According To Yes

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According to his secretary
According to his secretary
You’re not supposed to want straight men. Carson Bitters wants nothing more than to feel his secretary inside him. He dreams of it every day. You’re not supposed to fall in love with them. They won’t love you back. But Carson can’t stop longing for Asher Hall; the man his homophobic father handpicked for him. A living, breathing, giant NO. And yet, every time Asher speaks, every glance, every careless brush of his hand, Carson finds himself wanting more. Needing more. And what starts as longing could destroy everything, or make it unforgettable.
10
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93 Chapters
Yes Daddy
Yes Daddy
"Good... I want to see you play with yourself and unless you have my permission, you can't f*cking c*m" "Yes, Daddy" * MONALISA I thought I had a problem being aroused. My ex boyfriend broke up with me for being insensitive to his touches and I thought I really had a problem with myself until I met him, Lucius Devine, my late father's best friend. He could make me wet just by staring at me and his slightest touches could make the 'insensitive' me shudder and c*m. Yet, he wanted boundaries, he wanted to be a father figure to me but I didn't want him as a father. I wanted him. I wanted him to be my daddy. I wanted to be his little submissive sl*t and I was going to break his boundaries until I become Daddy's Little Sub.
9.8
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116 Chapters
Yes Master
Yes Master
Anita, a woman as thick as pudding and quirky as a genius because she was one, meets the man of her dreams after she has to step back from her job as a surgeon. You would think that her accident was the end of her story but it just became her new beginning. While learning that the main characters in horror stories do exist, she falls in love with a werewolf with a strong liking for BDSM and making her panties wet with just a look. Anita soon discovers through her contact with Andrew, the main ML, that she has been living a lie all these years, but when she finally finds out what makes her so different from her family members, she overhears Andrew talking about a situation that has far-reaching consequences for both humans and supernatural creatures. Anita joins forces with Andrew to set things right before it is too late while falling deeper in love with her wolf and embracing her quirks which may be the only solution to save everybody. Our FL also has to deal with crazy bitches who believe that Andrew could do better, but Anita refutes those claims adamantly. How could Andrew find somebody as cute and as resourceful as her? Plus, she already licked him, so he belongs to her as much as she belongs to him.
Not enough ratings
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15 Chapters
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Yes Boss!
Yes Boss!
Savannah Tresscot is loud, sarcastic and not afraid to voice what she thinks about anyone. Not to mention that she can beat any sailor at a cussing competition. Plain on the outside but some serious secrets to hide, she’s totally not PA material. Yet, she gets miraculously hired by Synclair Group of Companies by a stroke of luck. Nathan Synclair is cold, collected and a hardcore businessman. Hot as on the outside but a complete mess in terms of organizing his life, he is the top industrialist in the country...in desperate need of a PA. His only option is the one who does not throw herself at him during the interview. And what better than a person he already knows, the creepy-nerd-turned-hot-graduate from his high school that he hadn't seen in years. So what happens when two completely opposite personalities meet and face their match? Will they be as aloof as they were back in school or will love give them a second chance? And can Savannah trust him with her deepest, darkest secrets, even though they might cost her everything she has worked so hard to achieve?
10
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40 Chapters
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YES, DADDY
YES, DADDY
Logan grabbed hold of her hair and yanked it back so she could look up at him. "You got that?" He questioned her while casting a stern gaze into her eyes. "Yes," Stephanie whimpered, tears streaming down her cheeks. His grip on her hair was so tight. She's a virgin, and this isn't how she had imagined her first night to be, especially with her own stepfather.Logan smacked her face and roared fiercely, "Yes, what?" "Yes, Daddy," Stephenie cried out with teary eyes."Good, now get on your fours, legs spread out for Daddy on the bed", Logan commanded sternly then released his grip on her hair, and she complied. ********* It all started when Stephanie's single mother weds a 49-year-old, single hot daddy. Shortly after the wedding, her mother was killed in an accident, and the 19-year-old virgin Stephanie was forced to take over her mother's place as the bride for the night. But then everything changed for the worse the moment her ex-boyfriend appeared in the picture. He took her virginity, and his father fucked her hard until she became addicted to them and couldn't stop requesting more. "Yes, Daddy. I will always be urs, your submissive, and a bitch for being a bad girl for you daddy." Warning! This book contains steamy scene and real dark scene that is strictly recommended for 18+ only.
9.3
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33 Chapters
Yes Daddies
Yes Daddies
"Fuck, I am going to cum inside your tight pussy, Daisy" "I am close too. Want me to cum on your pretty face?" "Yes. Yes, daddies." * The Drakton brothers have never agreed on anything in years. Two rivals, deep hatred. They are hellbent on never agreeing on anything and sharing a woman? It was the last thing any of the brothers would have ever imagined. The last thing until I came through. I wanted them both. They both wanted me. None wanted to give me up and I didn't want to give any up. And for the first time since I knew my father's two friends, they both agreed on one thing. To fuck me. To share me. And I wanted it more than anything. It was wrong. Desiring, wanting or lusting after one of them was wrong but wanting both? Nothing could be more wrong, more forbidden and yet nothing could feel more right and hotter.
10
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113 Chapters

