Confessions A Novel

Confessions
Confessions
Victor murmured 'Happy Birthday Misha' as he fed me a small piece of cake. Wait! Why was he sounding so husky all of a sudden? Stop it! As usual, I was imagining things. I shook my head as I sliced a piece of cake with cherry and tried to feed him. But the icing was soft, and the cake began to slip away from my fingers. Victor grabbed my hand...(Oh my! I will remember this day forever!)... Closed his mouth around the cake and my fingers! And a hot rush which started somewhere in my core began to spread inside with lightning speed and I felt my cheeks burn. His mouth was so warm and his lips, they were everything I imagined them to be, and more. My lips parted as I watched him close his eyes and lick my fingers. There was something so sensual and possessive about it that I began to wonder the same thing all over again. Does Mr Popular and youngest pilot from his academy, Victor Matthews finally got a clue that I have been secretly in love with him all these years?
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4 Chapters
Steamy Confessions
Steamy Confessions
The largest collection of first-person accounts sharing their steamy tales of seduction and temptation. From LA to Sydney, Paris to New York, Stockholm to Singapore, Manhattan to Malaysia, these hand-picked bestsellers will be your perfect bedside companion. The confessions might shock, amuse or excite but you'll find what you're looking for over here ;)
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108 Chapters
Wet Confessions
Wet Confessions
Wet Confessions Thirty Taboo Tales You’ll Never Forget Some secrets are whispered. Some are moaned. And some are written between trembling thighs. From steamy offices and dimly lit confessionals to forbidden bedrooms and midnight rendezvous, Wet Confessions is a raw, unapologetically sexy collection of 30 taboo short stories that explore the desires we hide behind closed doors. Every story is a sin dressed in silk. Every character is someone you shouldn’t want but do. And every ending leaves you aching for more. These are the fantasies you never say out loud. The confessions you’d only whisper in the dark. And the kind of love you’re not supposed to crave. Read if you dare. Want more when you're done.
Not enough ratings
116 Chapters
Twisted Confessions
Twisted Confessions
"Bless me daddy, for I have sinned." Geoff Vasily was a sick bastard. He was depraved. I knew something was off about him the moment I saw his slicked golden hair and stony gray eyes. I used to live a cheap, albeit independent life supporting myself and my mother, despite my eighteen years of existence. The day he walked into the cafè, I knew the Devil had just walked into our lives. I told her not to take the card, but she didn't listen. Now, he doesn't even look at my mother. He's fixated on me. My stepfather. My doom.
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39 Chapters
Dark Sex Confessions
Dark Sex Confessions
🔥 Dark Sex Confessions 🔥 A sinful collection of taboo, dominant, and dangerously hot stories. Warning: 18+ only. --- “Is this what you wore to distract me, sweetheart?” he asked, fingers trailing up my inner thigh beneath the flimsy excuse of a skirt. “You knew exactly what you were doing when you walked into my office dressed like that.” I bit my lip, heart racing. “Maybe I just needed some... extra attention.” His chuckle was dark. Dangerous. Desperate. He pushed everything off his desk with one sweep, pulling me forward so my legs dangled open in front of him. “You’re about to learn your most important lesson,” he said, sinking to his knees between my thighs. “How to beg properly.” His mouth met my soaked panties, tongue pressing through the thin fabric until I gasped, arching against his face. He groaned like a man starved, ripping them aside and licking into me with a hunger that made me cry out. “God, you’re so wet for your professor,” he growled between licks. “Dripping for the man grading your papers.” My fingers tangled in his hair as he sucked my clit into his mouth, tongue lashing me like punishment and reward all at once. My thighs shook, heat building fast and deep. “Come for me, right here, right now,” he ordered. “And then I’m bending you over this desk and fucking every A+ out of that tight little body.” And I did. Exploding on his tongue, moaning his name like a filthy prayer— Knowing this was just the beginning of the most sinful semester of my life.
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31 Chapters
Confessions Of An Exorcist
Confessions Of An Exorcist
“Confessions Of An Exorcist” Mason Woods is a 40 year old multimillionaire who owns Woods Travel Safe, an airline company in New York City. He lives in New York City with his three-months pregnant wife; Victoria Woods who is a cardiac surgeon and earns a good pay, his two daughters; Audrey Woods and Leslie Woods, ages eight and four respectively. A meeting with a Chinese contractor drags out longer than anticipated and causes him to miss his daughter’s fourth birthday party. Mason Woods comes out of the meeting to see series of calls from his wife. He comes back home and offers to take the family out to celebrate Leslie’s birthday- an attempt to make up for his absent.On their way to a recreational park to celebrate his daughter’s fourth birthday, they were involved in an accident and his pregnant wife and two daughters die at the spot while Mason dies on the way to the hospital. A burial is done and they are laid to rest. But a few months later, Mason Woods returns to life under supernatural circumstances and finds out that everything he owned has been taken by the government being legally dead and also that demons are responsible for the accident which took the lives of his family. He woke up to the realization that demons and ghosts are real and his family died because demons were trying to eliminate him so he won’t have to become an Exorcist. Mason Woods still overcome with guilt and grief in equal measures, leaves everything behind and move to a secluded small town, Vineyard, Utah, where he hopes to begin a new life. A life as an Exorcist. And one day hope to avenge the death of his family and stop anyone from meeting the same fate he
9.4
43 Chapters

