Isabel Lucero, author of titles like Sicko , Payback , and Deviant , is a frequent target. Why? Because dark romance is extremely popular in Eastern European reader circles, and VK is the go-to platform. Here is where the situation gets toxic for the community:
👇 Note: This post is intended to highlight the structural harm of piracy, not to harass individual readers who may have used VK unknowingly. dysfunctional isabel lucero vk
Lucero, like most authors, sends free ARCs to trusted readers in exchange for honest reviews. When those specific ARC files (often watermarked or with specific formatting) end up on VK, it is a direct betrayal by someone inside the author’s own street team. That dysfunction creates paranoia, forcing authors to shrink their ARC lists and hurt their own launch visibility. The Reader’s Rationalization (And Why It’s Flawed) You’ll see comments like: “I live in a country where Amazon doesn’t work” or “The book isn’t available in my region.” Isabel Lucero, author of titles like Sicko ,
Let’s talk about the dysfunctional relationship between readers, a popular author, and the world’s largest Russian social network—VKontakte (VK). For the uninitiated, VK isn’t just a Facebook clone. It has become one of the largest repositories of pirated eBooks on the internet. Entire groups are dedicated to uploading EPUBs and PDFs of ARC copies (Advanced Reader Copies) and finished books—often within hours of release. Here is where the situation gets toxic for
Many readers defend VK use by saying, “I just preview it there to see if I like it before buying.” But VK doesn’t offer previews—it offers the whole file. Human nature means most never go back to pay. That isn’s sampling; that is taking.
The VK Elephant in the Room: Isabel Lucero, Piracy, and Why “Just Looking” Hurts