Who Forged The Amulet According To The Lore Book?

2 Answers2025-08-31 05:30:03

Wild detail that always sticks with me: the lore book called 'The Codex of Hollow Paths' pins the forging on a single, almost tragic figure—Maelin Emberhand, who the margins call the Emberwright. The book paints him less like a mythic demiurge and more like a weary, brilliant smith who lived in a cliffside forge. According to the Codex, Maelin forged the amulet during the Night of Falling Stars, using a fallen star's iron, a strand of moon-silk, and a single tear that the sea goddess gifted him after he saved a drowned village. The ritual was guided by Seris, the moon-priestess; she sang the binding song while Maelin hammered, and the final blow is said to have split a part of his memory into the gem at the center.

I love that the Codex doesn't present this as gospel so much as a layered story: it includes eyewitness accounts, marginal sketches of the forge, and a council debate where a historian argues Maelin only fashioned the casing while Seris truly imbued the amulet's power. That debate is part of what makes it feel alive—every reader brings their own bias. There are also illustrations showing Maelin with soot under his nails and a softness in his eyes, which humanizes a figure who could easily have been exaggerated into a pure archetype.

On top of the legend itself, the Codex records consequences. It claims Maelin's memories embedded in the gem can be unlocked, which explains why several later rulers obsessed over possessing the amulet: it was both weapon and archive. Scholars in the margins tie this to the disappearance of Maelin’s lineage—some say they wandered into dream-lands; others whisper they were hunted. I first read that part in a cramped secondhand bookshop, and I kept thinking about the ethics of forging objects that hold people’s minds.

If you're into further digging, the Codex cross-references 'Ballads of the Sea-Giver' and a fragmentary diary called 'Ash and Memory'. Whether you take Maelin as the lone forger or as a collaborator with Seris, the story reads like a cautionary tale about craft, power, and the cost of making something meant to outlive you. I still picture him at the anvil whenever I think of that amulet.

What Inspired When Love Turns To Ash According To The Author?

3 Answers2025-10-20 13:35:29

I can still picture the interview where the author described the spark for 'When Love Turns to Ash' — it wasn’t a single lightning strike so much as several small, burning embers coming together. They talked about a breakup that didn’t have villains or heroes, just two people who quietly drifted apart, and how the ordinary, mundane things that once felt warm suddenly turned brittle. That personal heartbreak is the emotional backbone, but the author layered it with wider images: a town hit by wildfires, smoldering photographs, and the smell of smoke that sticks to memory.

Beyond personal loss, the author said they were inspired by mythic ideas of renewal — the phoenix motif, for instance — and by literature that treats love as both fragile and incendiary. They referenced old family letters that had been singed on the edges, which became a literal and figurative motif in the book. There’s also a political undercurrent: they witnessed communities where grief was communal, where climate and neglect made loss routine, and they wanted to make that shared sorrow palpable on the page.

Reading it after knowing all that made the book feel like an elegy and a wake at the same time. I found myself thinking about how small decisions can calcify into ash, and how stories salvage meaning from the ruins — that’s what stuck with me most.

Which Characters Die According To Outlander Season 7 Synopsis?

3 Answers2025-12-30 13:55:22

Wild night to be a fan — the official season-seven blurbs for 'Outlander' are surprisingly coy about exact names. What the synopses do make clear is that this season leans hard into heavy consequences: loss, the fallout of violence, and a community shaken by death. The promotional text and episode descriptions tend to hint at tragedies that ripple through the Ridge and across the timelines without handing you a neat roll call of who bites it. That’s intentional; they want viewers to feel the shock when it lands on screen.

