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Seeking Oblivion: A Love Bite (eBook)

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Seeking Oblivion: A Love Bite
Seeking Oblivion: A Love Bite eBook Cover, written by Mason Ashley
Seeking Oblivion: A Love Bite eBook Cover,
written by Mason Ashley
Author(s) Mason Ashley
Publisher Amazon Digital Services
Publication date October 28, 2018
Media type eBook
Length 11 Pages
ASIN B07JZ8GYKH

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


Seeking Oblivion: A Love Bite is an eBook written by Mason Ashley. In this work the character Oblivion is an Incubus.


Overview

  • Title: Seeking Oblivion: A Love Bite
  • Author: Mason Ashley
  • Published By: Amazon Digital Services
  • Length: 11 Pages
  • Format: eBook
  • ASIN: B07JZ8GYKH
  • Publishing Date: October 28, 2018


Plot Summary

Micah is still mourning his past relationship, and decides to do something risky and exhilarating. He summons a demon on Halloween, but what comes out of the circle was not was he was expecting, but perhaps...what he needed.


Book Review

The following review was originally published by Tera on her Blog, A Succubi's Tale on November 9, 2018


Micah needs to forget, to give himself something that is missing. Summoning a demon isn’t exactly the smartest thing, but it could everything for him.

The work is a very short, what I call a pamphlet, erotic hot flash with a male/male focus. Very fast paced, the story rushes from the start to get the two characters together and then fall into the eroticac and see where that takes them. As that happens, there’s a sadness, a longing that carries through until about the last handful of pages and that tone is rather haunting.

Oblivion, the incubus of the work isn’t really evil. Controlling eyes, dominant absolutely. But his focus is on the sex at the beginning and then things turn in and unexpected way. He does not seem to be stereotypical, and at the same time there’s really nothing told of him beyond the pleasure he offers. It’s a shame because that’s an aspect of his character that could have been added to and perhaps better explain why the story turned as it did.

Three out of five pitchforks.

the work closes in a place of longing and something akin to unfulfillment. It’s something of an unclosed circle and with that comes quite a lot of questions that really never get tied up. Still, the story is too well, is captivating and so dearly emotional as well.


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