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The Mirror: Seduced by the Lust Demons (eBook)
For other uses of the word Incubus, see Incubus (disambiguation).
The Mirror: Seduced by the Lust Demons is an eBook written by Adrian Blue. In this work several characters are described as being Incubi.
Overview
- Title: The Mirror: Seduced by the Lust Demons
- Author: Adrian Blue
- Published By: Amazon Digital Services
- Length: 17 Pages
- Format: eBook
- ASIN: B07DYH5XFT
- Publishing Date: June 21, 2018
Plot Summary
Hannah is excited to move into her new apartment. It's a great price, a good size, completely perfect for her. Perfect, except for the strange mirror that came with the place. It soon proves itself to be far more than a simple antique.
After her first night in the apartment, Hannah is too fascinated to heed a stranger's dire warnings. Warnings that the mirror is not a mirror at all. It is a gateway. And the hungry, seductive creatures trapped on the other side? They just want Hannah all to themselves.
Book Review
The following review was originally published by Tera on her Blog, A Succubi's Tale on July 17, 2018
Hannah dearly loves her new apartment, it’s everything she could want, but the truth is her desires will give her more than she could have ever imagined and endlessly so.
The work is a very short, what I call a pamphlet, erotic hot flash that slowly builds a mystery as the work unfolds, ties the main character into being the focus of a vast number of incubi, and what, and who, comes from the desires they all have.
It’s a delightful slow burn seductive mystery that works well in telling the story, placing a sense of danger, and then toying with that theme towards the eventual climax of the erotic encounters that unfold. The pieces of the puzzle are dropped into play well, the mystery of the story holds togethr throughout and I enjoyed that.
As for the incubi of the work, they are shadows and teases of themselves. They never speak, never really appear fully and it’s all very much their effect on the main character and building that edge of need and desire within her and them as well. They don’t feel like they are stereotypical or evil, though certainly mischievous, a bit dominating and certainly enamoured with her.
Three and a half out of five pitchforks.
The revelation at the end of the story was somewhat telegraphed from the first moment the main character’s encounters began. It’s a shame that the incubi never speak, are never named, and they are more spirits of desire than being fleshed out as well as the main character is. How things come to a close leaves a lot of story untold and making this into a series to explore the other side of the mirror would have been really interesting to see.