American Maverick: Target: American Gangsters

The American
The American
"What!" Ethan says in his all too familiar deep rude voice. "You hit me, which caused my coffee to spill all over me," I say, pointing out the obvious. "So, what do you want me to do about it," He speaks like he has done nothing wrong "You are supposed to say sorry," I say in a duh tone "And why should I." "Because that is what people with manners do." "I know that, but you don't deserve sorry from me." "Wow, really, and why is that." "Because black bitches like you don't deserve it." "I have told you times without number to stop calling me that," I say getting angry with his insults "Make me," Ethan says, taking a dangerous step closer to me. I don't say anything, but hiss and walk past him. I don't know why I even expected him to say anything better. It is Ethan, after all. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This is a story about two people who knew how to express the word hate more than anything else to one another. Ethan hates Adina more than anything in the world and would give anything to see her perish into thin air. While on the other hand Adina could careless about Ethan other than the fact that she won't let him walk all over her with his arrogant character. What happens when a big incident changes all that. How do these two different people deal with a feeling that is supposed to be forbidden to feel for the each other. Read to find out how the person you hate the most is the one person you can love the most.
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21 Chapters
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An American Cinderella
An American Cinderella
“I’d give up my whole kingdom to be with you. I want to be your Prince Charming.” Aria has a big heart but bigger problems. Her whole life is a mess thanks to her controlling stepmother. But when she’s knocked over- literally- by the hottest man she’s ever had the pleasure of tangling up her body with, everything changes. Henry Prescott, second-string rugby player for the Paradisa Royals, is funny, sweet, charming, and oh-so-sexy. He’s got a rock hard body and tackles her in bed as fiercely as he tackled her in the park. Knowing nothing about rugby, but absolutely intoxicated by his accent, she finds herself falling for him. There’s only one problem: Henry Prescott doesn’t exist. The man she thinks she loves is actually Prince Henry, second in line for the throne of the nation of Paradisa. He’s the man who Aria’s entire department has to impress for trade relations. And that makes Aria’s stepmother’s plans even more dangerous. He’s the man who could destroy her world or make all her dreams come true. He lied about being a prince… did he also lie about being in love? NYT Bestseller Krista Lakes brings you this brand new sweet-and-sexy royal romance. This standalone novel will have you cheering for an American princess’s happily ever after.
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40 Chapters
PLAYING FOR KEEPS: MY FAKE ALL AMERICAN QB BOYFRIEND
PLAYING FOR KEEPS: MY FAKE ALL AMERICAN QB BOYFRIEND
Jaxon Carter has everything a man could want—talent, fame, and a multimillion-dollar contract with the Titans almost within his grasp. The only problem? His reckless lifestyle stands between him and the contract. But his agency has told him that he can salvage the contract by cleaning up his image. Sienna Blake has two things in life she held dear —her ballet career and her house she grew up creating memories in. But when the bank forecloses her house and her ballet career barely covers her bills, she turns to her agency, only to be coldly rejected. When their paths cross at the agency, Jax sees an opportunity. She needs money. He needs stability. The solution? A fake relationship. He offers to clear her debts in exchange for playing the perfect doting girlfriend—just long enough it's beneficial to them. But what starts as a transaction soon spirals into something neither of them expected. Public appearances turn into stolen moments and close proximate intimacy blurs into something more. They find themselves trapped in a dangerous game—one where the greatest risk isn’t losing a contract or a house… but losing their hearts. And just when Sienna is ready to confess the biggest secret of all, Jax's past comes haunting them. Hurt and betrayed, she walks away without a second glance, choosing to protect her heart and her unborn child. Will Jax fight for what they had? Will he risk everything—including his career—to fight for the only thing that ever truly mattered?
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14 Chapters
The Mafia’s Target
The Mafia’s Target
Alana Solis gets a new job with a salary she can't refuse, however the contract failed to mention that the most feared man in the city is her boss. He's mysterious, ruthless and yet insanely irresistible. Nicholas Diaz lives a double life - he runs his own company whilst being the don of the Italian mafia. He will do anything to get revenge on the people who hurt his family. Even if it means destroying an innocent girls life. Lingering eyes and tempting touches grow into a sexual relationship where scars and old memories arise. Tropes CEO romance Mafia Romance Coworkers with Benefits Second Chance
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74 Chapters
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Her Bodyguard, His Target
Her Bodyguard, His Target
Hunter is no ordinary bodyguard. He’s an underboss in one of the most feared mafia families. Protecting Rebecca was never part of the plan. Infiltrating her mansion, getting close enough to strike… that was his mission. Rebecca thinks he’s just a gruff shadow hired to watch over her. But every smirk, every heated glance hides the truth: she isn’t just under his protection, she is his target. Duty demands he use her. Desire makes him want her. And when the lines blur, Hunter finds himself caught between loyalty to the family and a dangerous obsession he can’t control. In a world ruled by power, money, and betrayal, Hunter must decide: will he complete the mission… or sacrifice it all for the woman who was never meant to matter?
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71 Chapters
Not Her Usual Target
Not Her Usual Target
“He is the successor of a billionaire!” After breaking up with her “sugar daddy”,Avery decided to take the aim on the youngest billionaire in the country who she encountered on the rainy day. Avery smirked and walked up to him. The wave and curl of her blonde hair gave her sensu-ality and youth. She stopped when she’s inches from his face, her rosy lips were so charming and alluring that few mans can resist the tempta-tion. “So you are interested in me. You liked what you saw in the con-dominium.” “Yes, you are pretty but I don’t think I am that interested. He smiled politely and slowly moved his body away.He gave the umbrella to her as if nothing had happened,“I’m sorry.” It was the first time in Avery’s life that she tasted the failure. “What’s up with this man? How dare he rejected me! The asshole man!” “I must captive the guy’s heart!” Avery was determined.Not Her Usual Target is created by Sunshine Lee, an EGlobal Creative Publishing signed author.
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50 Chapters

