A Doll's House

私が誘拐された時、夫は毎月28回誘拐される幼馴染を救っていた
私が誘拐された時、夫は毎月28回誘拐される幼馴染を救っていた
夫の柊南斗はボディーガード協会の総隊長だが、私が犯人に殺されそうになっているその時、彼は腕の中でしくしく泣く幼馴染を慰めていた。 犯人たちがサービスエリアで食事をしている隙に、私は冷静に五回、彼の仕事用の電話にかけた。 やっと繋がったと思ったら、電話口から彼の激しい叱責が飛んできた。 「媛は今、犯人から助け出されたばかりで、俺が必要なんだ。もし俺に家に帰ってきてほしいなら、嫉妬で誘拐されたふりをしたり、猿真似みたいなことはするな!」 傍らで佐藤媛が可愛らしい声を上げているのが聞こえた。彼と口論している時間はない。私は協会のホットラインに電話をかけた。 しかし、オペレーターから、三十分前に柊南斗が佐藤媛を救うため、市内のボディーガードを総動員したと告げられた。 犯人たちが戻ってきて、柊南斗がボディーガードを総動員し、誘拐された少女を救出した武勇伝を嘲笑っていた。 私の記憶が正しければ、佐藤媛が誘拐されたのは、今月で二十八回目だ。 犯人がライフルとスタンガンを持ってこちらに歩いてくるのを見て、私は絶望のあまり目を閉じた。 死ぬ前に、私は最後の力を振り絞って、彼にメッセージを送った。 「どんなことがあっても、私はあなたを愛していた。さようなら」
9 Chapters
腹黒くて執念深いドS女子×ドMな純真の優等生男子
腹黒くて執念深いドS女子×ドMな純真の優等生男子
腹黒くて執念深いドS女子×純真のドMな優等生男子 最近、学業優等生の大岡新平が少し様子がおかしかった。 いつも顔を真っ赤にして、コソコソとキャンパス内を歩いているのが見えた。 彼をついて、何が起こっているのか確かめることにした。 そして、廃墟となった建物の中で、彼がカメラに向かって......
6 Chapters
雪桜婚〜すべてはスマホ間違いから始まった〜
雪桜婚〜すべてはスマホ間違いから始まった〜
見た目はそこそこ奇麗なのに、なぜか男性運がない。鈴山雪音。働かない父を見て育った彼女の夢は安定職の男性と結婚して幸せな家庭を築くこと。ただそれだけ。  そんなある日、婚約者であった絢斗が転勤先で同僚に寝取られた。  会社にも婚約者がいる話をしていた雪音は、ショックのあまり日常生活にも影響が出始めていた。  一人、部屋で飲んだくれの日々が続いていた雪音は仕事でもミスばかり。  桜が咲いているのになぜか雪が降っていた、そんな幻想的でおかしなある日のこと。  会社に行く途中で雪音は、スマホを触っていた龍太郎を避けようとして、雪で滑って、転び、スマホを落としてしまう。 「パンツ、見えてますよ」 龍太郎から笑われた雪音は急いでスマホを拾うも、それはぶつかった龍太郎のスマホで、スマホが入れ違いになってしまい、彼が不倫していることを知ったのだった……。  家庭の事情で、歪んだ性格のドSな龍太郎から溺愛される日々がなぜか始まった。  努力家で身分違いの彼との恋に悩み、自分の生きる道、自分を心から愛することを知り、本当に自分のしたい仕事を見つけて成長する雪音。  そんなスマホ間違いから始まる恋愛と結婚のお話。
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47 Chapters
生きた魔モノの開き方
生きた魔モノの開き方
 ヴェルミリオン帝国の第七監獄《グラットリエ》――その地下には、生きた魔物を解体・調理する異端の調理場がある。そこで終身刑の囚人であり調理人のエルドリス・カンザラが演者を務めるのは、生放送料理番組『30分クッキング』。彼女は魔物を生かしたまま切り開き、極上の料理へと変えていく。調理助手《アシスタント》兼監督官として配属された新米役人イオルク・ネイファは、その狂気に満ちた調理を前に戦慄するが、彼女を止めることはできない。  番組は今日も進行する。血と痛みの先にある、一皿のために。
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81 Chapters
crisis
crisis
背中についた爪の痕が、痛いのか熱いのか── 僕に溺れている君があまりにも愛おしい── 鬼畜サイコパス教師×強がりヤンキーの恋の馴れ初め 生きるのが下手くそな、先生と芯の物語。 知る所と知らない所のすれ違いが交差して、想いは交われない。 互いに分かり合えてきたはずなのに、肝心な所を知らない。 そこへ加わる過去の異物。 誰よりも自分を知らないから行き違う想い。 相手の機微には無意識で敏感なのに。 バカと天然と鈍感は横並びで、息衝く愛を蹴落としてゆく。 ※タイトルについて *:先生視点 #:芯視点 匿名での感想やメッセージなどはコチラへ https://ofuse.me/e/32936
評価が足りません
53 Chapters
The Way of the Dragon
The Way of the Dragon
Zephyr Khan, the King of Alchemy, was reborn in his youth. He took the Ancient Draconic Way to refine his body and cultivate supreme sword skills! In this life, he was destined to ascend to the top of martial arts, Even the most gifted one was inferior to him!
9.7
4240 Chapters

