Jaelyn James only wants to live her life in peace with Liana the octogirl. Their love is all the more powerful for its forbidden nature. A freak and a monstergirl, each rejected by their own societies, take refuge in each other's love. Her love for Liana is so fierce she would do anything for her. One starry evening their honeymoon ends savagely, and when she opens her eyes again, Jaelyn is far away from Liana--if she's still alive. Worse, she finds herself back in the restraints of the sadistically depraved futanari doctor, Ilsa Carrera. Her only hope for any chance to see Liana again is to go along with Dr. Carrera's scorching sexual fertility experiments. If she's successful, the doctor will change the world. There's no choice Jaelyn can make that lets her off the hook one way or the other, but she has to live before she can live with herself. Even if she gets free of Dr. Carrera, how would she even begin to search for her lost lover, taken to the depths of the sea? What will she have to do and how far is she willing to go for love? In the depths of her soul and the depths of the ocean, an unimaginable fate awaits her in the Temple of Dagon.
Bryce Calderwood is an award-winning, top-100 Amazon author who has been publishing strangely hot erotica since 2015. His stories usually combine paranormal elements with either futanari or BDSM (or both). Bryce likes to explore the boundaries between sex and violence, between pleasure and pain, and between the human and the monstrous.
He lives currently near the coast in North Carolina, where the weather is nice but the landscape isn't and neither are the people. Bryce has been involved in the BDSM lifestyle off and on for many years and is now a very proud Daddy Dom for a darling cute and perverted Kitten.
Every day, Bryce writes smut, drinks insane amounts of black coffee, and grows his beard.
That being said, you need to have read the previous novels to know the characters and the main story.
Unfortunately, though, too many sequels make a story become a little lame - which is also my general opinion about movies. This one somehow felt like a “forced conclusion “ to the previous novels.