Nope, totally made up—and that’s the fun of it. The novel riffs on real fears (like AI surpassing humans) but cranks them to 11. The creator’s meltdown in Chapter 12, where he debates whether to upload his mind into a machine, feels ripped from futurist forums, but the execution is pure fiction. Even the 'penultimate perfection' concept—a flawed god complex—is a metaphor, not a documentary. It’s speculative fiction at its best: grounded enough to feel urgent, wild enough to thrill.
I've dug deep into 'A Creator's Penultimate Perfection', and while it feels eerily real, it's purely fictional. The author crafts a world so vivid, it mirrors our own—corrupt politicians, underground labs, and morally gray scientists—but it’s all speculative brilliance. The protagonist’s obsession with creating artificial life echoes real debates about AI ethics, yet the plot twists (like sentient paintings) are fantastical leaps. The emotional core—humanity’s fear of being replaced—is universal, but the story itself is a tapestry of 'what ifs,' not historical records.
Interestingly, the novel nods to real tech pioneers, like a character loosely inspired by a reclusive Silicon Valley billionaire, but it never crosses into biography. The lab scenes drip with authenticity, likely because the author consulted neuroscientists, but the experiments described defy current science. That blend of realism and imagination is what makes it so gripping—it’s not true, but it *could* be.
I can confirm it’s original fiction. The setting borrows from modern dystopian vibes—think corporate espionage meets 'Black Mirror'—but the events are invented. The protagonist’s backstory, involving a failed clone experiment, mirrors controversies around CRISPR gene editing, but the details are exaggerated for drama. The book’s strength is how it twists real-world anxieties (privacy, tech monopolies) into a wild, cinematic narrative. Fans of psychological thrillers will love how it walks the line between plausible and preposterous.
Not based on true events, but it’s stuffed with real-world parallels. The corporate cover-ups resemble big-tech scandals, and the creator’s downfall mirrors hubris tales like Tesla or Theranos. The science is fictionalized, but the ethical dilemmas—playing god, sacrificing morality for progress—are ripped from today’s headlines. It’s a fantasy that feels uncomfortably possible.
2025-06-13 03:39:13
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Becoming Perfect Before the End
E. L. Knox
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The doctor told me I had 72 hours left, unless I got access to the newest experimental treatment. However, there was only one slot available, and my husband Bowen Liddell gave it to my sister Yvonne Lawson instead.
"Her kidney failure is more critical," he said.
I nodded and swallowed the white pills that would only speed up my death. In the time I had left, I got a lot done.
The lawyer's hand trembled as he passed me the documents. "Are you sure you want to transfer the two billion dollars in shares?"
I replied, "Yes. Give them to Yvonne."
My daughter, Candice Liddell, was giggling in Yvonne's arms. "Mommy Yvonne bought me a new dress!"
I said, "It looks beautiful. Make sure you always listen to Mommy Yvonne, okay?"
The art gallery I built from the ground up now had Yvonne's name on the sign.
"You're too kind, Kathy," she said, crying.
I told her, "You'll run it even better than I ever did."
I even signed all my parents' trust fund away.
That was when Bowen finally gave me his first genuine smile in years. "Kathleen, you've changed. You're not so aggressive anymore... You're beautiful like this."
Indeed. This dying version of me finally became the 'perfect Kathleen Sullivan' in their eyes—obedient, generous, and no longer argumentative.
The 72-hour countdown had already begun, and I couldn't help but wonder what they would remember when my heart stopped for good.
The good wife who 'finally learned to let go', or the woman who completed her revenge by dying?
Love Story in Heaven is a story about the love story of the God of Fire - León de Fuego, the god with the greatest power in heaven. He is someone who has the ability to create happiness and suffering for mankind, as well as destroy an entire nation. However, he is a very lonely person, living a boring life in heaven. One day, he happened to see goddesses modeling people with clay, he chose the cleanest and whitest clay to mold an extremely beautiful girl. Every day, the God of Fire - León de Fuego talks to the statue. The god of fire's close friend is the Thunder God Rey de Los Lobos, afraid that his friend would break the law of heaven, he threw the statue down to earth. The statue was shattered, but León de Fuego's tears saved it. A thousand years later, the statue became a goddess named Palomas Blancas. And their love story continues. During a feast in heaven, the Fire God León de Fuego met Palomas Blancas again. However, she pretends not to know him for fear that her love will affect both of them because heaven is absolutely devoid of love. That still couldn't stop his love for Palomas Blancas. He often covered Palomas Blancas when she arbitrarily visited the human world many times. Finally, the Fire God León de Fuego and the Goddess Palomas Blancas were also happy together by giving up all the privileges of the gods to become human.