Who Is Robert The Doll

3 answers2025-02-24 08:16:16

"Robert the Doll? 'Aah, ' you are putting it on the table again. Robert is an extraordinary artifact, held now at Fort East Martello Museum in Key West. It was first owned by Robert Eugene Otto from the early 1900s and is believed to have strange supernatural abilities. Shadowy stories shroud this doll - odd events, voices issuing from nowhere, changes in his position! And let's not even start talking about the 'curse' brought on by the doll. Yes, a little bit creepy but also intriguing beyond words! Come and visit him, just be sure to ask first if you can take any photographs of him!

Is Robert The Doll Real

5 answers2025-02-27 03:14:09

Certainly. Robert the Doll is a real doll, oddly enough, that is now part of history on display at Key West Museum in Florida. However, The stories people tell about his supposed supernatural acts also vary. Many people, indeed mainly those who felt strange happenings on their persons as a result of not showing respect towards Robert, are convinced he has supernatural powers. Skeptics believe that these types of stories are nothing but superstitions and coincidences.

How Old Is Dream Doll

2 answers2025-02-20 09:53:33

Dream Doll, the talented rapper, was born on February 28, 1992, which would make her 29 years old right now.

Who Is The Antagonist In 'The Last Russian Doll'?

2 answers2025-06-29 01:45:28

I've been obsessed with 'The Last Russian Doll' since I first picked it up—the antagonist isn't just some mustache-twirling villain but a layered, haunting presence that lingers long after the book ends. The story revolves around Tonya, a woman unraveling her family's dark history, and the antagonist is this shadowy figure named Dmitri Volkov. He's not just a person; he's a symbol of the generational trauma and political brutality that claws at Tonya's lineage. Dmitri starts as a charming Soviet official with a smile that hides knives, but as the layers peel back, you see the monstrosity of his actions—how he weaponizes power to destroy families, including Tonya's. The brilliance of his character is how he morphs across timelines, from the Stalinist purges to the chaotic post-Soviet era, always adapting, always surviving while others crumble.

What makes Dmitri terrifying isn't his physical dominance but his psychological grip. He manipulates with whispers, not shouts, turning loved ones against each other with bureaucratic coldness. There's a scene where he condemns a man to the gulags with a signature, then compliments his wife's perfume—it's that casual cruelty that chills. The book doesn't paint him as a lone wolf, either; he's part of a system that breeds monsters, and that's where the real horror lies. Yet, he's not devoid of humanity. Flashbacks show glimpses of a younger Dmitri, idealistic before the system warped him, which adds this tragic complexity. You almost pity him—until he does something unforgivable again. The way he intertwines with Tonya's present-day quest, how his legacy is a puzzle she must solve to free herself, is storytelling at its finest. He's less a man and more a ghost, haunting every page.

How Does 'The Last Russian Doll' End?

