by
Belonging can sometimes be Hell
Jin is 17, pansexual, blue-haired, half-Korean and a lifelong outsider. His modus operandi, after years of neglect and chaos, is never belong, never attach, because both just bring pain. What he doesn't know, and mustn't, is if he does ever belong, his lust demon father will take him to Hell forever the day he turns 18.
But when he moves to the remote Scottish town of Hammer Falls, where he shouldn't fit in at all, he finds being supernatural and queer aren't quite the barriers to belonging he'd hoped. As his lust demon blood begins to show and he grows ever closer to gorgeous part-angel demonstalker Nate, how long can Jin continue to convince himself he doesn't belong and isn't getting attached?
Lust & Other Demons is the first in a trilogy containing a snarky, prickly half lust demon, hot demon hunters, werebears, angst, messy love and explicit MM sex. Books 2 & 3 also contain steamy MMM+ polyamory scenes as part of a key relationship. NOTE - These books are NOT suitable for younger readers or people likely to be offended by speculative views about religion.
- 1 To Be Read list
Publisher: Independently Published
Genres:
Tropes: Antihero, Cross-Species Friendships, Enemy to Ally, Fellowship, Humans Evolved From Aliens, Hunted, I Am Your Father, Immortality, Inaccessible Magic, Portals, Reluctant Hero, Sex Magic, Superpowers
Word Count: 195000
Setting: Scotland, Scottish Highlands
Languages Available: English
Series Type: Continuous / Same Characters
Tropes: Antihero, Cross-Species Friendships, Enemy to Ally, Fellowship, Humans Evolved From Aliens, Hunted, I Am Your Father, Immortality, Inaccessible Magic, Portals, Reluctant Hero, Sex Magic, Superpowers
Word Count: 195000
Setting: Scotland, Scottish Highlands
Languages Available: English
Series Type: Continuous / Same Characters
The Hammer Falls series started life as a Shadowhunters-TeenWolf-Twilight mashup fanfic-with-sex before evolving into entirely its own thing. None of it has been previously published anywhere and where fanfic similarities remain, they're necessary to the plot. The themes of good and evil are deeply explored and this trilogy isn't recommended for people likely to be offended by speculative views about religion.