Before The Movement

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My Brother's Billionaire Bestfriend
My Brother's Billionaire Bestfriend
“Of course, I love you,” I whispered, my voice trembling with desire as I looked into Gabriel’s intense gray eyes. “But you need to be careful. We can’t let my brother find out.” He pressed me firmly against the wall, his lips brushing my ear. “I’m always careful, my little doll,” he murmured, his voice raw with need. “But right now, this man” he pointed at his hard member “needs to be inside that sweet pu**y of yours.” With a swift, passionate movement, he lifted me and laid me gently on the bed, his deepening as he circled his tongue all over my mouth. Ava Morales returns to Switzerland, haunted by her tragic past. But Gabriel Pierce, her brother’s energetic billionaire best friend, offers her an unexpected escape. As she begins to let go of the darkness and revenge she carried, their deepening connection seems like a new beginning. However, just as Ava believes she has found her haven, a shocking truth about Gabriel threatens to unravel everything she thought she knew. Can she handle the weight of his secrets, or will the revelations destroy her forever?
10
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295 Chapters
THE BAD NERD BOY
THE BAD NERD BOY
Winner of The People Choice Awards (Fiction) 2019 for Best Diverse Books When "Gossip " meets "Pretty Little Liars" and had a kid with "Sherlock Holmes". That kid is "The Bad Nerd Boy". "You know my secret now. That's really bad, Summers." He smirked. That nerd smirked! And call me crazy but at this moment, he looked goddamn hot.      "I won't tell others." I blurted the words out, hoping it gave the assurance he needed so he would let me go because even though he looked damn hot, he also looked dangerous. Trying to stop myself from trembling, I bit my lips.  His eyes caught the movement and he bent forward, filling my nostrils with the smell of dope he smoked earlier. Tilting his head, he clicked his tongue and smiled. "Wrong move." With that, he slammed his lips against mine, knocking all the air from my lungs. He kissed me with no mercy. His tongue slipped at the seam of my mouth, and my mind went blank when I felt the tip of his tongue caressing mine. Pulling away he watched me with a mischievous look on his face as he said, "now I'm going to be yours." * * * Professionally edited by Fernanda Lemos. All Rights Reserved 2018 © agatharoza
9.7
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90 Chapters
Dear Husband, I'm the Fortune Heiress
Dear Husband, I'm the Fortune Heiress
Emily Watson is the next heiress to a multi-billionaire industry company. Instead of taking her fortune and next step as royalty, she let it all go for a man she fell in love with for 7 years. Little did she know that the 3 years of her marriage was going to be cold and distant. Her husband has never touched her since that night, her mother-in-law hates her. Her life was miserable. Yet, she linger on because she loves him. Even if she watched him from a distance, it was fine with her for he was her every breath. Until one day he divorce her to be with the woman he loves. What's this? The woman is pregnant. Heartbroken she left her husband and the home she had called for so many years. 6 months later she showed up at the biggest and grandest Watson's ball. There Emily stood, the next heiress to the multi trillionaire of the century. Her ex-husband, Joshua MacClare was shocked that the woman he have divorce have made him yearend for her. His heart was beating rapidly for her, his eyes followed her every movement, his breathing was unsteady as she was close to him. He gulped as he wanted her. Wanted her as his wife again. "We're divorced," said Emily. "No, we're not," said Joshua. "Huh?" questioned Emily. Joshua smiled at her and said, "On that night, a rainy night if you have forgotten, the documents were destroyed." "What?" asked Emily. "You see, you threw our divorce paper into the stormy rain. So, the rain have washed away our prints." Emily's breath quickened. "So, since there is no legible signatures on the divorce paper, we're never divorce." Emily backed away from him. Joshua walked over to her and said, "You're still my wife."
8.4
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103 Chapters
My Greatest Regret
My Greatest Regret
Two people in Marriage create beautiful bond called Love , soulmate god choose a mate for you . preview "Good morning" she mumbled softly smiling.She look up when she got no reply or any movement from her mate Aaron.Aaron remove his arms around her and suddenly sat up. "What the -!"he muttered when realization hit him."A-Aaron what happened" Grace asked nervously getting up from her laying position."! !How did it happened" Aaron pull his hair in frustration.Grace bite her she don't know what to do or think of Aaron reaction. he didn't regret it right? No don't think like this Grace. She won't yeah she can't. think positive.But her hope crumbled with Aaron next words."I am sorry ""W-why?" she hold her breath don't want to hear the next words. She's not ready she can't take it."I was not in my right mind, i lost control again. I didn't want to do this. I am sorry"Aaron's every word was scratching her heart painfully. its painfully. So hurt."B-but we are m-married and you are my mate, it's alright right? I-It's normal in c-couple then why are you s-sorry?" She was already tearing from inside."But we are not a couple Grace!!" He shouted standing up."I didn't even wanted a mate at the first place!!" he said pacing back and forth. Grace tears started running down from her cheeks."Look, i-it was just a mistake. Don't take it seriously. Just think it didn't happen and we are good. ." He said and just stormed out of the room.Grace grab her chest that was hurting painfully. A mistake. That was it?The night she was so happy she was peaceful. Where she feel loved and wanted from her mate.... was just a mistake.
7.9
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51 Chapters
A Game With No Rules
A Game With No Rules
Dangerous Desires Book Two. The first time I laid eyes on Roman Castillo, there was a charge of electricity that ignited my pulse to surge—like a lightning strike in the night sky, zapping my broken heart to life. He was beguiling, the bearer of the most vivid blue-gray eyes I had ever seen. Everything about him had the ability to make my heart trash against my chest cavity and made me weak on the knees. And for me to feel all these strange feelings at our first meeting was borderline extreme in my book. So I gave him a show, one that he would never forget. I relished the way his eyes darkened, following every intricate movement of my body. Little did I know I was stepping into dangerous territory. An uncharted world where the most primal rule prevails—only the strong survive. I wasn’t ready for him. I wasn’t prepared for the danger of his world. And nothing prepared me for the secrets I’d unravel while falling deeply for him. Because in the world I live in, love is patient; love is kind. But in his world, love is a game with no rules. [Mature Content] Cover by DobolyuV
10
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105 Chapters
The Mafia’s Exclusive Stripper
The Mafia’s Exclusive Stripper
“You don’t know how much I’ve been dying to hear you scream beneath me.” He whispered into my right ear with his husky and extremely sexy voice. I groaned as I moved slightly, hitting his dick lightly with my movement and he growled as he took my breast in his palm. “Then fuck me, I’ll scream all you want. I’ll do whatever, just fuck me.” I begged, he was no longer my boss, he was now someone I wanted to take all of my innocence away. ———————————- After being forced to quit her job because of her abusive boss, Hazel Wallace searched for jobs to no avail, soon she saw the opportunity to be a stripper. Falling in love was not included in the contract Hazel signed, she was just a stripper in his club and his private slut. The contract was to make sure neither of them develop feelings for the other. But what happens when an incident from the past comes in between them, threatening what they share? Warning: Mature content, BDSM, fights and blood.
9.2
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131 Chapters

