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Glass and Fire: An Eroith Tale (eBook)

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Glass and Fire: An Eroith Tale
Glass and Fire: An Eroith Tale eBook Cover, written by Lilith Locke
Glass and Fire: An Eroith Tale eBook Cover,
written by Lilith Locke
Author(s) Lilith Locke
Series Tales of Eroith
Publisher Amazon Digital Services
Publication date September 9, 2018
Media type eBook
Length 16 Pages
ASIN B07H7M5XJN

For other uses of the word Incubus, see Incubus (disambiguation).


Glass and Fire: An Eroith Tale is an eBook written by Lilith Locke. It is the first work in the Tales of Eroith series by this author. In this work the character Exaron can be described as a kind of Incubus.


Overview

  • Title: Glass and Fire: An Eroith Tale
  • Author: Lilith Locke
  • Published By: Amazon Digital Services
  • Length: 16 Pages
  • Format: eBook
  • ASIN: B07H7M5XJN
  • Publishing Date: September 9, 2018


Plot Summary

She never planned on falling for him. After all, she's an angel, and he's a demon. At the most basic level, that should be enough of a deterrent. But they can't keep their hands off each other. So, what happens when she tries to break it off?


Book Review

The following review was originally published by Tera on her Blog, A Succubi's Tale on October 16, 2018


Exaron did not intend to become enamoured with Exaron. Angels do not love the fallen after all. But neither can resist the truth between them. Perhaps love and desire are the most powerful things in creation after all.

The work is a very short, what I call a pamphlet, erotic hot flash that seems not quite to know the way to being the main characters together. There’s quite a bit of building to the moment when they do, and become intimate and that felt somehow like lost time to the main characters.

Exaron, the demon of the work has some incubus aspects to him, not the least of which is his need and desire for Exaron, and the erotic need between them was well done. But at the same time, there is reallty so very little in the way of character development for him or Exaron and by the end of the story, it’s more of a tease wrapped in a wish for the two of them.

Three out of five pitchforks.

An interesting story of lovers in other worlds with barriers between them and trying to come to terms with themselves. It’s a bit of an odd read, the story felt a lost at the beginning and by the end the questions left I think worked well in the series that followed.


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