Have Filmmakers Adapted The Infinite Game Novel?

5 Answers2025-10-17 14:57:26

I've dug into this a lot over the years, because the idea of adapting something titled along the lines of 'infinite game' feels irresistible to filmmakers and fans alike.

To be clear: there isn't a mainstream, faithful film adaptation of a novel literally called 'The Infinite Game' that I'm aware of. If you mean 'Infinite Jest' by David Foster Wallace, that massive novel has never been turned into a widely released film either; its scale, labyrinthine footnotes, tonal shifts, and deep interiority make it brutally hard to compress into a two-hour movie. Philosophical works like 'Finite and Infinite Games' or business books such as 'The Infinite Game' by Simon Sinek haven’t been adapted into major narrative films either — they'd likely become documentaries, essay films, or dramatized case studies rather than straightforward biopics.

What fascinates me is how filmmakers sometimes capture the spirit of these texts without adapting them directly: experimental directors create fragmentary, self-referential movies that evoke the same questions about meaning, competition, and play. If anyone takes a crack at a proper adaptation, I'd love to see it as a limited series that respects the book's structural oddities. I’d be thrilled and a little terrified to see it done right.

Who Wrote The Bestselling Novel The Sleep Experiment?

5 Answers2025-10-17 15:11:08

I've dug into the whole 'who wrote The Sleep Experiment' mess more than once, because it's one of those internet things that turns into a half-legend. First off, there isn't a single, universally acknowledged bestselling novel called 'The Sleep Experiment' in the way people mean for, say, 'The Da Vinci Code' or 'Gone Girl.' What most people are actually thinking of is the infamous creepypasta 'The Russian Sleep Experiment' — a viral horror story that circulated online and became part of internet folklore. That piece was originally posted anonymously on creepypasta sites and forums around the late 2000s/early 2010s, and no verified single author has ever been publicly credited the way you'd credit a traditional novelist.

Because that anonymous tale blew up, lots of creators adapted, expanded, or sold their own takes: short stories, dramatized podcasts, indie e-books, and even self-published novels that borrow the title or premise. Some of those indie versions have been marketed with big words like 'bestseller' on Amazon or social media, but those labels often reflect short-term charting or marketing rather than long-term, mainstream bestseller lists. Personally, I love how a moody, anonymous internet story can sprout so many different published offspring — it feels like modern mythmaking, if a bit chaotic.

Who Are The Main Characters In The Unteachables Novel?

5 Answers2025-10-17 08:32:37

I get such a kick out of the cast in 'The Unteachables'—they’re perfectly messy and oddly lovable.

At the center is the teacher who, for reasons both noble and stubborn, takes on the school’s most notorious detention class. He’s the glue: unpolished, earnest, and equal parts exasperated and proud. Then there’s the group of students themselves, the titular unteachables—each one reads like an archetype stretched into a full person: the class clown who hides anxiety behind jokes, the angry kid with a reputation and a soft core, the quiet one who sketches or writes in secret, the overachiever whose perfectionism masks pressure, the schemer who’s always planning a prank, and the social kid who’s great at reading the room.

Supporting players include a weary principal, a few skeptical colleagues, and parents who complicate things. The novel thrives on how these personalities clash and then, slowly, teach each other. I always end up rooting for the group as a whole—and smiling about their small, stubborn victories.

