On November 6th, 2024, the 9,000th article was added to the SuccuWiki!
The Woman in the Mirror (eBook)
For other uses of the word Succubus, see Succubus (disambiguation).
The Woman in the Mirror is an eBook written by E. V. Thorne. In this work one of the characters be described as a kind of Succubus.
Overview
- Title: The Woman in the Mirror
- Author: E. V. Thorne
- Published By: Amazon Digital Services
- Length: 50 Pages
- Format: eBook
- ASIN: B0FRZPK372
- Publishing Date: September 30, 2025
Plot Summary
A haunted manor. A shattered mirror. A forbidden transformation.
When Professor Auren purchases an abandoned estate on the edge of Pyrrhold, he expects dust, silence, and superstition. Instead, he finds her. Pale as moonlight, sensual as a dream, the woman in the mirror is more than a reflection, she is a temptation wrapped in shadow, a mystery bound in glass. Each night she presses closer, whispering promises of desire and ruin, until Auren must choose between the safety of his wards and the forbidden allure of her touch.
But passion in the glass carries a cost. What begins as temptation becomes possession, what begins as seduction becomes rebirth. Bound in her embrace, Auren’s body reshapes beneath her influence, his form remade into something both male and female, both cock and cunt, both scholar and succubus’s prize. A story of gender transformation, futanari desire, and supernatural seduction, The Woman in the Mirror is a gothic gender swap story where identity, lust, and power blur as easily as reflections on silvered glass.
Book Review
The following review was originally published by Tera on her Blog, A Succubi's Tale on June 7, 2026
He needed a place to exist, he found a purpose to live. A mansion of mystery, a teasing voice in the wind, a promise given but at what cost is the question to be answered.
The work is a wonderfully told erotic story of looking inside of one’s soul, a succubus who presses for that realization, and the mystery of what happens when a gift is both a curse and a need. Dearly complex from the beginning, the story’s narrative plays with descriptions, sounds and images in a way that I thought gave so much, but did not release the mystery at once, but allowed it to grow.
The transformation of the main character is a slow burn taking much of the story to come to the climax. It feels right, not odd or over the top either. It matters to the story, to the needs of both characters and delightful as well.
The succubus, who is never given a name, which bothers me to no end. It is wonderfully complex and mysterious creature of lust, need, desire and power. She is a succubus, her sexuality, the lust she creates, the power which settles over the main character speak of that. But at the same time she is dearly etherial from the start, sinking her talons into the main character and then reshaping him to her purposes. The final form taken reflects on the mythos of succubi and incubi in a unique way that didn’t feel wrong, it had a purpose.
Three and a half out of five pitchforks.
Such a dearly atmospheric story, the characters play off each other all, the air of mystery and discovery is so very telling. The work closes in a place that would lead somewhere that I wonder about, the place in this world the newly formed self they have become will be. Still, not giving the succubus a name bothers me. It works, but at the sane time it leaves something missing.