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Succubae Queen (eBook)

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Succubae Queen
Succubae Queen eBook Cover, written by Adrienne Steele
Succubae Queen eBook Cover,
written by Adrienne Steele
Author(s) Adrienne Steele
Series Queens of the Underworld
Publisher Amazon Digital Services
Publication date May 22, 2025
Media type eBook
Length 526 Pages
ASIN B0F3XQTZG4
Preceded by Succubae

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


Succubae Queen is an eBook written by Adrienne Steele. It is the second work in the Queens of the Underworld series by this author. In this work the character Elisheba is described as being a Succubus.


Overview

  • Title: Succubae Queen
  • Author: Adrienne Steele
  • Published By: Amazon Digital Services
  • Length: 526 Pages
  • Format: eBook
  • ASIN: B0F3XQTZG4
  • Publishing Date: May 22, 2025


Other Works in this Series on SuccuWiki


Plot Summary

Kidnapped. Abducted. Gone. When Liz’s best friend, Fajra, is taken by none other than Liz’s own stalker, the Succubae Queen is forced to rise to new heights.

Saving Fajra is priority number one — besties before the resties, after all — which means Liz needs to set aside her multitude of relationship issues. Her ex, Lucifer, is back in the mix, she’s entangled with a mysterious angel, and now, the vampire senator she just met has decided she’s “the one.” And why is Alex, the incubi barista, still on her mind? Times change the with that so does Elisheba. Liz walked away from the world she was drawn into and in the modern world finds herself drawn back into events and plans that she wants nothing to do with. Perhaps, along the way, she may discover the truth about herself and the men she cannot ignore.

The work is mainly a reverse harem adventure mystery erotica story with a scattering of the main character’s succubus nature appearing from time to time. It’s a bit scattered in the story telling, mostly from the disconnected thoughts and actions that the characters have with each other and themselves. The barriers that are placed between Liz and those that desire her, and her nature itself, felt like a lot of frustration to the plot and narrative and I’m not sure that really worked all that well.

The conflict that swirls around Liz deals with a lot of that and while a perfect relationship doesn’t add to the drama, and I understand that, there’s a point where suddenly turning off the conflict and the characters just being overwhelmed by themselves feels somehow wrong.

The moments of erotica in this work have very little in the way of heat, being somewhat abrupt and rushed through in comparison with the overall story. At times it is less sensual than it is raw need and wild passion, which sometimes is just a delight and other times feels so very, very over the top and somehow doesn’t work well with the character personalities.

Liz, the succubus of the story, is interesting, if perhaps a little less so than the first work in the series. She understands, to a point, her succubus nature, but there is also so much that she doesn’t, but the men around her do, and that knowledge just takes forever to get through to her and develop her towards the character she should be, not the lost one she is for most of the story. I think, much like the first work, she is a temptation at best, a distraction at worst, and the mystery behind her simmers and waits.

Three pitchforks out of five.

The science fiction aspects of the first work are basically no more and the story falls into a reverse harem theme with a little bit of the main character’s succubus nature appearing from time to time. Mix in to that the intrigue and mystery and what is left really isn’t a succubus story for the most part. It is interesting at points, some of the plot threads are dearly overcomplicated, if for a reason in the end. The work ends in a somewhat expected place with all of the events prior to it and I do wonder how that will be resolved, if at all in the next work. “Hurry home, Lizbeth. Your friend only has ten fingers.” A bestie to save, a stalker to handle, and a harem to, ahem… “manage,” it’s time for Liz to bring her Main Character Energy and take her place as the Succubae Queen. But is she ready to enter the fight from stage left?


Book Review

The following review was originally published by Tera on her Blog, A Succubi's Tale on April 24, 2026


Times change the with that so does Elisheba. Liz walked away from the world she was drawn into and in the modern world finds herself drawn back into events and plans that she wants nothing to do with. Perhaps, along the way, she may discover the truth about herself and the men she cannot ignore.

The work is mainly a reverse harem adventure mystery erotica story with a scattering of the main character’s succubus nature appearing from time to time. It’s a bit scattered in the story telling, mostly from the disconnected thoughts and actions that the characters have with each other and themselves. The barriers that are placed between Liz and those that desire her, and her nature itself, felt like a lot of frustration to the plot and narrative and I’m not sure that really worked all that well.

The conflict that swirls around Liz deals with a lot of that and while a perfect relationship doesn’t add to the drama, and I understand that, there’s a point where suddenly turning off the conflict and the characters just being overwhelmed by themselves feels somehow wrong.

The moments of erotica in this work have very little in the way of heat, being somewhat abrupt and rushed through in comparison with the overall story. At times it is less sensual than it is raw need and wild passion, which sometimes is just a delight and other times feels so very, very over the top and somehow doesn’t work well with the character personalities.

Liz, the succubus of the story, is interesting, if perhaps a little less so than the first work in the series. She understands, to a point, her succubus nature, but there is also so much that she doesn’t, but the men around her do, and that knowledge just takes forever to get through to her and develop her towards the character she should be, not the lost one she is for most of the story. I think, much like the first work, she is a temptation at best, a distraction at worst, and the mystery behind her simmers and waits.

Three pitchforks out of five.

The science fiction aspects of the first work are basically no more and the story falls into a reverse harem theme with a little bit of the main character’s succubus nature appearing from time to time. Mix in to that the intrigue and mystery and what is left really isn’t a succubus story for the most part. It is interesting at points, some of the plot threads are dearly overcomplicated, if for a reason in the end. The work ends in a somewhat expected place with all of the events prior to it and I do wonder how that will be resolved, if at all in the next work.


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