1 answers2025-06-30 08:21:43

I just finished 'The Last Russian Doll' last night, and that ending left me staring at the ceiling for hours—it’s the kind of conclusion that lingers like a haunting melody. The book wraps up with a brutal yet poetic symmetry, tying together three generations of women in a way that’s both unexpected and inevitable. The protagonist, Rosie, finally uncovers the truth about her mother’s past in Soviet Russia, revealing how a single act of rebellion reverberated through decades. The final scenes alternate between a snowy Moscow in the 1990s and the same streets during Stalin’s purges, with Rosie literally standing in her grandmother’s footsteps as she pieces together the family’s fractured legacy. The doll motif comes full circle when she discovers a hidden compartment in the heirloom nesting doll—not gold or jewels, but a scrap of paper with a name that changes everything. It’s not a happy ending, but it’s cathartic. Rosie burns the doll in the end, letting the fire consume the secrets that poisoned her family. The ashes scatter like the lies she’s dismantled, and for the first time, she walks away without looking back.

The beauty of the ending lies in its refusal to soften history’s blows. Rosie doesn’t magically fix the past or heal all wounds; instead, she learns to carry the weight without collapsing under it. The last chapter mirrors the opening scene—another train ride, another woman fleeing—but this time, Rosie isn’t running from something. She’s moving toward a future where the ghosts no longer whisper. The author doesn’t spoon-feed resolutions, either. We never learn if the KGB officer who tormented her grandmother faced justice, or if the stolen paintings resurface. But that ambiguity feels intentional. Some threads are left dangling like loose stitches, reminding us that history isn’t a neatly wrapped package. What we do get is Rosie’s quiet reckoning—her decision to translate her mother’s suppressed poetry into English, finally giving those silenced words a voice. The final line gutted me: 'The doll was empty now, and so was I.' It’s not closure; it’s liberation through emptiness. After 400 pages of obsession, she’s free to fill herself with something new.

What Is The Main Mystery In 'The Last Russian Doll'?

1 answers2025-06-30 12:25:34

I recently devoured 'The Last Russian Doll' in one sitting, and the central mystery still lingers in my mind like the scent of old books. The story revolves around a Matryoshka doll—those nested Russian dolls—that holds secrets spanning generations. The protagonist, a woman unraveling her family’s dark past, discovers the outermost doll carries a cryptic message hinting at a lost treasure and a betrayal during the Russian Revolution. But here’s the twist: each smaller doll reveals a fragment of the truth, tied to a different era, from Stalin’s purges to the fall of the Soviet Union. The real enigma isn’t just the treasure’s location; it’s why her grandmother, a ballerina exiled to Siberia, deliberately scattered the clues across time. The layers of deception are as intricate as the dolls themselves—some hiding love letters, others bloodstained maps. The most haunting mystery? The identity of the ‘Winter Prince,’ a shadowy figure who seems to connect every tragedy in the family.

The novel’s brilliance lies in how it intertwines historical upheaval with personal ghosts. One doll contains a scrap of a Pushkin poem, another a bullet casing—each artifact a breadcrumb leading to a chilling revelation about the protagonist’s own lineage. The deeper she digs, the more she questions whether the treasure is even material or something far more abstract, like the truth about her mother’s disappearance. The final doll, no bigger than a thumbnail, holds the ultimate question: was the family’s suffering orchestrated, or merely collateral damage in history’s chaos? The way the author blends folklore with Cold War espionage makes this mystery unforgettable. It’s not just about solving a puzzle; it’s about confronting the echoes of choices made in desperation.

Why Is 'The Last Russian Doll' Compared To 'The Nesting Dolls'?

2 answers2025-06-30 09:45:52

Reading 'The Last Russian Doll' immediately reminded me of the intricate symbolism in nesting dolls. The novel layers its narrative much like how these dolls hide within one another, each layer revealing deeper truths about the characters and their histories. The protagonist's journey mirrors the process of opening a matryoshka doll—every chapter peels back another layer of her family's dark past, exposing secrets that were carefully concealed. The comparison isn't just about structure; it’s about the emotional weight each layer carries. The outer doll might be polished and perfect, but the inner ones are raw, unfinished, just like the protagonist’s understanding of herself.

