Educating The Retarded Child

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When I Flash-Married a Billionaire, My Ex Went on a Hunger Strike
When I Flash-Married a Billionaire, My Ex Went on a Hunger Strike
The once-revered socialite, Adora Matthews, was abducted for three years. After escaping death and making her way back, she thought the nightmare was finally over, only to plunge into yet another abyss. Her once-doting parents now treated her like a plague. Her fiercely protective older brother loathed her to the core. The adopted sister she once cared for mocked her with cutting remarks. Even her childhood sweetheart, who once sworn eternal love, was now engaged to that very sister, wishing for her death. All because of the rumors that she had contracted a vile disease, given birth to an old man’s child, and disgraced the Matthews family. With no other choice, she severed all ties and walked away, secretly carrying a fortune worth millions. Without hesitation, she entered a flash marriage with Louis Walker. Everyone knew Louis Walker was a surgical prodigy—young, brilliant, and from a prestigious family. Yet, no one dared to approach him, let alone propose marriage. His temperament was unpredictable, his moods volatile—genius and madness teetering on the edge. But after marrying the disgraced heiress of the Matthews family, Louis transformed into the ultimate doting husband, flaunting his love in public and clinging to her in private. As the Matthews family faced imminent bankruptcy with no way out, they turned to their son-in-law as a last resort. "For the sake of the family, help us find the mastermind who ruined us..." Louis, holding his wife in his arms, kissed her delicate fingers and smirked. "My dear Adora has such beautiful hands. Tell me, how did these flawless hands of hers manage to ruin you?" The Matthews family stood frozen in shock. "Adora... it was you?!"
9.6
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1296 Chapters
The Denver Alpha
The Denver Alpha
COLE : Being the alpha of the largest shifter pack in the state isn't easy or glamorous. It takes quick decisions and a level head, and sometimes I have to make ruthless choices for the greater good. It's a constant balancing act, only achieved with the highest level of organization- every aspect of my life is carefully curated. Some say I'm cold. Detached. Controlling. But we'd descend into chaos if I didn't rule with an iron fist, so I do, and my pack falls in line. Little did I know, all it'd take is one girl to upend my life into chaos. One girl who won't bow to me and fall in line with the rest. Juliet is too young, too wild and stubborn. She's the one I want but can never have. ~ JULIET : All my life, I've played a part. The daughter of our pack's former alpha; the sister of its current alpha. The darling of the Westfield pack. The smart girl. The good girl. The pretty girl. Everyone in my life seems to want me to fit a certain mold and behave a certain way, but I just want to be free. That's why I jumped at the chance to get away from home for the first time. Enrolling at the University in Denver is my golden ticket out of my small town; my first real shot at freedom. It's my chance to let loose and have fun away from the watchful eyes of my brother, and it's one I'm not going to waste. I'm going to flirt with boys. Dance the night away. And the Denver Alpha? Now that I've set my sights on him, he doesn't stand a chance. ~ *While this book is connected to the six-pack series universe, it can be read as a standalone*
9.9
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43 Chapters
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Chasing My Pregnant Wife
Chasing My Pregnant Wife
When Rosalie Young was two months pregnant, her husband, Theodore Spencer, suddenly handed her divorce papers."Cynthia has returned,” he said.Theodore and Cynthia Zeller had been childhood sweethearts, while Rosalie had been Theodore’s companion for ten years. Yet, Rosalie couldn't compete when her husband’s first love returned.She didn't try to hold onto him. She simply turned around and left, letting him fulfill his dream of being with his first love.Until one day, Theodore found a pregnancy test.When he saw it, he completely lost his mind!
7.5
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1482 Chapters
Accidentally Married
Accidentally Married
She was Dumped. He needed a bride. Jessica was to be married to her high school sweetheart and heartthrob Burke They decided to only go to the courthouse and do something small. Jessica gets dumped on her wedding day as Burke confesses to cheating on her. She is devastated. On the other hand, Xavier is the only grandson of the famous billionaire grandmaster. His grandfather who had been raising him since his parents died while he was still at a tender age is now nearing death. The grandfather wants his grandson to be married before he transfers ownership of the company to him. He doesn't care who the grandson marries he just wants him to settle down. Xavier had contracted a wife to get married to him. The strange girl who he had never seen before doesn't show up on the day of the wedding. Coincidentally, Jessica and Xavier happen to be together in the same courthouse at the same time. While Jessica overhears the conversation with Xavier over the phone she goes to propose marriage to him and then gets married to him. She was usually careful and ooverthoughteverything. She decided to do something spontaneous for the first time and it landed her into a marriage. She was going to get married either way. What happens when two people begin to spend time together? Read on to find out the thrilling love story between Jessica and Xavier
9.1
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707 Chapters
Reincarnation - The Divine Doctor and Stay-at-home Dad
Reincarnation - The Divine Doctor and Stay-at-home Dad
As an ordinary human being on the earth, Tang Long was brought to the Cultivation World by a lost immortal, and relying on his amazing talent, he made it to one of the five emperors in that world. However, struck by Thunder of Nine Heavens, he lost his life. It was lucky for him to rebirth in the human world as an intern who was named Qin Haodong. With his excellent medical skills, he became a divine doctor of traditional Chinese medicine and a father of a baby girl, whose mother was as pretty as a fairy. The little girl even asked him to find more lovers. What a cute girl...
9.9
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Her Return, His Regret
Her Return, His Regret
Everything changed when his Ex-girlfriend returned….. Larisa Bennett thought the news of her pregnancy would improve her relationship with her husband, Ryan Kingsley. However, before she could tell him the pleasant news, his ex-girlfriend, Ivy Williams, reappeared and turned her life upside down. It was like she was starting from zero all over again. Ryan suddenly became distant and detached, his attention now focused on the woman he always loved. Larisa was hit with the reality that Ryan would never love her. She was the third wheel in her own marriage and she was tired. Resorting to the only thing that would set her free, she asked for a divorce but surprisingly, Ryan refused, not wanting to let her go but his actions told a different story. His ex-girlfriend always came first. In a shocking turn of events, everything turned south when Larisa found herself kidnapped at the same time as Ivy. Ryan is faced with a difficult choice. He can only save one. Will he choose to save his wife or ex-girlfriend? What are the consequences of his choice? If he chooses to save Ivy, will he regret it and will it be too late?
9.9
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181 Chapters

