Books I Need To Read

All I Ever Need
All I Ever Need
Harris Black's sister died, which has sent his world in a spiral gloom. Having to juggle the loss of his closest family member, and high school, Harris struggles to find the light in his life. He just wants to run away with his girlfriend, Sarah, to Stonefall where they can live off their musical dreams. While Harris struggles with the darkness of grief, Sarah White deals with her own issues. Her dad is a drunk, and hardly pays attention to her, and she faces bullies at school because of what she wears. As they navigate their lives together, willing to work through their own pain to create something wonderful, secrets come out, and a loss larger than Harris's sister shakes the lives of these two teens.
8
6 Chapters
I NEED YOU, ELENA
I NEED YOU, ELENA
What happens when you find yourself addicted to your professor, willing to do whatever it takes to do just have her, not caring she is married, but then she turns out to be your aunt, meaning it's a taboo. Can you fight it or you are just going to give in?
Not enough ratings
130 Chapters
Not the Wedding I Need
Not the Wedding I Need
My fiancé wants to marry me in a pizzeria. At the same time, he promises to give his true love the rest of his life on a luxurious cruise. Our wedding is only 48 hours away, but I don't want him anymore.
8 Chapters
I Need A Second Chance
I Need A Second Chance
Melissa's life is forever changed when she's betrayed by those she trusts the most, her fated Alpha, Rico and her best friend, Lorinda. Melissa walks in on her fated Alpha, Rico cheating on her with her best friend. “I thought you loved me?” she wailed in pain. All she could hear was the growling of her alpha towards her. She was broken, betrayed, humiliated and torn apart by the Alpha she loved. Unknowingly to her, he was being cast under a spell with the dark powers she never thought existed after her mother's death. Melissa was sold into slavery to a ruthless alpha, Troy, who she initially thought would be her redemption. She is forced to endure unimaginable hardships and humiliation even than she had experienced with her fated Alpha after his rejection. As she struggles to survive, she discovers a hidden strength within herself - supernatural powers that could be her ticket to freedom, or her ultimate downfall. As Melissa navigates her way being a slave to Troy, and striving to harness her powers. Will she finally find redemption and reclaim her rightful place when she figures out the truth about her past, or will she become a pawn in Troy's game of dominance?
Not enough ratings
13 Chapters
I Don't Need Fake Matebond
I Don't Need Fake Matebond
I saw a trending post on a werewolf forum: "How to get your mate to break the bond with you?" The poster said he was going to lie to his mate about going on a wilderness trial, but he was really planning to run off with his "true love." I silently scoffed. What a shameless scumbag. But the next day, my Alpha mate came home, smelling of another she-wolf. "For the future of our pack, I have to go on a lone wolf trial in the wilderness," he said. "We should temporarily break our mate bond." I looked at his phony face and nodded calmly. "Okay. Whatever you say. We'll break the bond tomorrow." Later, he took the family money and his lover and disappeared. But with his parents' support, I became an executive at the family company. He blew through all the money, ditched his lover, and came crawling back to the country, trying to win me over. But by then, I was already at my engagement party with another, far better Alpha. I said it from the beginning. He was the one who chose to abandon his family. Even if he wanted to come back, this place would be nothing but his personal hell.
14 Chapters
Alpha I don't need you
Alpha I don't need you
An alpha king rejected by his mated queen when they found each other. But Alpha king didn't accept her rejection and want to know her reasons first which he found as very complicated they need to make alliance with each other to stop the biggest fight with the rogue. Queen has the ability to predict things and it happens that way. She is like the next to the moon goddess has power to overcome any poision. She had already rejected two mates as she is selfless. She can link to any one in any pack.
10
138 Chapters

What Are The Underrated Books I Need To Read Before They Trend?

3 Answers2025-09-02 11:24:54

Oh man, I've got a soft spot for odd, quiet books that feel like secret doors — here are a few I keep nudging people toward before they blow up.