The nesting doll metaphor also extends to the themes of identity and heritage. The novel explores how people present different versions of themselves to the world, much like the dolls’ painted exteriors. Yet, the core often remains unchanged, a truth that the protagonist grapples with as she uncovers her family’s Soviet-era secrets. The cyclical nature of trauma and resilience is another parallel—each generation’s struggles are nested within the next, repeating patterns until someone finally breaks them. The author’s use of this symbolism elevates the story from a simple family saga to a profound exploration of memory and legacy.

Is 'The Last Russian Doll' Based On A True Story?

3 answers2025-06-30 18:44:06

I've been diving into 'The Last Russian Doll' lately, and let me tell you, it’s the kind of book that blurs the line between reality and fiction so masterfully that you’ll find yourself Googling historical events halfway through. While the novel isn’t a direct retelling of a true story, it’s steeped in real-world history—specifically, the tumultuous periods of Russia’s past. The author stitches together fragments of the Bolshevik Revolution, Stalin’s purges, and the fall of the Soviet Union into a narrative that feels hauntingly authentic. The way the protagonist’s family secrets unravel against this backdrop makes it easy to forget you’re reading fiction.

What really sells the illusion is the meticulous research. The descriptions of Leningrad under siege, the whispers of dissent in Soviet kitchens, even the trivial details like the weight of a ration card—they all scream authenticity. I’ve read memoirs from that era, and the novel mirrors their tone uncannily. The doll motif? It’s a brilliant metaphor for layers of hidden truth, but no, there isn’t a literal ‘last doll’ buried in archives somewhere. The emotional core, though—the generational trauma, the sacrifices—that’s undeniably real. It’s fiction wearing history’s skin, and that’s what makes it so powerful.

How Does 'The Last Russian Doll' Explore Russian History?

1 answers2025-06-30 22:06:14

'The Last Russian Doll' digs into Russian history like a treasure hunter uncovering lost artifacts. The novel weaves together the turbulent 20th century, from the Bolshevik Revolution to the collapse of the Soviet Union, through the eyes of women in one family. It’s not just a backdrop—it’s a character itself, shaping their choices and scars. The way the author ties personal tragedies to historical events is brutal yet poetic. You see the Siege of Leningrad not through dry statistics but through a grandmother’s hands, permanently trembling from starvation. The Stalinist purges aren’t just dates in a textbook; they’re the reason a character burns letters instead of keeping them. The book nails how ordinary people survive eras where history feels like a landslide burying them alive.

What’s genius is how it mirrors Russia’s cyclical pain. Revolutions, wars, repressions—they echo across generations like a cursed heirloom. The ‘doll’ metaphor isn’t cute nesting toys; it’s layers of trauma passed down. When a character in the 1990s section repeats her great-aunt’s 1930s survival tactics during economic collapse, it hits hard. The novel also smashes romanticized Western views of Russia. No ballet-and-samovar clichés here. Instead, you get the sticky reality of corruption, the exhaustion of queues, and the dark humor that keeps people sane. The rare glimpses of joy—like stealing apples from a collective farm or dancing to smuggled Beatles records—feel like acts of rebellion. History here isn’t something you study; it’s something that hunts you.

Where Can I Buy 'Dream Doll: The Ruth Handler Story' Online?

5 answers2025-06-19 10:25:38

You can find 'Dream Doll: The Ruth Handler Story' on major online retailers like Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Book Depository. Amazon usually has both new and used copies, including Kindle editions if you prefer e-books. For collectors or those wanting signed editions, checking AbeBooks or eBay might yield rare finds. Local independent bookstores often list their inventory online through platforms like Bookshop.org, which supports small businesses.

If you're looking for audiobook versions, Audible and Google Play Books are solid options. Libraries sometimes offer digital loans via OverDrive or Libby, though availability varies. Don’t forget to compare prices across sites—discounts fluctuate, especially during sales events. Some niche academic sellers like Better World Books also stock it, occasionally with free shipping.

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