What Age Group Does Bud Not Buddy Target?

5 Answers2025-10-17 22:56:13

Flip through most middle-grade shelves and 'Bud, Not Buddy' often pops up alongside other staples for upper-elementary and early-middle-school readers. I usually tell people it’s aimed squarely at kids around 9 to 13 years old — think grades 4 through 7. The protagonist, Bud, is about ten, which makes his voice and perspective very accessible to that age group. The language is straightforward but emotionally rich, and the plot moves at a pace that keeps reluctant readers engaged without talking down to them.

Beyond age brackets, I love pointing out why teachers and caregivers favor this book: it deals with serious themes like poverty, loss, identity, and resilience in a way that’s honest but age-appropriate. The historical setting (the Great Depression) doubles as a gentle history lesson, and Bud’s humor lightens the heavier moments. Older kids and even teens can get a lot from the novel too — there’s emotional depth and social context that rewards rereading. For younger siblings, reading aloud with parental guidance works well, and many classrooms use it for discussions about empathy and perseverance. Overall, it’s a perfect middle-grade gem that still sticks with me every time I revisit Bud’s road trip adventures.

Why Does The Surgeon Target Victims In The Thriller Novel?

4 Answers2025-10-17 21:58:42

Picture the surgeon in a thriller as someone who thinks they're solving a problem nobody else can see. In the first paragraph of these books they're often introduced with steady hands and a cool bedside manner, but the undercurrent is guilt, loss, or an unshakeable belief that the medical profession gives them the right to 'fix' moral or physical imperfections. I've seen this trope used as revenge: a spouse died on their table, a child wasn't saved, and the surgeon flips grief into a warped mission. Sometimes it's hubris — the character believes that because they can cut and rebuild bodies, they can also cut away what they call society's rot. Think of how 'The Surgeon' or 'Silence of the Lambs' toys with authority figures who hide monstrous ethics behind expertise.

Beyond personal vendetta, authors use surgeons to explore themes of control, identity, and bodily autonomy. The operating room is intimate and secretive, which makes it a brilliant stage for terror: the killer knows anatomy, can leave signatures you don't expect, and turns healing instruments into tools of harm. For me, that mix of clinical cool and human frailty is why these characters stay with you — they're terrifying because they blur the line between care and cruelty, and that tension is almost tragic in a dark way.

Which Websites Host American Standard Bible Online Free Legally?