Start with 'The Etched City' by K. J. Bishop: it reads like a fever-dream western meets decaying fantasy city. The prose is gorgeous and strange, and the characters stick with you in the weirdest ways. If you like atmospheric, character-forward stories, pair it with a slow rainy playlist and you'll fall into it. Next, try 'Under the Skin' by Michel Faber. The surface plot is eerie and spare, but the real payoff is the way it makes everyday things feel uncanny. The movie got attention, but the book has this patient, unsettling cadence the adaptation can't capture.

For something wildly inventive, read 'The Vorrh' by B. Catling. It's dense and hallucinatory — not for everyone, but it rewards readers who love language and myth. Then pick up 'The People of Paper' by Salvador Plascencia if surreal, playful metafiction delights you — it romper-stomps through grief, politics, and breathless sentences. Finally, don't forget 'Engine Summer' by John Crowley: soft, melancholy post-apocalyptic fiction that reads like a hymn. These books share the same trait: they whisper at first, then burrow in. If you're the kind who wants to be the friend who recommends something that changes how others read, these are prime picks. Happy treasure-hunting — bring a notebook, because lines will haunt you.

What Are The Best Books I Need To Read This Summer?

2 Answers2025-09-02 23:51:03

Sunshine and paperback pages—there’s nothing like a summer TBR that actually gets finished. I’ve been curating lists for years and I pick books that fit different moods: something to get lost in on a long train ride, something short and sly for a café break, and one that lingers like the last taste of an ice cream cone. If you want a balanced summer, mix one big immersive novel, a couple of bite-sized reads, a thoughtful non-fiction, and at least one comfort or feel-good story you can return to when the heat makes concentration optional.

For an immersive epic that still reads quickly, try 'Pachinko' for family sagas and quiet power, or 'The Overstory' if you want something expansive and unexpectedly urgent about trees and people. For lighter, warm-hearted fantasy that doesn’t demand heavy worldbuilding homework, 'The House in the Cerulean Sea' is pure balm. If you crave sharp, contemporary prose that sparks conversation, put 'Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow' on the pile — it’s about friendship, creation, and games in a way that still feels human. For speculative hooks with big ideas, 'Project Hail Mary' will keep you turning pages with a grin, while 'Klara and the Sun' offers melancholic, haunting questions about what love might look like in a near future.

Don’t forget variety: a twisty gothic like 'Mexican Gothic' for late-night chills, a heartfelt historical like 'The Night Watchman' to stretch empathy muscles, and a glowing rom-com crossover like 'The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo' if you want glamorous, page-turning drama. For non-fiction that’s surprisingly readable in one sitting or as a slow sip, 'Sapiens' gives perspective on human weirdness; if micro-essays float your boat, try 'Goodbye, Things' for minimalism prompts. Mix formats too—an audiobook for walking, a paperback for the beach, a hefty hardcover for porch days. I love pairing 'Project Hail Mary' with cold iced coffee and 'The House in the Cerulean Sea' with lemon tea.

If you’re building a reading plan, aim for two long reads and three short ones, and leave room for impulse discoveries from library shelves or a friend’s recommendation. Swap books with someone, make a tiny summer reading club, or keep a notebook of favorite lines. I’ll be tucking 'The Night Watchman' under one arm and something silly under the other—tell me what you pick and maybe I’ll steal a recommendation back.

Do You Need To Read Abby Jimenez Books In Order

3 Answers2025-08-01 09:59:36

I’ve been diving into Abby Jimenez’s books lately, and while they’re all standalone stories, reading them in order adds a layer of depth. The characters often pop up in each other’s worlds, like little Easter eggs. For instance, in 'The Friend Zone', you meet Kristen and Josh, and then in 'The Happy Ever After Playlist', Sloan’s story ties back to them subtly. It’s not mandatory, but it’s like catching up with old friends. The emotional arcs also feel richer when you see how the author’s universe expands. If you’re someone who loves interconnected stories, order matters. If not, you can jump in anywhere—her writing shines either way.