What Are Signs Of Bow Hunter'S Syndrome During Neck Movement?

4 Answers2025-11-05 14:50:17

A friend of mine had a weird blackout one day while checking her blind spot, and that episode stuck with me because it illustrates the classic signs you’d see with bow hunter's syndrome. The key feature is positional — symptoms happen when the neck is rotated or extended and usually go away when the head returns to neutral. Expect sudden vertigo or a spinning sensation, visual disturbance like blurriness or even transient loss of vision, and sometimes a popping or whooshing noise in the ear. People describe nausea, vomiting, and a sense of being off-balance; in more severe cases there can be fainting or drop attacks.

Neurological signs can be subtle or dramatic: nystagmus, slurred speech, weakness or numbness on one side, and coordination problems or ataxia. If it’s truly vascular compression of the vertebral artery you’ll often see reproducibility — the clinician can provoke symptoms by carefully turning the head. Imaging that captures the artery during movement, like dynamic angiography or Doppler ultrasound during rotation, usually confirms the mechanical compromise. My take: if you or someone has repeat positional dizziness or vision changes tied to head turning, it deserves urgent attention — I’d rather be cautious than shrug it off after seeing how quickly things can escalate.

What Is The Summary Of The Naxalite Movement In India?

4 Answers2025-12-11 17:03:46

The Naxalite Movement began in 1967 in Naxalbari, West Bengal, as a radical peasant uprising led by Charu Majumdar and Kanu Sanyal. Inspired by Maoist ideology, it aimed to overthrow the Indian state through armed struggle, focusing on land redistribution and tribal rights. The movement gained traction in rural, forested regions where inequality was rampant, but it also faced brutal crackdowns by security forces. Over decades, it splintered into factions like the CPI (Maoist), which remains active today in states like Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand.