5 Answers2025-09-03 22:54:17

I get a little nerdy about editions, so here’s the straight scoop: the 1901 'American Standard Version' is in the public domain, which is why several reputable sites host it legally and for free. For easy reading and verse-by-verse navigation I often use BibleGateway — they have a clean interface, quick search, and shareable links (search for 'American Standard Version' on their version menu). BibleHub is another favorite when I want parallel translations and commentaries; their layout makes spotting variant readings and cross-references painless.

If I’m chasing original scans or downloadable editions, the Internet Archive and Sacred Texts are gold mines for older printings and public-domain downloads. For study-oriented features like interlinear text, Strong’s numbers, and integrated commentaries I usually switch to Blue Letter Bible or BibleStudyTools. And for a text-focused, searchable collection without flashy extras, Christian Classics Ethereal Library (CCEL) hosts the ASV plainly and reliably. All of these host the 1901 'American Standard Version' legally because it’s public domain, so you can read, quote, or reuse it with confidence. I tend to hop between them depending on whether I want quick lookup, deep study, or a downloadable scan — each has its own tiny strengths that make it my go-to at different times.

What Is The Plot Of The American Wolf Novel?

5 Answers2025-10-17 05:11:51

If you've ever wanted a page-turner that also feels like a nature documentary written with grit, 'American Wolf' is exactly that. Nate Blakeslee follows one wolf in particular—known widely by her field name, O-Six—and uses her life as a way to tell a much bigger story about Yellowstone, predator reintroduction, and how people outside the park react when wild animals start to roam near their homes.

The book moves between scenes of the pack’s day-to-day survival—hunting elk, caring for pups, jockeying for dominance—and the human drama: biologists tracking collars, photographers who made O-Six famous, hunters and ranchers who saw threats, and the policy fights that decided whether wolves were protected or could be legally killed once they crossed park boundaries. I loved how Blakeslee humanizes the scientific work without turning the wolves into caricatures; O-Six reads like a fully realized protagonist, and her death outside the park lands feels heartbreakingly consequential. Reading it, I felt both informed and strangely attached, like I’d spent a season watching someone brave and wild live on the edge of two worlds.

What Is The Main Theme Of American Like Me?

4 Answers2025-11-14 23:50:33

Exploring identity in 'American Like Me' feels like peeling an onion—layers upon layers of cultural nuance, belonging, and contradiction. The anthology, edited by America Ferrera, isn't just about hyphenated identities (Latina-American, Asian-American, etc.); it digs into the messy, beautiful tension of feeling 'too much' of one thing and 'not enough' of another. I especially resonated with the essays that tackle microaggressions—like being asked 'Where are you really from?'—because they expose how exhausting it is to constantly justify your existence. The book doesn’t offer tidy answers, though. Instead, it celebrates the kaleidoscope of immigrant and first-gen experiences, from food rituals to code-switching at family gatherings. It’s like a literary potluck where every story adds flavor to the idea of 'American-ness.'

What struck me most was how humor and heartbreak often sit side by side. One contributor writes about using Spanglish as a superpower; another recounts crying over a lunchbox of 'weird' food that embarrassed them as a kid. That duality—pride and shame, laughter and tears—is the book’s heartbeat. It’s not just for people who’ve lived these stories; it’s for anyone who’s ever felt like an outsider. After reading, I found myself replaying my own family’s quirks—like my abuela’s insistence on blessing me with agua florida before exams—and realizing those moments weren’t just cultural footnotes; they were the main text.

How Does American Like Me Explore Identity?

4 Answers2025-11-14 09:50:25

America Like Me' dives deep into the messy, beautiful tapestry of what it means to belong—or not—in the U.S. As someone who grew up straddling cultures, the essays hit hard. There’s this raw honesty in how each contributor unpacks their hyphenated identity (Mexican-American, Nigerian-American, etc.), and it’s not just about heritage. It’s about the daily microaggressions, the food that tastes like home but gets mocked at school, and the guilt of 'not being enough' for either side.

What struck me most was how the book avoids tidy resolutions. Like, in one essay, the writer admits they still flinch when their name is mispronounced, even after years of success. That lingering ache? Relatable. It’s not a 'how to fix identity crisis' manual but a mirror held up to all the contradictions we live with.