Do You Need To Read Tana French Books In Order

3 Answers2025-08-01 03:51:27

I’ve read all of Tana French’s books, and while each one stands on its own, there’s something special about experiencing them in order. The Dublin Murder Squad series has recurring themes and subtle connections between characters that enrich the reading experience. For instance, 'In the Woods' introduces Rob Ryan, and his story lingers in the background of later books, even if they focus on different detectives. Reading them out of order won’t ruin the plots, but you’ll miss those little nods and deeper layers. Plus, French’s writing evolves, and seeing that progression is part of the fun. If you’re a completionist like me, starting from the beginning feels rewarding.

What Are The Short Books I Need To Read In One Weekend?

2 Answers2025-09-02 01:48:07

If you're trying to cram a handful of brilliant reads into a single weekend, I’ve got a little stack you can breeze through between coffee, naps, and the occasional procrastination spiral. I lean toward novellas and short novels because they give you the satisfaction of a complete story plus the mental space to think about it afterward. Start with 'The Old Man and the Sea' — it’s meditative, beautifully pared-down, and Hemingway’s sentences move so steadily that an afternoon will probably do it. Pair that with 'The Death of Ivan Ilyich' for a darker, philosophical bite; Tolstoy’s concision on mortality will sit with you in a way longer tomes sometimes don’t.

If you want something surreal and quick, tuck 'The Metamorphosis' into your Saturday. Kafka’s bizarre, claustrophobic voice is perfect for late-night reading when the house is quiet. For something lighter and oddly haunting, 'Coraline' works wonders — it’s short but unsettling, and Gaiman’s imagery will follow you into the kitchen. On the contemporary side, read 'The Sense of an Ending' if you like unreliable narrators and quiet revelations; it’s the kind of slim book that sparks long conversations afterward. For pure magical-world joy, 'The Emperor’s Soul' is a bite-sized fantasy that showcases worldbuilding and moral nuance in under two hundred pages — Sanderson trimmed down and still hit hard.

I also love slipping in a graphic novella when my eyes need a break: 'Persepolis' offers emotional density with accessible pacing, and a single afternoon can cover it while giving you a loud emotional payoff. If you want experimental and playful, 'Flatland' is a surprising geometry satire that’s as much math toy as social critique. Lastly, sprinkle in a short story collection or two — a handful of stories from 'Dubliners' or 'Stories of Your Life and Others' lets you sample different moods without committing a whole weekend to a single plot. Think about pacing: start breezy, hit something dense after lunch, then finish with a warm or eerie piece before bed. I love closing the weekend by jotting a few lines about what stuck with me; it makes the tiny stack feel like a full literary retreat rather than just rushed reading.

Do I Need An Account To Read Kindle Books In Browser?

3 Answers2025-07-06 08:09:04

I've been using Kindle for years, and I can confirm that you don't need an account just to read Kindle books in the browser. Amazon lets you access a limited selection of books through Kindle Cloud Reader without signing in. However, if you want to read your purchased books or sync your progress across devices, you'll need an Amazon account. The browser version is pretty convenient—just open the book, and it loads like any other webpage. No downloads or installations are required. But if you're into personalized features like bookmarks or notes, logging in is a must. It's a trade-off between convenience and functionality.

What Are The Historical Books I Need To Read To Understand WWII?

3 Answers2025-09-02 18:05:09

If you're going to build a solid picture of World War II, I’d patch together sweeping narratives, focused battle studies, and personal testimonies so the big picture and the human scale both come through.

Start with a clear single-volume narrative to orient yourself: try 'The Second World War' by John Keegan or Antony Beevor’s 'The Second World War' — both give good maps of strategy, politics, and how the war moved across continents. For a vivid, journalistic perspective on Nazi Germany’s rise and collapse read William L. Shirer’s 'The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich' and then Ian Kershaw’s two-volume 'Hitler' for more modern biography-based interpretation.

Next, dive into major theatres and turning points. For the Eastern Front, Antony Beevor’s 'Stalingrad' and Richard Overy’s 'Russia’s War' (or Overy’s essays) are indispensable; for the Western front read Beevor’s 'D-Day' and Stephen E. Ambrose’s 'Citizen Soldiers' for the Allied advance; for the Pacific try E.B. Sledge’s memoir 'With the Old Breed' and Richard B. Frank’s 'Downfall' about the final months. To understand the horrific policies and machinery of genocide, mix Raul Hilberg’s 'The Destruction of the European Jews' with personal testimony like Elie Wiesel’s 'Night' and Primo Levi’s 'Survival in Auschwitz'.

