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Sins of the Son (eBook)

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Sins of the Son
Sins of the Son eBook Cover, written by Sins of the Son
Sins of the Son eBook Cover,
written by Sins of the Son
Author(s) Sins of the Son
Publisher Boruma Publishing
Publication date May 4, 2016
Media type eBook
Length 173 Pages
ASIN B01F6HF4O8

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

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


Sins of the Son is an eBook written by Sins of the Son. In this work the character Lilith is compared to the Lilith of legend and reference is made to both Succubi and Incubi.


Overview

  • Title: Sins of the Son
  • Author: Sins of the Son
  • Published By: Boruma Publishing
  • Length: 173 Pages
  • Format: eBook
  • ASIN: B01F6HF4O8
  • Publishing Date: May 4, 2016


Plot Summary

Lilith. Legend, myth, or his mother? John chronicles his exodus from morality to a life of incestuous indulgence. Her son confesses to the carnal pleasures he and his mom enjoy as they travel the taboo path of the forbidden. Come, learn what happens when the lines between right and wrong, son and lover, Heaven and Earth become blurred. Come, discover why John must confess the Sins of the Son.


Book Review

The following review was originally published by Tera on her Blog, A Succubi's Tale on February 19, 2017


John goes to confession and tells of his mother, his needs for her and more. Along with the past comes a question about the myth of Lilith and how John’s own Lilith compared to her most of all.

The work’s theme centres on the taboo relationship between John and his mother Lilith. It is a bit confusing at times, a little odd here and there. Much of the work is page after page of their sexual relationship, the struggles in who is in, and out, of control.

Lilith herself is a confused mess which is mainly caused by her, on occasion, talking about herself as being the Lilith of legend and as well John’s scattered commentary about her, sometimes calling her a succubus, the succubus queen and so on. There is no real appearance of Lilith being a succubus save for her sexual needs and demands. She’s willful, a bit manipulative, and perhaps a little emotionally off, but as for being a succubus, that’s not really shown.

The erotica is focused on John and Lilith, their entwinements and what happens to them along the way. There are other characters drawn into their world, but they are fleeting. However, the appearance of the person that John is confessing to throughout the work, does lead to some fascinating biblical discussion which I liked for that point alone. The thoughts about Lilith in the work would be, at least for me, a better story to tell than what this work is.

The writing is a bit juvenile at times, some of the methods used to tell the story seemed strange and out of place. The writing is monotone at times, needing some emotional impact to make the story more but that only seems to be present when John and Lilith are together. I couldn’t really find my way into this work, the theme didn’t appeal, the lack of any sort of succubus or a Lilith that was the myth didn’t help either. Theology is one thing, but it isn’t enough to hold this work together.

One and a half pitchforks out of five.

I really didn’t care for the story, the porn level erotica didn’t interest me. The discussion about chapter and verse and Lilith’s myth was what attracted me, but the rest just didn’t work for me.


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