Pandora's Box (eBook)

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

Pandora's Box
Pandora's Box eBook Cover, written by Amelia Elias
Pandora's Box eBook Cover, written by Amelia Elias
Author(s) Amelia Elias
Publisher Amazon Digital Services
Smashwords
Publication date January 31, 2012
Media type eBook
Length 43,000 Words
ISBN 9781465727367
ASIN B0075CFQKU


Pandora's Box is an eBook written by Amelia Elias. In this work, the characters Rowan and Troian are both Incubi.


Overview

  • Title: Pandora's Box
  • Author: Amelia Elias
  • Format: eBook
  • Length: 43,000 Words
  • Publisher: Amazon Digital Services & Smashwords
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B0075CFQKU
  • ISBN: 9781465727367
  • Release Date: January 31, 2012


Plot Summary

Tera Kenner’s life revolves around Pandora’s Box, her erotic novelty shop. It’s a place where fantasies come alive, where lackluster lovers are inspired, and sexual fulfillment is for sale on every shelf… for everyone but her. Running a shop for lovers is torture when she doesn’t have a man of her own around to help her let off a little steam.

When her pent-up sexual frustration attracts an incubus, Tera can’t resist tasting the pleasures he offers. Rowan is lust incarnate, a consummate lover whose merest touch fires every sexual part of her body. He knows how to touch her, how to kiss her, how to melt her resistance and make her ache for more. Every moment together raises her need to new heights, but every sexual encounter drains a little more of Tera’s life force.

And to make matters worse, Rowan isn’t the only incubus who is drawn to her need. Troian is older, stronger, and ruthless, and he wants her for his own. Only Rowan’s claim prevents Troian from taking her for his own.

Tera’s been unlucky in love before, but never like this. To leave Rowan is to risk her life at Troian’s hands, but to stay is to risk her heart and her very soul.


Book Review

The following review was originally published on Tera's Blog, A Succubi's Tale on March 31st, 2013


I love this story. It’s well told, the characters are ones that I care about. It has emotion, change, understanding, and, in the end, proves a point that I have believed in for a very long time. Yes the scenes between Tera and Rowan are so very hot and deliciously erotic, but, while they are a large part of the story, they aren’t the core of it. That made this work so much more enjoyable for me personally.

Tera is a strong woman, but also one with a major flaw in her character that haunts her. That theme runs throughout the story and it, eventually, helps to guide her to a decision. She also discovers in the course of the story that she is special and the why of that is the reason for both Incubi to come to her, and to want her.

Rowan, who we see the most of through the story of the two Incubi, starts out being a classical Incubus, there’s really no other way to describe him. While he is tender and tries to not cause pain, but pleasure, the end result is that he will, eventually, kill whomever he takes energy from to survive. The story, which makes that very clear, is one of Rowan being taught lessons about being human, what emotions are, and discovering that even a demon can discover one of the most precious things in the universe. Love.

Troian, the “bad” Incubus for lack of a better word, is all evil, all of the time. What he does over the course of the story makes him that, and more. What he takes from Tera, what that results in, and what it fixates Tera on, I think was a perfect catalyst in the story. He isn’t seen much, but then he doesn’t need to be for what happens. To be honest I think we got well enough of him as it was and I really didn’t need to see anything more of him to understand him. And I have to admit that I kept reading his name as Trojan several times, which gave me all sorts of giggles when condoms appeared in the story or were mentioned.

The other main female character, Wren… I loved her, probably as much if not a little more than Tera in the story and what happens with her, the secret she didn’t share and the choice she made… I understand it, and in a way I think that most would understand it as well. But, and there is a but, I would have liked to see more of her. Her attitude, her connection with Tera, her view of the world and its secrets we really don’t get to see a lot of and I would have liked to.

There are some questions not answered by the end of the story, though for the most part there is closure. Still, one major glaring question was left unanswered by the end of the story and I would have liked to have known what that question means to Tera, Rowan, and Troian.

Everyone has their own “voice” in the story, you know exactly who is speaking or acting, there isn’t any mistaking one for another which was nice to see. I also liked the moral and spiritual questions that arrived at the end of the story, which paid off the events within it really well.

The author shows great talent in writing and it really was a joy to be able to look into this world they created, the characters that they cared about, and the story that was within them wanting to be seen…

Wonderful, and I recommend this book highly.

I’m giving this work four and a half pitchforks out of five.

Hot, so very hot, my namesake is adorable, and Rowan is amazingly tempting… I just wish that Tera would have become a Succubus, but that would have been asking too much really… And there is such a dangling plot thread that there should be a second story to follow… Not having that closure really, truly, is a shame.


External Links