Immortal Pleasures, V. Castro
Immortal Pleasures, V. Castro
List: $22.50 | Sale: $15.75
Club: $11.25

Immortal Pleasures

Author: V. Castro

Narrator: Raquel Beattie

Unabridged: 11 hr 1 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 04/16/2024


Synopsis

An ancient Aztec vampire roams the modern world in search of vengeance and love in this seductive dark fantasy from the author of The Haunting of Alejandra.

“Hauntingly rendered and decadently written, Immortal Pleasures is a surprising and fantastical portrait of one of history’s most fascinating (and perhaps most misunderstood) figures.”—Eric LaRocca, author of Things Have Gotten Worse Since We Last Spoke

Hundreds of years ago, she was known as La Malinche: a Nahua woman who translated for the conquistador Cortés. In the centuries since, her name has gone down in infamy as a traitor. But no one ever found out what happened to La Malinche after Cortés destroyed her people.

In the ashes of the empire, she was reborn as Malinalli, an immortal vampire. And she has become an avenger of conquered peoples, traveling the world to reclaim their stolen artifacts and return them to their homelands.

But she has also been in search of something more, for this ancient vampire still has deeply human longings for pleasure and for love.

When she arrives in Dublin in search of a pair of Aztec skulls—artifacts intimately connected to her own dark history—she finds something else: two men who satisfy her cravings in very different ways.

For the first time she meets a mortal man—a horror novelist—who is not repelled by her strange condition but attracted by it. But there is also another man, an immortal like herself, who shares the darkness in her heart.

Now Malinalli is on the most perilous adventure of all: a journey into her own desires.

About V. Castro

V. Castro is the author of Maria The Wanted and the Legacy of The Keepers, her debut vampire novel series, and The Erotic Modern Life of Malinalli the Vampire, an erotic novella series. You can also find her horror film reviews on scifiandscary.com.

She is a Mexican American ex-pat living in the UK for the past twelve years. As a full-time mother, she dedicates her time to her family and writing.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Hannah

one-star book. Five-Star Experience. no review I could write could possibly be more entertaining or informative than just giving you the list of every sentence I highlighted while reading this. spoiler cuts contain the sexually explicit ones (and also one actual spoiler). please......... please enjo......more

Goodreads review by Kaitlyn

Immortal Pleasures by V. Castro is a deliciously dark historical fantasy, transfused with passionate romance and righteous retribution. In the pages of history, La Malinche was a woman who translated for the terrible and blood thirsty Hernan Cortes, a conquistador who brutally conquered the native p......more

3.5 stars rounded up This is a really cool take on a vampire story. Immortal Pleasures follows an ancient Aztec woman turned vampire. It's a mix of modern day and flashbacks to when she was enslaved and impregnated by Cortès and how she became a vampire. In the modern timeline, she buys and sells ant......more

Goodreads review by J

two stars.... i am being very generous here. here's a list of things that made me scream with laughter. - shallow and facile. the parts that didn't read like nonprofit web copy read like my immortal. - our protagonist, a 500yo vampire, has the normal insecurities of a 25yo and tells us about them in......more

Goodreads review by Denise

Immortal Pleasures by V. Castro was one of my most-anticipated reads this year. The examination of the complex historical figure La Malinche: the Nahua woman who translated for the Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés and her eventual transformation into the ancient vampire Malinalli who seeks to recl......more


Quotes

“V. Castro lures readers into a perilous netherworld charged with debauchery and primal sensuality. Hauntingly rendered and decadently written, Immortal Pleasures is a surprising and fantastical portrait of one of history's most fascinating (and perhaps most misunderstood) figures.”—Eric LaRocca, author of Things Have Gotten Worse Since We Last Spoke