Finally, round out with thematic and historiographical works: Timothy Snyder’s 'Bloodlands' for the overlapping violence in Eastern Europe, Adam Tooze’s 'The Wages of Destruction' for economic context, and A.J.P. Taylor’s 'The Origins of the Second World War' if you want a provocative take on causes. Also keep maps, a good atlas, and the documentary 'The World at War' handy — they turn names and dates into places you can picture. I dog-eared so many pages doing this that my copy looked like a battlefield map itself, but that made every chapter come alive.

Do You Need To Read Lisa Jewell Books In Order

3 Answers2025-08-02 15:05:50

I've read a bunch of Lisa Jewell's books, and honestly, you don't strictly need to read them in order. Most of her novels are standalone, with unique characters and plots. That said, if you're a completionist like me, you might enjoy spotting subtle Easter eggs or recurring themes she sprinkles across her works. For example, 'The Family Upstairs' and its sequel 'The Family Remains' are connected, so reading them in order enhances the experience. But books like 'Then She Was Gone' or 'The House We Grew Up In' are perfectly fine on their own. Her writing style is gripping enough that you can jump in anywhere and still get hooked.

Do You Need To Read Elizabeth Strout Books In Order

3 Answers2025-08-01 12:52:12

I've been a huge fan of Elizabeth Strout's work for years, and I can confidently say that while her books share a common universe, you don't strictly need to read them in order. Each novel stands on its own, offering a complete story with deep emotional resonance. That said, reading them chronologically enhances the experience. Starting with 'Amy and Isabelle' gives you a foundation, but jumping into 'Olive Kitteridge' first won't leave you lost. The beauty of Strout's writing is how she revisits characters like Olive in later books, adding layers to their stories. If you're the type who loves seeing characters evolve over time, then order matters. But if you prefer diving into whichever book catches your eye, you'll still get the full impact of her brilliant storytelling.

What Are The Classic Books I Need To Read For Every Bookshelf?

2 Answers2025-09-02 21:48:39

My shelves are a chaotic hymn to the books that taught me how to feel bigger feelings and ask harder questions. Classics aren't a checklist to flex — they're a toolkit. They teach voice, style, history, and the way certain themes echo across centuries. If you want a bookshelf that breathes, start with a handful that span genres and eras: 'Pride and Prejudice' for razor-sharp social observation and sparkling dialogue; 'To Kill a Mockingbird' for moral clarity and childhood as a lens; '1984' and 'Brave New World' for dystopian warnings that still ring true; and 'The Odyssey' for the taste of mythic adventure and oral storytelling rhythms.

Then, broaden outward. Slower, immersive reads like 'War and Peace' or 'Anna Karenina' teach you character orchestration and how personal lives intersect with history. 'One Hundred Years of Solitude' opens a whole way of seeing magical realism and family cycles, while 'Beloved' forces you to confront trauma and language in a way very few novels do. Gothic and strange books like 'Frankenstein', 'Dracula', and 'Wuthering Heights' show how mood and atmosphere can be characters themselves. Add 'Crime and Punishment' or 'The Brothers Karamazov' for moral psychology, 'Don Quixote' for the comic-tragic blend, and at least one modernist puzzle like 'Ulysses' or the more approachable 'Mrs Dalloway' to feel how language can be stretched.

Practical bits from me: don't feel pressured to finish everything fast. Read translations that have notes if you're tackling non-English classics, and mix in shorter plays and poetry — a night with 'Hamlet' or 'The Waste Land' resets your ear. Pairing a book with a film or a good audiobook can help hard passages land. I like to alternate heavy tomes with lighter or more immediate ones: a page-turner like 'The Great Gatsby' followed by something dense keeps reading fun. Above all, let curiosity lead you; these books reward re-reading, and often the sentence you underlined years ago is the one that finally clicks. That's why I keep returning to them, notebook in hand, ready to be surprised.

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