<p><em>From the author:</em></p><p>When I decided to reissue my early books in the Collection of Classic Erotica I did so without realizing what I was getting myself into. I would have to read them again.<br /><br />Or as in the case of BORN TO BE BAD I&rsquo;d have to read them for the first time.</p><p>I remembered just three things about the book. (1) The title BORN TO BE BAD. (My mother on hearing about the novel suggested that BORN TO BE BANGED might have been a superior choice.) (2) The name of the heroine Rita Morales. (My mother bless her heart thought Rita Immorales might better suit the character.) (3) The circumstances of the writing&mdash;that it was the fall of 1958 that I had just returned to Antioch College after a gap year with a literary agency that I wrote it on an office-model Remington typewriter in the office of the Antioch College Record where I was serving as Managing Editor prior to assuming the full-time editorship the following semester and that between the newspaper and the books I was writing I was devoting precious little time to my classes. When I was supposed to be reading PARADISE LOST by John Milton and Roderick Random by Tobias Smollett I was instead writing BORN TO BE BAD by Sheldon Lord.<br /><br />It was my third novel for Harry Shorten at Midwood Books and you&rsquo;d think I might have a clearer recollection of the circumstances of writing it if not of the book itself. At the very least I&rsquo;d have expected to have a good number of Oh Yeah moments while reading it. &ldquo;Oh yeah I remember that character. Oh yeah I remember that scene. Oh yeah I remember cooking up that plot twist.&rdquo;<br /><br />Nope. It was all remarkably new to me&mdash;and I drew great comfort from the discovery that it was better than I&rsquo;d expected. It&rsquo;s the story of the daughter of a Cuban prostitute from the slums of Miami who goes to New York breaks into show business moves from a Times Square hotel room to a Greenwich Village apartment and takes aim at a life of middle-class respectability. She meets some unusual people and does some unusual things and stuff happens. And you know what? It&rsquo;s not bad.<br /><br />Still let&rsquo;s keep Rita&rsquo;s bildungsroman in perspective. She&rsquo;s no Becky Sharp and BORN TO BE BAD&rsquo;s not on the same shelf as Vanity Fair. (Uh that&rsquo;s be the novel by William Makepeace Thackeray not the magazine. But you knew that right?)</p><p>Never mind. I can but hope you enjoy BORN TO BE BAD as much in your first reading of it as I did just now in mine. I should mention that the cover is by the great Paul Rader who did so many outstanding covers for Midwood. The book sported a different cover in 1962 when Midwood reissued it with the title PUTA. Then five years later they trotted it out again with a third cover and its original title restored. So I guess they must have sold a few copies over the years but I never got anything beyond the original $600 advance. But you know what? I&#39;m okay with it.</p>