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Feed Me Your Soul (eBook)

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Feed Me Your Soul
Feed Me Your Soul eBook Cover, written by Aurelius Black
Feed Me Your Soul eBook Cover,
written by Aurelius Black
Author(s) Aurelius Black
Series The Succubus of Manhattan
Publisher Amazon Digital Services
Publication date August 25, 2025
Media type eBook
Length 69 Pages
ASIN B0FNRSWMWS

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


Feed Me Your Soul is an eBook written by Aurelius Black. It is the first work in the Succubus of Manhattan series by this author. In this work the character Seraphina is a Succubus and the demoness Lilith appears.


Overview

  • Title: Feed Me Your Soul
  • Author: Aurelius Black
  • Published By: Amazon Digital Services
  • Length: 69 Pages
  • Format: eBook
  • ASIN: B0FNRSWMWS
  • Publishing Date: August 25, 2025


Other Works in this Series on SuccuWiki


Plot Summary

She's Satan's daughter. Manhattan's most exclusive art dealer. And every thirty days, she needs to feed.

Seraphina has perfected the balance: twenty-nine days of charity work and clean living, one night of soul-draining seduction. Her bone corset holds the ribs of CEOs and kings—trophies from centuries of calculated feeding. Her streaming platform @Devil4U turns micro-doses of desire into quarterly metrics for Hell.

It's sustainable. Controlled. Safe.

Until Lilith—the ancient hunger living inside her—discovers she can spread through every screen, every subscriber, every reflection. Now Seraphina's victims are showing up half-drained and desperate, counting to thirty in their dreams, bearing bruises they can't explain.

Enter Elias: the one man who can see what she really is. The one man who doesn't run. The one man who makes the predator feel like prey.

As day thirty approaches and Lilith grows stronger, Seraphina faces an impossible choice: feed and unleash an ancient evil on a million screens, or starve and lose the only man who's ever seen her as more than a monster.

Some hungers can't be satisfied. Some thirsts can't be quenched. And some women are worth damning yourself for.


Book Review

The following review was originally published by Tera on her Blog, A Succubi's Tale on June 5, 2026


Seraphina has everything she could want, except that Lilith wants even more. A unexpected turn takes her perfectly formed would and stands it upside down with a dark fate approaching. There is no escape, so Lilith demands, but someone else may have another opinion of Seraphina and is willing to be what she needs. Even if she doesn’t realize it until there is little other choice to be made.

The work is a fantasy-mystery erotic story focused on the main character and the demons, of various kinds, within and surrounding her. Dearly atmospheric, the story is dark at the beginning and transforms into something quite unexpected by the final page. There is an underlying tone of impending doom in many forms that pulls on the plot threads, making them quite fascinating to see come to form.

The erotica in the beginning is a bit bland and somewhat business like, but that has a lot to do with the main character’s beginnings and where the story travels to. It’s after the two main characters come into conflict, turning towards need and desire, when the author writes the most beautiful and captivating scenes between them.

Seraphina, the succubus of the story, is rather dislikable at the start and, if that had continued without any character development, the story would have become rote and that would have been a shame. She is unashamedly a succubus, with all of the powers, seductiveness, and domination one would expect. At the same time the Seraphina at the beginning is dearly banal in her personality and there were points where she just didn’t work, for me at least. In the moment when she realizes her fate, meets Elias, that’s when she becomes more interesting, more self aware and that just turned her into something quite special as a succubus which I enjoyed.

As part of the story, the demoness Lilith appears, and this is the part of the work which bothers me. It is for effect, but she is such a stereotypically evil version of Lilith, and so dearly over the top, that I just felt like it was overdone. Lilith should be a seductive evil, a temptress, a whispering presence to tease others to her will and she isn’t here. I understand that reasoning for that, and by the close of the story it works well, but it’s when Lilith loses control that it felt wrong somehow.

With all of that, the story is just amazingly well told. Each moment, scene and chapter has a purpose and it was a delight to see how the pieces of the puzzle came together to breathe life into the characters and the story itself.

Four out of five pitchforks.

The work closes in a place that leaves a number of threads dangling as one would expect in the first work of a series. With that said, it’s the complexities of the story that delight me and yet, at the same time, Lilith seeming to be so stereotypical just rubs me the wrong way. Hopefully the next work in the series will close a few threads and perhaps do something more with Lilith than what happened here.


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