pulp novels through the 1960s and 1970s.
The uneven quality of the writing - prose that lapses at times into cliches and extended expository telling - had me speed reading a fair amount of the time, but otherwise this is an interesting noir about a private nurse who moves in with a family and takes over. The writing is at its best while our nurse is plotting how to take over the household and when she is manipulating and controlling the family. Yes, she has sex with them all, but it is described in that censorship era way that has a new chapter starting just when things get steamy, meaning, you turn the page and that sex scene you were reading is ancient history.
Freida is hired, not bred (bred???!!), to be a live-in nurse for the rich family that runs her mill town - where she was born on the other side of the tracks. Her ambition to go from the bottom of the social order to the top leads her to exploit herself and everybody around her.
This is really more of a naughy noir than erotica. I thought it was okay, and if you like the Hard Case Crime noir books (which I do), this is similar.