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.

Who Is The Author Of His Untamed Savage Bride Novel?

3 Answers2025-10-17 20:14:56

I dug around my usual spots and, honestly, 'His Untamed Savage Bride' is one of those titles that gets a bit messy in English-speaking circles. What I found most often are fan-posts, translation snippets, and aggregator pages that credit a translator or a group rather than a clear original novelist. That usually means either the work is a fan translation of a web serial where the original pen name isn't consistently translated, or it's been circulated under different English titles so the original author credit gets lost in the shuffle.

If you want a solid lead: look for the original-language edition (often Chinese, Thai, or Korean for novels with that kind of phrasing) and check the site it was first serialized on—sites like JJWXC, 17k, or the serial platforms often list the proper pen name. Novel-specific databases like NovelUpdates sometimes gather original titles and author names even when English pages just list the translator. From all the versions I checked, many pages either omit an original-author field or list different pseudonyms, which is why the author seems elusive. Personally, I get a little fascinated by tracing the original publication trail—it's like detective work—and I enjoy comparing translators' notes when the author’s real name finally turns up.

Who Wrote My Ex-Fiancé Went Crazy When I Got Married Novel?

3 Answers2025-10-17 12:19:44

Wow, this one can be annoyingly slippery to pin down. I went digging through forums, reading-list posts, and translation sites in my head, and what stands out is that 'My Ex-Fiancé Went Crazy When I Got Married' is most often encountered as an online serialized romance with inconsistent attribution. On several casual reading hubs it's simply listed under a pen name or omitted entirely, which happens a lot with web novels that float between platforms and fan translations.

If you want a concrete next step, check the platform where you first saw the work: official publication pages (if there’s one), the translator’s note, or the original-language site usually name the author or pen name. Sometimes the English title is a fan translation that doesn’t match the original title, and that’s where the attribution gets messy. I’ve seen cases where the translation group is credited more prominently than the original author, which can be frustrating when you’re trying to track down the creator.

Personally, I care about giving creators credit, so when an author name isn’t obvious I’ll bookmark the original hosting page or look for an ISBN/official release. That usually eventually reveals who actually wrote the story, and it feels great to find the original author and support their other works.

Who Wrote Her Heart Her Terms Novel?

3 Answers2025-10-17 21:42:24

I did a fair bit of searching through my usual book haunts and databases, and here's the situation as I see it: there isn't a clear, widely cataloged mainstream novel titled 'Her Heart Her Terms' credited to a single, well-known author in major repositories. That usually means one of three things — it's a self-published or indie release with limited distribution, it's a title used on platforms like Wattpad or Royal Road under a pen name, or there’s a slight variation in the title that's created confusion with other books. I've run into that exact trap before when a romantic contemporary had a comma or an extra word in some listings and suddenly the author looked different everywhere.

If you're trying to track down the writer, the fastest routes are the Amazon/Kindle product page, Goodreads entry, or the book’s copyright/ISBN details — indie authors often list a pen name in their author bio on those pages. Library catalogs and publisher pages can also clear things up if it was traditionally published. Personally, I love discovering these under-the-radar stories: there’s a thrill to finding the person behind a heartfelt title, even if it means wading through a few fan pages or social profiles to confirm who wrote 'Her Heart Her Terms'. It feels like treasure hunting, honestly.

What Does No Strangers Here Mean In The Novel?

2 Answers2025-10-17 23:52:07

That little line—'no strangers here'—carries more weight than it seems at first glance. I tend to read it like a pocket-sized worldbuilding anchor: depending on who's speaking and where it appears, it can mean anything from a warm, open-door community to an ominous warning that outsiders aren’t welcome. In a cozy scene it reads like an invitation: a character wants to reassure another that they belong, that gossip and judgment are put aside and that the space is for mutual care. I instinctively think of neighborhood novels or small-town stories where everyone knows your grandmother's name and secrets leak like light through curtains. In those contexts the phrase functions as shorthand for intimacy and belonging.