If you’re looking for specifics, the short version is that the showrunners kept major spoilers out of the teasers. The biggest personal takeaway I had while following the publicity was how the season frames loss as part of the fabric of the story rather than a single headline event. Main pillars like Jamie and Claire are not presented as being eliminated in the synopses — the emphasis is on how their world is altered by deaths around them, and how survivors deal with those consequences. I found that approach emotionally effective, even if it made me impatient for full episode recaps. It felt raw and faithful to the book's tone, and left me buzzing after each episode.

When Does Outlander Season 8 Start According To Cast Interviews?

3 Answers2025-12-27 13:06:32

I’ve been following every cast interview and panel like they’re little breadcrumb trails, and what came through strongest was a clear sense that 'Outlander' season 8 was aiming for a late-2024 rollout. In a few sit-downs, the leads talked about finishing principal photography earlier in the year and then heading into lengthy post-production, which they stressed would take time because of the scale — battle sequences, visual effects, and the emotional beats that need careful editing. Several interviews hinted at a fall premiere window rather than a summer drop, with the cast sounding cautiously optimistic about an autumn launch once the network locked the schedule.

Beyond the timing talk, cast members also teased the tone: they described the season as conclusive and heavier in parts, which fits why post-production would be meticulous. A couple of interviewers asked about splitting the final run; the cast didn’t flatly confirm a two-part release but didn’t shut the idea down either, saying only that Starz would announce the official plan. So, if you’ve been tracking interviews rather than press releases, the consensus felt like late 2024 for a first batch of episodes, with the caveat that an exact date would come from the network.

I’m keeping my calendar loosely blocked around the fall months and hoping for trailers in advance — nothing beats that first look. I’m honestly buzzing to see how they wrap everything up.

Why Are Booktok Books So Bad According To Publishing Experts?

5 Answers2025-05-09 05:20:21

I’ve noticed that publishing experts often criticize 'BookTok' books for prioritizing marketability over literary depth. Many of these books are designed to go viral, focusing on tropes and emotional hooks that resonate quickly with audiences but lack nuanced storytelling or character development. This approach can lead to formulaic plots and shallow narratives, which, while entertaining, don’t always stand the test of time.

Another issue is the oversaturation of certain genres, like romance and young adult fiction, which dominate BookTok. While there’s nothing inherently wrong with these genres, the emphasis on trends can stifle diversity in storytelling. Publishers often chase what’s popular, leading to a flood of similar books that cater to the same audience, leaving little room for innovative or experimental works.

Additionally, the fast-paced nature of TikTok encourages quick consumption rather than deep engagement. Books that thrive on BookTok often rely on dramatic twists or emotional highs that can be easily summarized in a 15-second video. This can result in stories that feel rushed or underdeveloped, prioritizing instant gratification over lasting impact. While BookTok has undeniably brought attention to reading, it’s worth questioning whether it’s fostering a culture of depth or just fleeting entertainment.

Is Queen'S Gambit A True Story According To Walter Tevis?

3 Answers2025-11-24 02:05:37

No — it isn’t a literal true story, and I actually love how Walter Tevis used fiction to make something feel truer than a straight biography. I grew absorbed in 'The Queen's Gambit' because Tevis braided believable emotional truth with invented events. Beth Harmon is a made-up prodigy: her life, relationships, and the specific arc of the book are creations of Tevis’s imagination. That said, the book resonates because Tevis brought in pieces of his own life — his familiarity with addiction and obsession, his talent for writing about competitive subcultures (he did wonders with pool in 'The Hustler'), and careful research into the chess world of the mid-20th century.

Because of that blend, the novel smells like lived experience without being a memoir. Tevis wasn’t claiming to be Beth or to have lived every scene; he used sympathetic truths — the loneliness, the reliance on substances to cope, the single-minded focus on a craft — to build a character who feels authentic. The result is a fictional portrait that teaches you about the pressures of competition and the era’s Cold War chess politics while remaining a novel first and foremost. I always come away impressed by how a fictional story can hit emotional accuracy harder than a straight history; it stayed with me long after I closed the book.

How To Be Kingdom Ready According To The Coming Golden Age?

1 Answers2026-02-14 19:58:40

The concept of being 'Kingdom Ready' as explored in 'The Coming Golden Age' is such a fascinating and layered topic. It's not just about personal spiritual preparation but also about aligning oneself with a broader vision of societal transformation. The book suggests that readiness involves both inner growth and outward action—cultivating virtues like compassion, humility, and wisdom while actively contributing to a world that reflects these values. I love how it frames this as a collective journey, where individual efforts ripple out to create larger change. It reminds me of how some of my favorite fantasy stories, like 'The Lord of the Rings', show small acts of courage paving the way for epic shifts.