Who Is The Target Audience For Fit To Fat To Fatter?

3 Answers2025-11-14 05:23:36

Man, let me tell you about 'Fit to Fat to Fit'—it's a wild ride that hooks you from the first episode. The show’s heart is in its brutal honesty about weight struggles, and I think it resonates hardest with two groups: folks who’ve yo-yo’d with fitness themselves, and trainers who’ve never truly understood the emotional toll of weight gain. The raw empathy in seeing trainers intentionally gain weight to walk in their clients’ shoes? That’s powerful stuff. It flips the script on typical weight-loss shows by forcing the 'experts' to confront the mental hurdles they’ve probably glossed over before.

But it’s not just for people battling the scale. Anyone who loves underdog stories or human transformation arcs would get sucked in. The show’s messy, uncomfortable at times, but that’s what makes it feel real—no polished before-and-after montages here. It’s like watching someone’s diary come to life, complete with setbacks and small victories. Personally, I binged it with my roommate who’s a nutritionist, and we both ended up yelling at the screen like it was a sports match.

Can I Download Gangsters Of Capitalism For Free?

3 Answers2025-11-14 12:54:00

Man, I totally get the temptation to find free downloads, especially with books like 'Gangsters of Capitalism'—it's such a gripping read! But honestly, as someone who's been burned by sketchy download sites before, I'd really recommend sticking to legit sources. The author put in crazy work researching all that historical depth, and they deserve the support. Plus, pirated copies often come with malware or missing pages, which just ruins the experience. If money's tight, check your local library's digital lending; apps like Libby or Hoopla often have it. Or wait for a Kindle sale—I snagged my copy for like $5 last year!

That said, I won't lie—I used to hunt for PDFs in my broke college days. But now that I've seen how piracy hurts smaller authors, I save up for books I truly care about. 'Gangsters' is totally worth the investment. The way it connects modern imperialism to corporate greed? Mind-blowing. Maybe borrow a physical copy from a friend if you're curious first!

When Was Dark Water 2005 American Remake Released?

3 Answers2025-08-31 00:56:50

There’s something about rainy-day thrillers that hooks me, and 'Dark Water' (the American remake) is one of those films I keep thinking about whenever a storm rolls in. It hit U.S. theaters on June 10, 2005, which is the date people usually cite for its wide theatrical release. I dug into the credits again the other day and loved seeing Walter Salles’ name attached as director and Jennifer Connelly leading the cast — it’s a strange mix of arthouse sensibility and mainstream horror that stuck with me.

I also like to tell friends that the American 'Dark Water' grew out of Hideo Nakata’s 2002 Japanese film 'Dark Water', so if you’re comparing versions it helps to watch both back-to-back. The remake circulated through some festival screenings the month or so before its U.S. opening, but June 10, 2005 is the key date for general audiences. I actually saw it at a near-empty matinee and the quiet theater made the film creepier than I expected — perfect timing for a water-dripping horror flick.

Which Actors Star In Dark Water 2005 American Remake?

3 Answers2025-08-31 13:00:20

There’s something about rainy, slightly creepy movies that sticks with me, and the 2005 American remake of 'Dark Water' is one I still bring up when talking about atmospheric horror. The film is fronted by Jennifer Connelly, who plays the troubled single mother trying to keep her life together. Alongside her, Tim Roth appears in a prominent role, bringing that quietly unsettling presence he’s so good at. John C. Reilly also shows up in a supporting capacity, adding a grounded, human touch to the cast mix. The little girl at the center of the story is played by Ariel Gade, whose performance as the daughter is both vulnerable and memorable.

I love that the movie was directed by Walter Salles, who usually makes very different films, so the remake has this interesting cross-genre sensibility. It’s technically a remake of the Japanese film 'Dark Water' (2002), but this version leans into suburban dread and the complexities of single parenthood while keeping the supernatural thread taut. If you’re into film craft, it’s worth watching for the performances—Connelly anchors the emotional side, Roth injects tension, Reilly brings warmth, and the child actor really sells the stakes.

If you haven’t seen it in a while, try it on a rainy evening with a blanket and low lights; it still gives that slow-burn chill that lingers after the credits.

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