Flip the tone, though, and it becomes deliciously sinister. When I see 'no strangers here' in a darker book, my spider-sense tingles. Authors use it as a soft propaganda line: communal unity dressed up to mask exclusion. It can point to a group that's inward-looking, protective to the point of paranoia, or even cultish. Think of how a slogan can lull characters (and readers) into complacency—compare that to the chilling certainties in '1984' where language is bent to control thought. When 'no strangers here' shows up in a scene where people glance sideways, doors close slowly, or the narrator lingers on a lock, I start hunting for what the group is hiding. It’s a great device to signal unreliable hospitality: smiles on the surface, razor-edged rules underneath.

Stylistically, repetition is key. If the phrase recurs, it can become a refrain that shapes reader expectations—sometimes comforting, sometimes claustrophobic. As a reader I pay close attention to who gets to be called a stranger and who doesn’t: are children exempt? New lovers? Outsiders with different histories? That boundary tells you the society’s moral code and who holds power. Also, placement matters: tacked onto a welcoming dinner scene it comforts, tacked onto a whispered conversation at midnight it threatens. I like how such a simple line can do heavy lifting—worldbuilding, theme, and foreshadowing all in one breath. It’s the kind of small detail that keeps me turning pages.

What Scenes Left Readers Unusually Worked Up In The Novel?

2 Answers2025-10-17 08:00:33

Certain passages twist my chest tighter than a plot twist ever should. Scenes that leave readers unusually worked up usually share a few things: high emotional stake, a character you’ve invested in, and a moral or physical shock that feels both inevitable and betrayed. Think about betrayals that feel intimate rather than theatrical — a lover revealing a secret in the quiet aftermath of dinner, a mentor quietly choosing a rival, or a friend walking away when you need them most. Those hits land harder than blockbuster violence because they punch the connection you built chapter by chapter. In 'A Storm of Swords' the betrayal at a wedding shocks not just because people die, but because the party setting and personal trust invert into mass violence; in 'Gone Girl' the revelations twist sympathy into suspicion and make readers reevaluate every prior moment.

Writers also get people worked up with the slow-burn dismantling of hope. Endings that pull the rug from under the protagonist in a way that recontextualizes everything — like the big reveal in 'Atonement' — guilt and regret become communal with the reader, and that shared uneasy feeling ferments into real anger or grief. Unreliable narrators, courtroom climaxes, the slow drip of a mystery being revealed, and scenes that force characters into impossible moral choices (sacrifice a loved one or let innocents suffer) all strain a reader’s ethical muscles. Sensory detail matters too: a hospital room where a life hangs by a breath, or a cellar smelled of damp and regret, makes dread physical. I find that when authors synchronize pacing, sensory description, and I-protagonist vulnerability, the scene transcends plot and becomes a bodily experience for the reader.

Personally, the scenes that really stayed with me combined personal betrayal with a sudden, irreversible consequence. I once tore through a book where a quiet confession in the rain turned into a public, legal nightmare by dawn — the intimacy of the confession made the fallout feel like a personal wound. Afterwards, I had to stop, put the book down, and breathe; that’s the kind of upset that means the writer succeeded. Those are the scenes I talk about with friends for days, dissecting what we would have done differently and why our hearts were racing. They linger, in a good way, like a song you can’t stop humming.

How Does Tomorrow When The War Began Differ From The Novel?

5 Answers2025-10-17 22:31:37

I still get a kick out of comparing the book and the screen version of 'Tomorrow, When the War Began' because they almost feel like two siblings who grew up in different neighborhoods. The novel is dense with Ellie's interior voice—her anxieties, moral wrestling, and tiny details about the group's relationships. That internal diary tone carries so much of the story's emotional weight: you live in Ellie's head, you hear her doubts, and you feel the slow, painful drift from ordinary teenage banter into serious wartime decision-making. The film, by contrast, has to externalize everything. So scenes that in the book unfold as extended reflection get turned into short, dramatic beats or action setpieces. That changes the rhythm and sometimes the meaning.

The movie compresses and simplifies. Subplots and backstories that give characters depth in the novel are trimmed, and some scenes are reordered or tightened to keep the pace cinematic. Themes like the moral ambiguity of guerrilla warfare and the teenagers' psychological fallout are present, but less explored — the film leans harder on visual suspense and romance beats. Practical constraints show too: fewer long, quiet moments; a crisper moral framing; and characters who sometimes feel more archetypal than fully rounded. For me, the novel is the richer emotional meal and the film is the adrenaline snack—both enjoyable, but different appetites. I love watching the movie for its energy, but I always return to the book when I want to sit with the characters' inner lives.

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