Who Is The Protagonist In 'Educating'?

4 Answers2025-06-24 03:44:48

The protagonist in 'Educating' is a young woman named Emily Carter, whose journey from a sheltered upbringing to self-discovery forms the heart of the story. Emily starts as a naive college freshman, overwhelmed by the chaos of university life and the pressure to conform. Her sharp wit and hidden resilience slowly surface as she navigates toxic friendships, academic challenges, and a messy love triangle.

What makes Emily unforgettable is her flawed authenticity—she’s not a hero but an ordinary girl stumbling toward growth. Her passion for literature becomes her anchor, especially when she clashes with a cynical professor who later becomes her mentor. The novel’s brilliance lies in how Emily’s mistakes—like plagiarizing an essay or sabotaging a rival—reveal her complexity. By the end, she doesn’t magically transform but learns to embrace uncertainty, making her relatable to anyone who’s ever felt lost.

How Do Critics Compare Leaving Her Betrayed Partner And Child?

3 Answers2025-10-16 22:07:43

I notice critics often split into distinct camps when they talk about a woman leaving a betrayed partner and a child, and that split says a lot about the critic as much as the act. Some voices zero in on betrayal and abandonment; they frame the departure as a moral failure, talk about the duty of care, and measure the act against cultural expectations of motherhood and family stability. Those critics tend to emphasize immediate harm to the child and the partner’s suffering, and they often read the decision through a lens of responsibility rather than context.

On the other side, there are critics who foreground context—dangerous relationships, emotional or physical abuse, economic precarity, or chronic neglect. These readings ask whether staying would be a kinder or more sustainable option, and they make room for autonomy: the woman as an agent who must choose safety and dignity. Feminist-leaning critics will compare this scenario to male departures in stories like 'Kramer vs. Kramer', pointing out a double standard in moral outrage. Meanwhile, narrative analysts look at how stories portray her: is she villainized, redeemed, or rendered mysteriously ambiguous as in 'The Lost Daughter'? That framing shapes public sympathy.