In existence shaped by order and opposition, two beings cross a line that was never meant to be crossed.
An angel and a devil, born from different realms, find themselves drawn together in a way neither side could have predicted. What begins as closeness turns into something deeper, something forbidden. Love.
But Heaven, the very force that created love, refuses to accept it.
Their bond is seen as a flaw. A mistake. A defiance of everything they were meant to be.
Despite everything, they choose each other.
They try to hold on, to fight for what they feel, even as they are judged, even as they are pushed apart by the very laws that shaped them.
If love was created by Heaven, why is it denied?
And when even love is seen as wrong...
can they change the fate that was already decided for them?
Ukiyo Fujii is an ordinary student who desired to have the most beautiful voice and become the greatest idol of all time. One day, while walking at a shrine, she accidentally to met a god who offered to grant her this wish. Little does she know that in return, this god has to live with her.
This dark god, Shinrin Kurai, was exiled to earth by the higher gods as punishment. As part of his plan to return to the godly realms, he needed the help of a human with a strong desire and passion inside her heart. Now, beginning his journey with Ukiyo Fujii, other former gods started to interfere turning their adventure to a deadly quest.
To protect Ukiyo, Shinrin may risk losing his freedom and the ticket to return to his realm forever. Drawn into Ukiyo's world, will he choose to stay with her? Will Ukiyo accept him when she finds out that this gift is not permanent and he used her as living bait for his return?
This is the story of the biologist and the creature her father created. Cara received a plane ticket from her father the day before her birthday. Her father invited her to visit "the greatest of the century".When she arrived, she did not see her father but was locked up with the creature. The creature is the most beautiful than ever. But its IQ is only 8 years old human...So Cara treated him like a little brother. Is he really only eight years old human? I do not think so;)Yes, day after day, they fall in love.
After seven years of marriage, Kayla Campbell had finally become pregnant.
But during her prenatal checkup, she noticed something was wrong. The space to fill in the name of the child’s father was blank.
She instinctively spoke up.
"The father should be Luke Hudson. Was it missed during registration?"
In Havenport's upper circles, almost everyone was aware of how devoted the head of the Hudson family was to his wife. He loved her so deeply that he had once been willing to undergo a vasectomy for her.
"Kayla, watching you take medicine and get injections again and again breaks my heart. You're everything to me. If having a child means you have to suffer like this, then I would rather never have one."
Perhaps the heavens were touched by them.
Luke was a man known for his decisive and ruthless nature. On the day they confirmed her pregnancy, he had knelt and pulled her into his arms, crying until his voice gave out. He had personally handled all the medical registration paperwork afterward.
With how carefully he treated her, a mistake like this made no sense.
The staff member was clearly new to the job, and she worked at the computer for a long while before finally nodding.
"The father's name was blank when the file was created."
As she continued checking, her expression changed slightly.
"But Mr. Hudson's name does appear in another patient's record. He's listed as the father of her child. The mother's name is Stephanie Campbell. Do you know her?"
Kayla froze.
Her thoughts went blank.
People in their social circle all knew Kayla's background. She had been adopted by the Campbell family. But when the family finally found their biological daughter, they accused Kayla of having taken their real daughter's place for years and kicked her out without mercy.
That biological daughter was Stephanie.
I stumbled upon 'Perfect Love' while browsing for romance dramas last weekend, and it immediately caught my attention. The emotional depth and raw honesty in the characters' interactions made me wonder if it was inspired by real events. After digging into interviews with the screenwriter, I discovered that while the central love story is fictional, many of the smaller moments—like the couple's arguments over trivial habits or the way they reconcile—were pulled from the writer's own experiences and observations of friends.
What fascinates me is how the show blends these authentic snippets into a larger, more dramatic narrative. The scene where the leads reunite at a train station, for example, was apparently based on a real couple's tearful goodbye that the writer witnessed years ago. It’s these little touches of reality that make the fictional love story feel so relatable.
I stumbled upon 'Becoming Perfect Before the End' while browsing through some lesser-known indie titles, and its premise immediately caught my attention. The story follows a protagonist who undergoes intense self-improvement in a race against time, blending psychological drama with surreal elements. After digging around forums and author interviews, it seems the work is purely fictional, though it draws inspiration from real-life pressures like societal expectations and personal growth struggles. The writer mentioned in a podcast that they wanted to explore the 'what if' of perfectionism taken to extremes, rather than recount actual events.
What really struck me was how the themes resonate—like that scene where the main character burns out trying to master everything overnight. It reminded me of friends who’ve chased impossible standards. While not based on a true story, its emotional core feels uncomfortably real, which might be why some readers assume it’s autobiographical. The ending’s ambiguity left me staring at the ceiling for a good hour, though!