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Moonlight Becomes Her: Emergence (eBook)

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Moonlight Becomes Her: Emergence
Moonlight Becomes Her: Emergence eBook Cover, written by W.D. Laremore
Moonlight Becomes Her: Emergence
eBook Cover, written by W.D. Laremore
Author(s) W.D. Laremore
Series Moonlight Becomes Her
Publisher Amazon Digital Services
Publication date February 12, 2020
Media type eBook
Length 12 Pages
ASIN B084LGDHD6
Followed by Moonlight Becomes Her: Inferno

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


Moonlight Becomes Her: Emergence is an eBook written by W.D. Laremore. It is a prequel work in the Moonlight Becomes Her series by this author. In this work the character Lily Starlin can be described as a Succubus.


Overview

  • Title: Moonlight Becomes Her: Emergence
  • Author: W.D. Laremore
  • Published By: Amazon Digital Services
  • Length: 12 Pages
  • Format: eBook
  • ASIN: B084LGDHD6
  • Publishing Date: February 12, 2020


Other Works in this Series on SuccuWiki


Plot Summary

Lily Starlin has simple needs: Gel Dip on her nails, uninterrupted WiFi, and cute boots. She would love it if her biggest problem were deciding between a Pumpkin Spiced Latte and a mimosa for breakfast. The truth is, her biggest problem is getting close to a boy when her kiss is deadly.


Book Review

The following review was originally published by Tera on her Blog, A Succubi's Tale on July 11, 2021


There are questions in life that need to be answered. Who I am isn’t for some as important as why I am or perhaps more accurately how I got into this mess. Lily is asking herself all of these questions, and the simplest answer, that she is a succubus, isn’t answer enough.

This work was originally a series of short novelettes that were released over the course of a year and then bundled into a single work. It follows the main character Lily Starlin as she grows up, learns about herself, and then things take a turn for the odd. Becoming the herald of a demon, she then has to deal with losing herself. It’s that loss of self that tends to make the story drift as it progresses. Sometimes there’s a lack of focus, or it jumps between Lily having one personality and then a different one.

It does make sense from the perspective of Lily being a succubus and her powers shifting her form, but at the same time the story wanders when it turns away from Lily and focuses on other characters. It also, from time to time, drops some major characters out of the story and it’s uncertain as to why they were set aside. Even beyond these quirks the story doesn’t tend to have events tie together as well as I’d have liked them to.

That all said, there’s a lot to unpack in Lily through the story and it just seems to become more complicated the deeper the story goes. Even with teenage angst mixed with her succubus nature, there’s a lot of internal conflicts to deal with and the hurt that she needs to push through turns very dark sometimes.

At some points Lily acts like she has multiple personality disorder, which for a succubus is a very dangerous thing. She can be a friend, lover or something more in one scene and then turn so very darkly evil in the next. Again that’s interesting to see happen, but it might highlight a lack of focus in the story that need not be there.

There’s another major character that is very present throughout, being a thorn in Lily’s life and really being a major source of evil. They aren’t exactly likable, but they aren’t expected to be. Actually that’s true of a handful of characters in the story, but that’s a function of the plot and so it’s not unexpected. What I couldn’t quite enjoy was when Lily’s father appeared. I’d have liked to know a lot more about this incubus, more than the short appearance he makes.

Given that the original work was a series of short stories tied together at the edges, the series could use another editing pass to clean up some grammar, spelling and narration issues. That’s mainly to make the story flow better and read less scattered and more focused which I think really would make this work really shine.

Four out of five pitchforks.

Lily is a very unique character and there’s a lot to like about her overall. The story wanders a bit too much and it could be better if there was more connective story between the sharp story changes that occur. The author is continuing Lily’s story in another series of works, and perhaps in that will come a kind of closure for Lily’s trials and a means to find herself at last.


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