What fascinates me about this movement is its blend of revolutionary fervor and grassroots grievances. It’s not just about ideology—it’s deeply tied to local issues like displacement and exploitation. While some view it as a fight for justice, others see it as a destabilizing force. The government’s response has oscillated between militarized operations and development initiatives, but the conflict persists, revealing the complexities of India’s socio-political landscape.

How Historically Accurate Is The Naxalite Movement In India?

4 Answers2025-12-11 09:05:09

The portrayal of the Naxalite Movement in media often leans toward dramatization, but some works like 'Red Sun: Travels in Naxalite Country' by Sudeep Chakravarti strive for authenticity. I've spent years reading about Maoist uprisings, and while fictionalized accounts take liberties, they often capture the emotional truth—the desperation of tribal communities, the ideological fervor of young revolutionaries, and the state's heavy-handed responses. Historical records show the movement began in 1967 in Naxalbari, inspired by Marxist-Leninist ideals, but later fragmented into violent and non-violent factions.

What fascinates me is how pop culture simplifies this complexity. Films like 'Lal Salaam' or novels like 'The Lowlands' by Jhumpa Lahiri focus on personal tragedies rather than systemic critiques. The movement’s roots in land disputes and caste oppression are sometimes glossed over for narrative punch. Still, when creators interview survivors or embed real pamphlets (like in documentary 'Red Ant Dream'), the weight of history feels palpable. It’s a messy, painful chapter that resists neat storytelling.

How Did Maya Angelou Contribute To The Civil Rights Movement?

3 Answers2025-12-17 19:01:31

Maya Angelou's voice was a beacon during the civil rights movement, not just through her poetry but her sheer presence as a Black woman unafraid to articulate struggle and resilience. I first read 'I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings' as a teenager, and it shattered my naivety about racial injustice—her autobiographical courage mirrored the movement itself. She worked directly with Malcolm X and Dr. King, organizing events and using her art to fundraise. Her spoken-word performances at rallies weren't mere entertainment; they were rallying cries, weaving personal trauma into collective resistance.

What sticks with me is how she balanced artistry with activism. Her poem 'Still I Rise' became an anthem, but fewer people talk about her behind-the-scenes work, like coordinating the Cabaret for Freedom show to benefit the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. She understood that culture shifts politics—a lesson that resonates today when artists still leverage their platforms for justice.

Where Can I Read The Red Cross: A History Of This Remarkable International Movement In The Interest Of Humanity Online?

3 Answers2025-12-16 04:54:56

I stumbled upon this exact question when I was researching humanitarian literature last winter! 'The Red Cross: A History of This Remarkable International Movement in the Interest of Humanity' is one of those niche historical gems that’s surprisingly tricky to find digitally. After some deep digging, I discovered it’s available on Archive.org—their open library section has a scanned version you can borrow for free. The interface feels a bit archaic, but it’s a treasure trove for out-of-print books like this.

If you’re into the subject, I’d also recommend checking out Project Gutenberg’s collection of early 20th-century humanitarian texts. They don’t have this specific title, but works like 'A Memory of Solferino' by Henry Dunant complement it perfectly. The Red Cross’s own digital archives might have excerpts too, though their focus is more on contemporary reports.

What Are The Key Events In The Red Cross: A History Of This Remarkable International Movement In The Interest Of Humanity?

3 Answers2025-12-16 12:02:45

Man, diving into the history of the Red Cross feels like peeling back layers of human resilience and compassion. The movement really kicked off in 1863 when Henry Dunant, haunted by the aftermath of the Battle of Solferino, pushed for neutral medical aid during wars. That led to the first Geneva Convention in 1864, where nations agreed to protect wounded soldiers and medical staff. Fast forward to World War I, and the Red Cross was everywhere, organizing prisoner-of-war exchanges and even helping civilians—something totally new at the time. Then there's WWII, where they faced massive challenges but still managed to run those iconic prisoner mail services and Holocaust relief efforts, though their limitations during that period are a sobering reminder of how complex neutrality can be.

