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Tacca Chantrieri: A Diary of Descent into Possession (eBook)

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Tacca Chantrieri:
A Diary of Descent into Possession
Tacca Chantrieri: A Diary of Descent into Possession eBook Cover, written by Lucy Luxemburg
Tacca Chantrieri: A Diary of Descent into Possession eBook Cover,
written by Lucy Luxemburg
Author(s) Lucy Luxemburg
Publisher Amazon Digital Services
Publication date February 3, 2019
Media type eBook
Length 99 Pages
ASIN B07NCZ1JTB

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


Tacca Chantrieri: A Diary of Descent into Possession is an eBook written by Lucy Luxemburg. In this work one of the characters is an Incubus.


Overview

  • Title: Tacca Chantrieri: A Diary of Descent into Possession
  • Author: Lucy Luxemburg
  • Published By: Amazon Digital Services
  • Length: 99 Pages
  • Format: eBook
  • ASIN: B07NCZ1JTB
  • Publishing Date: February 3, 2019


Plot Summary

A young woman falls into the clutches of an incubus as she struggles to pull her life together during college. While her mental state degrades, she sifts through memories of depraved sex, drug use, trauma, and black magic. Rapidly the lines between fantasy and reality become blurred as the demon seduces her and pushes her to do its bidding. A story about the warping of sexual awakening, the affliction of fertility, and the paradise of delusion.


Book Review

The following review was originally published by Tera on her Blog, A Succubi's Tale on March 22, 2019


A soul lost, a power that seeks to take advantage and a fate that looms before all. Sometimes light cannot overcome the dark and what remains is lost forever more.

The work is a rather oddly written story which tries to connect a lot of various themes and ideas into something having a supernatural focus to meld with the reality that main character faces. It’s a very troubled story as a result, the feeling of loss and despair carries throughout and I found it a very difficult read as a result.

The incubus of the work, who is never named, is a creature of evil, there’s no escaping that aspect of them. More so, they delight in what they are responsible for and beyond that seek even more. They, much like many of the characters, are dislikable and as a result became means to an end rather than something to connect with than add to the story and characters evolving further.

Two out of five pitchforks.

A very scattered work overall with a very bare connection to incubi that appears. It’s more of an exploration of fears and internalized expressions of the main character’s mystery which has some moments but overall was lacking.


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