On November 6th, 2024, the 9,000th article was added to the SuccuWiki!

Thirty-Four (eBook): Difference between revisions

From SuccuWiki - The Wiki of the Succubi
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
 
Line 54: Line 54:


== Book Review ==
== Book Review ==
''At the time of this article's entry in the SuccuWiki, no review was available. Tera has this work on her reading list and will review it shortly.''
''The following review was originally published by Tera on her Blog, A Succubi's Tale on [https://www.succubus.net/blog/2018/06/03/a-review-of-thirty-four-by-harrison-ambler/ June 3, 2018]''
 
 
It is winter’s night and a couple waits for the bus. But there is something off about this night and others that wait for the bus with them.
 
The work is a very short, what I call a pamphlet, story of impending doom wrapped in a mystery and trailing towards that event. It’s something of a whispering tease that ends at a sharp surprise that feels like a struggle between good and evil in which both sides have a victory and a loss at the close.
 
The succubus of the work, who is never given a name, is something of a seductive attention grabber for one character. But beyond that they are something of horror wrapped in an attractive package. A means to an end really and beyond that there’s really so very little time for them to be anything more than that.
 
Three out of five pitchforks.
 
It is a succubus story, in a way, mostly in a bit of a mind control seduction way with a snap shift to a hint of a horror story in the very last paragraph. It’s a shame that this work was so short as really there’s a feeling of something more beyond what came out and that would have been interesting to play out, but it never was.




== External Links ==
== External Links ==
*[https://www.amazon.com/Thirty-Four-Tales-Blood-Harrison-Ambler-ebook/dp/B07DD7XB49/ This work in Kindle Format at Amazon.com] - ''No Longer Available''
*[https://www.amazon.com/Thirty-Four-Tales-Blood-Harrison-Ambler-ebook/dp/B07DD7XB49/ This work in Kindle Format at Amazon.com] - ''No Longer Available''

Latest revision as of 13:38, 7 June 2025

Thirty-Four
Thirty-Four eBook Cover, written by Harrison Ambler
Thirty-Four eBook Cover,
written by Harrison Ambler
Author(s) Harrison Ambler
Publisher Amazon Digital Services
Publication date May 29, 2018
Media type eBook
Length 8 Pages
ASIN B07DD7XB49

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


Thirty-Four is an eBook written by Harrison Ambler. In this work one of the characters is a Succubus.


Overview

  • Title: Thirty-Four
  • Author: Harrison Ambler
  • Published By: Amazon Digital Services
  • Length: 8 Pages
  • Format: eBook
  • ASIN: B07DD7XB49
  • Publishing Date: May 29, 2018


Plot Summary

A young couple waits at the bus stop on a cold dark winter night. While waiting on the 34, they are joined by two enigmatic strangers and a battle between good and evil ensues.


Book Review

The following review was originally published by Tera on her Blog, A Succubi's Tale on June 3, 2018


It is winter’s night and a couple waits for the bus. But there is something off about this night and others that wait for the bus with them.

The work is a very short, what I call a pamphlet, story of impending doom wrapped in a mystery and trailing towards that event. It’s something of a whispering tease that ends at a sharp surprise that feels like a struggle between good and evil in which both sides have a victory and a loss at the close.

The succubus of the work, who is never given a name, is something of a seductive attention grabber for one character. But beyond that they are something of horror wrapped in an attractive package. A means to an end really and beyond that there’s really so very little time for them to be anything more than that.

Three out of five pitchforks.

It is a succubus story, in a way, mostly in a bit of a mind control seduction way with a snap shift to a hint of a horror story in the very last paragraph. It’s a shame that this work was so short as really there’s a feeling of something more beyond what came out and that would have been interesting to play out, but it never was.


External Links