Post-war, the Red Cross evolved beyond battlefields, diving into disaster response. Think of the 2004 tsunami or the Haiti earthquake—their global networks were lifesavers. And let’s not forget their role in promoting international humanitarian law today, like pushing for bans on landmines. It’s wild how one man’s idea became this colossal force for good, even with all the moral tightropes they’ve walked.

Who Wrote The Red Cross: A History Of This Remarkable International Movement In The Interest Of Humanity?

3 Answers2025-12-16 06:43:35

The book 'The Red Cross: A History of This Remarkable International Movement in the Interest of Humanity' was penned by Henry Dunant, the Swiss humanitarian who co-founded the International Red Cross. It's fascinating how Dunant's firsthand experiences during the Battle of Solferino inspired not only this detailed account but also the very creation of the Red Cross itself. His writing captures the urgency and compassion that drove the movement, blending personal narrative with historical documentation.

Reading it feels like stepping into the mind of a visionary—Dunant doesn't just describe events; he makes you feel the moral weight behind them. The prose is surprisingly vivid for a historical work, almost like a call to arms wrapped in a memoir. I stumbled upon it after binge-reading humanitarian literature, and it stuck with me longer than most modern nonfiction.

Is The Wahhabi Movement In India Worth Reading?

3 Answers2025-12-31 07:57:15

History buffs with a taste for niche scholarly works might find 'The Wahhabi Movement in India' fascinating, but casual readers should brace for dense academic prose. I picked it up after stumbling upon references to Indian reformist movements in 19th-century colonial archives—the book digs deep into ideological clashes between Wahhabi scholars and British authorities, which I hadn’t encountered much in mainstream South Asian history. The footnotes alone are a goldmine for researchers, though the writing can feel dry if you’re not already invested in Islamic revivalism.

That said, the sections on grassroots mobilization in rural Bengal surprised me with their narrative momentum. The author’s analysis of how Wahhabi pamphlets circulated like underground samizdat literature made me draw parallels to anti-colonial printing movements elsewhere. Not a breezy read by any means, but worth enduring the jargon for those 'aha' moments about how religious dissent shaped India’s pre-independence politics.

Why Did Stokely Carmichael Lead The Black Power Movement?

3 Answers2026-01-02 01:44:28

Stokely Carmichael's leadership in the Black Power Movement wasn’t just about rebellion—it was a response to years of systemic oppression that demanded more than polite requests for equality. Growing up in Trinidad and later Harlem, he saw firsthand how Black communities were marginalized, even within civil rights groups that prioritized nonviolence. By the mid-60s, he’d grown disillusioned with slow progress and token reforms. The term 'Black Power' crystallized his vision: self-determination, pride in Black identity, and defiance against white supremacy. It wasn’t about rejecting allies but centering Black voices in their own liberation.

What’s often overlooked is how Carmichael’s ideas were shaped by global anti-colonial struggles. He drew inspiration from figures like Frantz Fanon and Kwame Nkrumah, linking the fight in America to broader movements in Africa and beyond. His shift toward radicalism wasn’t impulsive—it was a calculated rejection of respectability politics. For him, power meant economic control, political autonomy, and unapologetic cultural pride. That’s why his message resonated so deeply; it tapped into a frustration that younger activists felt but hadn’t articulated so boldly before.

How Do Animators Draw Anime Long Hair Movement?

4 Answers2025-08-25 13:22:18

I still get a little giddy watching long hair move in a hand-drawn scene — it's like a soft, living ribbon that helps sell emotion and motion. When I draw it, I think in big, readable shapes first: group the hair into masses or clumps, give each clump a clear line of action, and imagine how those clumps would swing on arcs when the character turns, runs, or sighs.

From there, I block out key poses — the extremes where the hair is pulled back, flung forward, or caught mid-swing. I use overlapping action and follow-through: the head stops, but the hair keeps going. Timing matters a lot; heavier hair gets slower, with more frames stretched out, while wispy tips twitch faster. I also sketch the delay between roots and tips: roots react earlier and with less amplitude, tips lag and exaggerate.

On technical days I’ll rig a simple FK chain in a program like Toon Boom or Blender to test motion, or film a ribbon on my desk as reference. For anime-style polish, I pay attention to silhouette, clean line arcs, and a couple of secondary flicks — tiny stray strands that sell realism. Watching scenes from 'Violet Evergarden' or the wind-blown moments in 'Your Name' always reminds me how expressive hair can be, so I keep practicing with short studies and real-world observation.

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