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The Incubus (eBook VII)

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The Incubus
The Incubus eBook Cover, written by Guler Zeytun
The Incubus eBook Cover,
written by Guler Zeytun
Author(s) Guler Zeytun
Publisher Amazon Digital Services
Publication date May 20, 2019
Media type eBook
Length 367 Pages
ASIN B07S5331HW

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


The Incubus is an eBook written by Guler Zeytun. In this work the character Eros is an Incubus.


Overview

  • Title: The Incubus
  • Author: Guler Zeytun
  • Published By: Amazon Digital Services
  • Length: 367 Pages
  • Format: eBook
  • ASIN: B07S5331HW
  • Publishing Date: May 20, 2019


Plot Summary

I wanted to bite into every inch of her pale flesh; to leave her trembling beneath my fingers; to hear her muffled screams and satisfied whimpers. Find out what happens when a Sunday morning goes wrong and Dani meets Eros, an incubus demon.


Book Review

The following review was originally published by Tera on her Blog, A Succubi's Tale on June 2, 2019


Desire can appear from the darkness to consume and capture. But that can be more than a singular obsession. Sometimes we don’t know ourselves until we are shown who we really are.

The work is a rather complicated story of romance, obsession, need and want wrapped around the creation of a fascinating story universe of succubi and incubi and the political and other fates that connect all within the story. While there are some lovely moments of erotic passions with expressions of heat that are so very telling, the story is not about that alone.

The singular thing about the story is the mythos that is created around the main characters, the world of succubi and incubi, and all of the complexities there are. The twists in the tale are really well dome and it does take some time to get to the point where the revelations about the main characters come out.

Eros, the incubus of the story, isn’t stereotypical, he’s somewhere between being passion unleashed and the need and truth that shapes him. At times perhaps a little two-dimensional, once the story truly delves into the connection between himself and Dani, he becomes far more interesting overall and quite a lot more enjoyable a character as well.

Three out of five pitchforks.

The work closes in a place that leaves a lot of questions behind, and at the same time felt like it was too rushed and tacked onto the story. It does answer some questions that needed to be dealt with, but at the same time there’s a path left untold that really needed a follow on story to tell well. It’s a shame that never happened.


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