The Demon Librarian

Hades’ librarian is ready to claim love for herself, and those late fees are killer.

Melinoe worries she’ll never find a love as legendary as her Olympian parents’. Once content collecting overdue books with her hellhounds, the demonic librarian has just uncovered a terrifying truth: souls have stopped checking in their stories to the Underworld. To save the dying myths, she must venture into the mortal realm to harvest the unwritten histories of humans before they vanish forever.

Sam never expected to study in the church’s library while seeking clues about his cultist upbringing, and he definitely didn’t mean to summon a charming horned woman only able to visit Earth at night. But Melinoe is a tantalizing distraction, and he can’t seem to stop himself from coming back, seeking truth in Melinoe’s sweet and irresistible darkness.

As their devotion to each other deepens, stolen nights are not enough. There’s one way to have more, but it carries a heavy price by unleashing nightmares into the waking world. Sam’s angelic nature should make them natural enemies — yet their desire to be together might just be the very thing that triggers the rapture.

Click “Buy Now” to discover how sweet a forbidden gothic romance can be when blind faith collapses into a deeper truth.

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TOP REVIEW FOR THE DEMON LIBRARIAN

I will start by saying that it’s a beautiful story and kind of haunting, with lots of mythological (and some religious) characters present or alluded to in some way.

Religion (or the idea of faith) is a central focus in this story. Not in a proselytizing way, more as a conduit for the story. It takes an interesting look at religious legend / lore / biblical history. Through the interactions of its characters Melinoe and Sam ( FMC and MMC), secondary characters Theo, Faith, Hades, Persephone, Cupid, the reader sees how sometimes that which claims to be righteous can be insidious or used for insidious purposes. It also shows how faith can be dangerous and/or ignorant, especially if religious /biblical doctrine is taken too literally (think, an eye for an eye type stuff). This may send certain readers up in arms, but if that’s the case then those readers are missing the point of the story, and that’s on them.

This book, to me, is philosophical and had me thinking. It isn’t light, fluffy fare with a little magic and romance, so my brain forced me to read it a little slower than I would normally devour a fantasy or paranormal fantasy book.

This book is different. The tone, the story, and the delivery. You’d have to read it to really understand, and I really think you should.