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Demon of Desire (eBook): Difference between revisions
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*[http://www.amazon.com/Demon-of-Desire-ebook/dp/B004XVM2EO/ This work in Kindle | *[http://www.amazon.com/Demon-of-Desire-ebook/dp/B004XVM2EO/ This work in Kindle Format at Amazon.com] | ||
*[http://www.arithatcher.com The author Ari Thatcher's website] | *[http://www.arithatcher.com The author Ari Thatcher's website] |
Revision as of 11:54, 6 June 2014
Demon of Desire | |
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Demon of Desire eBook Cover, written by Ari Thatcher | |
Author(s) | Ari Thatcher |
Publisher | Ellora's Cave Publishing |
Publication date | April 15, 2011 |
Media type | eBook |
Length | 96 Pages |
ISBN | 9781419933004 |
ASIN | B004XVM2EO |
For other uses of the word Succubus, see Succubus (disambiguation).
Demon of Desire is an eBook written by Ari Thatcher. It is the first work in the Whispering Valley series by this author. In this work the heroine Sin is possessed by a demon being that has many of the aspects and powers of a Succubus.
Overview
- Title: Demon of Desire
- Author: Ari Thatcher
- Published By: Ellora's Cave Publishing
- Length: 96 Pages
- Format: eBook
- ASIN: B004XVM2EO
- IBSN: 9781419933004
- Publishing Date: April 15, 2011
Plot Summary
The only consolation Sin has for moving into her late great-aunt’s creepy Victorian house is the handymen who come with it. Triplet vampires Baen, Gower and Enos are yummy enough to tempt her from her self-imposed celibacy and make her forget she’s well on her way to becoming a crazy cat lady.
The brothers instantly recognize Sin as their mate, but realize they need to ease her into the idea of being loved by three vampires. Then a sex-craving demon takes control of Sin’s body and seduces the men, forcing them to make a rash decision with her life.
Book Review
The following review was posted by Tera on her Blog - A Succubi's Tale on April 1, 2012
The story is interesting from the beginning, though I thought that having three male leads in the story was a little bit over the top. It because confusing to me when one brother talked and then the next came in and did something as the last attempted to do something else. I don’t understand why it was really necessary save for having a four-way as a possibility for a sex scene.
Sin, proper name being Absinthe, is of course the heroine of the story, and she is, quite simply overwhelmed by the three brothers when they appear at the beginning of the story. What’s a little bit off putting in the amount of internal dialogue that she goes through at almost every page. Now, I can see why that happens, we do need information on what is going on, but it felt too much like an info dump and that lost me in the beginning for a while until I accepted that and moved on with the story.
Eventually Sin discovers a little icon and it knocks her out, the vampire brothers rush in to help her and when she awakens, she isn’t the nice girl she was before. That little icon held the spirit of a Succubus within it and now Sin isn’t in her body, the Succubus is, and she’s going to get what she wants out of the three brothers even if that means killing them to get it.
Of course, since Sin has been possessed by a Succubus, all the men know is that she wants sex, a lot of it at first until they put two and two together and realize that Sin is possessed. The problem is that the Succubus that possesses her will not leave until and unless Sin dies.
And that is the problem that the men have to solve. They figure something out, which I can understand as being the logical choice, and then the story continues from there leaving the Succubus behind never to be returned to at least in this story…
I can see why the author would use the idea of a Succubus to move the story along in a certain direction and it does break the ice between the characters and all of their worries rapidly, but personally I didn’t like the possible paths for the effects of the Succubus that could have been used to simply vanish.
Still, the end result of the story is satisfying to a point. The sex is hot, the story well told, no real problems in editing or spelling or anything else to take the reader out of the story. I just wish the concept of Succubi possessing the living would have been explored more…
But then that’s where my personal interests lie…
I’ll give this work three out of five pitchforks.
A lot less vampire please and more Succubi and I would rate it better…