On November 27th, 2022, the 8,000th article was added to the SuccuWiki!

Slave for the Incubus: Catholic Schoolgirls Sinful Journey Into Lust (eBook)

From SuccuWiki - The Wiki of the Succubi
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Slave for the Incubus: Catholic Schoolgirls Sinful Journey Into Lust
Slave for the Incubus: Catholic Schoolgirls Sinful Journey Into Lust eBook Cover, written by Arcadia Black
Slave for the Incubus: Catholic Schoolgirls Sinful Journey Into Lust eBook Cover, written by Arcadia Black
Author(s) Arcadia Black
Publisher Lulu.com
Publication date September 23, 2014
Media type eBook
Length 40 Pages
ASIN B00O1462DK

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


Slave for the Incubus: Catholic Schoolgirls Sinful Journey Into Lust is an eBook written by Arcadia Black. In this work the character Mizazu is an Incubus.


Overview

  • Title: Slave for the Incubus: Catholic Schoolgirls Sinful Journey Into Lust
  • Author: Arcadia Black
  • Published By: Lulu.com
  • Length: 40 Pages
  • Format: eBook
  • ASIN: B00O1462DK
  • Publishing Date: September 23, 2014


Plot Summary

Three teenage catholic schoolgirls get more than they bargained for when they inadvertently summon a sadistic Incubus of sexual lust and perversion while attempting a prank.The Incubus and his hyper-sexual Gargoyles drag them into a dark world of eroticism and hot lust from which they cannot escape.


Book Review

The following review was originally published by Tera on her Blog, A Succubi's Tale on July 3, 2015


Abigail and her friends find a book in the library and after some consideration, decide to perform the summoning it tells of as a joke. The problem is that they do summon an Incubus that had his way with them all before turning them loose on the school they attend.

The most disappointing thing about this story is that it contains just about every single stereotypical erotic scene that has something to do with catholic schoolgirls. To say that the main characters of this work are hyper-horny, undersexed and wanton would be an understatement. Almost every scene has one of the students doing something erotic and that’s well before the Incubus appears.

There’s little in the way of story that doesn’t directly lead to some sort of sexual encounter and with that comes a repetition of assorted sexual innuendo, the students “making out” and assuming they are not being seen, but they are, and silliness continues from that point onwards. Even when there is some time given to the reasons to why the students are reading the book they find, it is mixed with what is really personalities that are just this side of vapid. Which, for me, was a complete turn off well before the work turned towards the Incubus appearing.

The Incubus, Mizazu, is yet another example of a stereotypically evil, mean, cruel and nasty creature that has his way with the students, bends them to his will, and forces them to pay the price for summoning him. This leads to some “monstrous” erotic scenes that, again, didn’t have any heat for me in them because they were, as a whole, just scenes of the characters being abused.

The latter part of the work then returns to the students being in school and having to obey the will of their “Master” which results in yet another stereotypical sex scene with the staff of school they attend and then other students as well. The story ends on a note which obviously seems to be meant to continue in another work.

As a whole, this sort of work does nothing for me at all. The work reads as very bland with an attempt at shock hot flashes mixed with some tentacle and monster erotica to give it some flavour. There is a story somewhere in all of this, but finding it means getting through all else which had no interest for me at all.

I think that the story needs a rewrite that lessens the “monster” part of the story and improves on the characters of the students. Less “air-head want to be slut” and more “reality” might help in that. Less “porn scenes” and more “actual erotic moments” would help as well.

I’ll give this work one pitchfork out of five.

There was some promise at the beginning that might have kept my attention, but I just found that things were too formulaic for my tastes. Too many stereotypes and fantasies that didn’t have any heat in them for me at least. Perhaps for others, but I couldn’t find it. Just disappointed with the work as a whole and I won’t be reading further if there is a second work.


External Links