One of the most striking ideas is the emphasis on 'awakening'—not just in a mystical sense, but as a call to heightened awareness of our interconnectedness. The book encourages practices like mindfulness, community service, and ethical living as ways to embody this readiness. It’s not about waiting passively for some distant future; it’s about co-creating that future now. I’ve found parallels in anime like 'Mushishi', where characters often grapple with harmony between humanity and the unseen forces around them. There’s a quiet urgency to the book’s message that feels both grounding and inspiring.

What really stuck with me is the balance between personal transformation and systemic change. The author doesn’t shy away from discussing economic justice, environmental stewardship, and cultural renewal as part of being 'Kingdom Ready.' It’s refreshing to see spirituality framed as something that isn’t just introspective but also fiercely practical. I’ve been trying to apply this by supporting local sustainability initiatives and engaging in more intentional dialogue with others. The book’s vision feels like a blend of the hopeful idealism in 'Studio Ghibli' films and the gritty determination of post-apocalyptic stories where characters rebuild society from the ground up.

At its core, 'The Coming Golden Age' makes readiness feel like an ongoing adventure—one that’s deeply personal yet universally relevant. It’s got me revisiting old favorites like 'Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind' with fresh eyes, seeing how its themes of healing a broken world resonate with the book’s ideas. Maybe being 'Kingdom Ready' is less about ticking off a checklist and more about staying open to growth, like a protagonist leveling up in an RPG, but with real-world stakes. Either way, it’s left me thinking about how small daily choices can be part of something much bigger.

What Do Readers Think Of Falling According To Goodreads Reviews And Ratings?

3 Answers2025-10-24 08:29:30

Readers' responses to the book "Falling" vary significantly across Goodreads, reflecting a spectrum of opinions that capture both admiration and critique. The novel, authored by T.J. Newman, has been categorized predominantly as a thrilling and action-packed read, with a strong premise that engages many. However, it has also faced criticism regarding character development and writing style. Some reviewers praised the book for its gripping narrative and fast-paced action, noting that it kept them engrossed throughout. For instance, one reader mentioned that they finished it in just a few hours due to its engaging plot. Conversely, a number of critiques highlighted that the characters felt one-dimensional and relied heavily on clichés. This disconnect left some readers feeling uninvested in their journeys. The overall rating on Goodreads hovers around 4 stars, indicating that while many enjoyed the experience, a fair share of readers found it lacking depth. Furthermore, discussions within the community have raised concerns about the portrayal of cultural stereotypes, particularly regarding the antagonists, suggesting that some readers found this aspect problematic. Ultimately, "Falling" presents a mixed bag of responses, with its thrilling premise appealing to some while leaving others wanting more depth and nuance.

How Do Older Women Make Good Lovers According To Psychology?

3 Answers2026-04-26 14:16:01

There’s a quiet magnetism to older women that psychology often ties to emotional maturity and self-assurance. Studies suggest they’re less likely to play games or seek validation through relationships, which creates a space of trust and comfort. Their life experience often translates into better communication—they know what they want and aren’t afraid to articulate it, which eliminates a lot of the guesswork that plagues younger relationships.

Another facet is their confidence in intimacy. Older women tend to prioritize mutual pleasure over performance, fostering a deeper connection. They’ve usually shed societal taboos about desire, making them more explorative and attentive partners. It’s not just about physicality; their emotional availability often makes the entire experience richer.

Who Are The Descendants Of The Khazar Empire According To The Thirteenth Tribe?

3 Answers2025-12-12 09:19:25

I stumbled upon 'The Thirteenth Tribe' by Arthur Koestler years ago, and it completely flipped my understanding of Ashkenazi Jewish origins. Koestler’s theory—which is controversial, to say the least—suggests that Ashkenazi Jews might descend from the Khazars, a medieval Turkic empire that converted to Judaism. The book argues that after the Khazar Empire collapsed, its people migrated westward, eventually blending into Eastern European Jewish communities. It’s a wild idea, and historians have debated it endlessly. Some dismiss it as fringe, while others find fragments of plausibility in genetic and linguistic traces. Personally, I love how it challenges conventional narratives, even if it’s not widely accepted.

What fascinates me most is how this theory intersects with identity politics. If true, it would reshape centuries of cultural belonging. Yet, most mainstream scholarship leans toward Ashkenazi roots in the Levant. Koestler’s work feels like a thought experiment—a 'what if' that lingers. I’d recommend reading it with a critical eye, but it’s undeniably gripping.

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