The Night Librarian, a short story by Neil Benson in Satin Beauty
The Night Librarian by Neil Benson
My short story, The Night Librarian, was included in Satin Beauty Anthology, published by
Static Movement. The Night Librarian is a story about a librarian who
helps the students at a local college during the day, and helps herself
to the local students at night. The librarian is a succubus who uses The
virility of the male students to a replenish her energy on a daily
basis. She is a "good succubus" because the students are alive, but
tired the following morning. Ancient myths portray Lilith as the mother
of all succubi. She's also been accused of being the mother of all
vampires.Clearly, the woman has a bad reputation.
In today's horror/paranormal genre authors have rehabilitated many evil creatures. Anne Rice made vampires "almost human" and Stephanie Meyers made them banal. Richelle Mead presented readers with a Georgina Kincaid, the succubus
who might live next door in a series of novels. I have read two of them
and found them interesting, not heavyweight material, but a pleasant
way to pass the time.On Lost Girl, the lovely Anna Silk
stars as "Bo" a succubus private detective/problem solver. She's a
kick ass creature with compassion for those in trouble. A sometime lover
is a werewolf, which makes for avery odd couple.Humanizing a succubus
is one thing, forgetting she's a demon is another.
My short story, The Night Librarian, was included in Satin Beauty Anthology, published by
Static Movement. The Night Librarian is a story about a librarian who
helps the students at a local college during the day, and helps herself
to the local students at night. The librarian is a succubus who uses the
virility of the male students to a replenish her energy on a daily
basis. She is a "good succubus" because the students are alive, but
tired the following morning. Ancient myths portray Lilith as the mother
of all succubi. She's also been accused of being the mother of all
vampires.Clearly, the woman has a bad reputation.
In today's horror/paranormal genre, authors have rehabilitated many evil creatures. Anne Rice made vampires "almost human" and Stephanie Meyers made them banal. Richelle Mead presented readers with a Georgina Kincaid, the succubus who might live next door in a series of novels. I have read two of them and found them interesting, not heavyweight material, but a pleasant way to pass the time. On Lost Girl, lovely Anna Silk stars as "Bo" a succubus private detective/problem solver. She's a kick ass creature with compassion for those in trouble. Her sometime lover is a werewolf, which makes for a very odd couple. Humanizing a succubus is one thing, forgetting she's a demon is another.
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