title
La Di Da Di Bloody Da!
Trannys to Tiaras!
Maharajas, Mystics & Masala
Wow! Pow! & Persusaions
Oysters Aweigh!
Triple Oh Heaven!
Rootin! Tootin! Khamun!
Ceruse – A cover-up extraordinaire
The Grin Reaper
Divoon Daddy
Neos Helios
Amos, Amas, Amassive!
Still Life – The Resurrection
Bruised Fruit
Defunct Gristle
Paul Dot Go
Regina
Red Snapper
Sebastian & Seline
Versus
The Gallery
The Blow Go Bar
Bobette - The Ups & Downs of a Total (Male) Tart
The Burning Bush
Crisp & Golden
Bel Ragazzo - Beautiful Boy - ? -
Swallow Dive
Too Good To Be Trué
6+6+6 – Eighteen Tales of Textual Titillation Vol 1
6+6+6 – Eighteen Tales of Textual Titillation Vol 2
Aliens & Arabesques – Blast Off!
She Married a Zombie Truck Driver & Five More "Trucking" Tales
Jan Unleashed!
Never a "CRAFT" Moment
I Give You My Heart
The Evil That Men Do – The Evil I Have Done
High Jinks In High C
Five Caballeros
Et Tutu, Brute?
Pillow Squawk
Three on a Match – Plus Three
Pits, Privates & Feet
Leo, Lulu, Lobie, & Mae

CHILDREN'S BOOKS
Four Zimbabwean Adventure Tales
The Adventures of Tumble The Clumsy Tree

TREYTON TEMPLETON SERIES
The Omnipotent
Colosseum
Who Scares Wins

6+6+6
Eighteen Tales of Textual Titillation
Volume Two

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

"A stunned Daniel, completely missing the target, also missed
getting the part"

Grady Harp - Amazon

And you’ll only get the belly laugh if you read the brief story that ends this new collection of tales.
Robin Anderson continues to write the campiest tales that take on hilarious proportions the further into the collection the reader progresses. For those who read and enjoyed Volume One of 6+6+6 the arrival of Volume Two (applause!) further demonstrates that his writing is risqué, full of parodies and putdowns, brimming over with naughty situations that never approach pornography – well, hardy ever. He is an apt storyteller, but in so many ways the story is not as important as the zany characters he creates to unfold his bizarre ventures. At times his writing seems like a Dr. Seuss tale written for adults with human characters instead of Seuss characters: if Horton Hears a Who then Anderson hears a Hoot!

Robin’s humor extends to (or is alerted by) his titles of each of his eighteen short stories that spread across the globe with a cast as varied as a well-soaked fruitcake. For instance, ‘Schlong of India’, ‘Peter the Perfidious Plumber’, ‘Hope Springs Internal’, ‘Chop Phooey’, ‘Come into the Garden Claude’ and on and on t equal eighteen. The stories are funny, naughty, and entertaining, but they also give evidence of Robin’s very bright mind – well informed of verbal innuendoes and plays on old ideas and phrases that sparkle with his pen.

Robin Anderson is unique – and he is one author who is consistent with the quality his magic brain creates. Jump on the wagon for a super ride.