I find those debates exhausting and necessary at once. They reveal how critics substitute moral certainty for messy lived realities. For me, the most honest critiques are the ones that refuse to flatten the woman into either villain or saint; they trace consequences for the child and the family while still acknowledging the structural forces—poverty, lack of social safety nets, gendered caregiving expectations—that push people into impossible choices. Personally, I tend to watch for nuance and for whether critics name those systems, not just judge the person, and that’s what sticks with me.

What Happens In 'The Explosive Child' Ending?

2 Answers2026-02-16 11:41:12

The ending of 'The Explosive Child' isn't about some dramatic climax or sudden revelation—it's more of a quiet, hard-won victory for both the child and the adults in their life. Dr. Ross Greene's approach centers on Collaborative & Proactive Solutions (CPS), so the 'ending' is really the culmination of small, persistent steps. By the final chapters, the child and caregivers have (ideally) built a framework for understanding explosive behaviors as a form of communication, not defiance. They’ve identified lagging skills and unsolved problems together, replacing punitive reactions with collaborative problem-solving.

What sticks with me is how the book frames progress as nonlinear. There’s no magic bullet, just gradual improvement through empathy and structured dialogue. The real 'ending' is a shift in perspective—seeing the child as a partner rather than an adversary. It’s oddly hopeful in its realism; Greene doesn’t promise perfection, just tools to reduce meltdowns and rebuild trust. I finished it feeling like I’d learned less about 'fixing' kids and more about listening to them.

How Does The Fifth Child End?

3 Answers2026-01-26 01:21:35

The ending of 'The Fifth Child' by Doris Lessing is hauntingly ambiguous, leaving readers with a sense of unease and unresolved tension. Ben, the fifth child, grows increasingly violent and alien, straining the family to breaking point. The parents, Harriet and David, eventually send him to an institution, but Harriet's guilt pulls her back—she visits Ben, who now lives in a squalid flat with other outcasts. The novel closes with Harriet realizing she can neither fully abandon nor redeem him. It's a bleak commentary on societal rejection and maternal conflict, where love is tangled with fear and obligation.

What lingers isn’t a clear resolution but the weight of Harriet’s choices. The final scene, where Ben stares at her with that eerie, unreadable gaze, suggests he’s beyond understanding or integration. Lessing doesn’t offer catharsis; instead, she leaves us questioning whether Ben was ever truly 'human' or a manifestation of the family’s repressed darkness. It’s the kind of ending that gnaws at you long after the last page.

Is The Kurt Cobain Child Involved In Music Or Art?

4 Answers2025-12-27 05:30:40

I get asked this a lot when conversations drift toward legacy kids and creativity—people are curious whether Frances Bean Cobain picked up a guitar or gravitated toward paint. From what I follow, she’s primarily carved out a life in the visual arts and fashion world rather than launching a public career as a musician. She’s shown work in galleries, done photography and collage, and has been photographed and styled for editorial spreads, leaning into a visual/curatorial sensibility more than a music-first identity.

That said, the music scene is woven into her life inescapably. She’s contributed to projects and exhibits connected to her father’s legacy and has collaborated on a few multimedia pieces that touch music and sound, but it’s not the same as being in a band or releasing albums. I really respect that she seems to choose what feels right for her, exploring visual storytelling and how image and memory interact—there’s a quiet strength in owning that path, and I find it inspiring.

Will Mr. Tycoon Is Actually The Father Of My Child Get A TV Show?

8 Answers2025-10-29 16:34:05

This one has been on my radar for months and I keep checking fan groups to see if a studio has snapped up the rights. 'Will Mr. Tycoon Is Actually the Father of My Child' screams TV-friendly material: it has clear romantic tension, a wealthy lead, and that 'secret parent' hook that makes for must-watch drama. If the source has strong readership numbers or viral fan art, producers will notice fast.

I think the real deciding factors are rights availability, whether the author is willing to license, and if a streaming platform believes it will bring viewers. In recent years I've watched several web novels and manhuas get adapted into glossy dramas because they already had built-in audiences. Casting is another make-or-break moment — the wrong chemistry can sink an otherwise perfect adaptation. Personally, I’m cautiously optimistic because the premise is exactly the sort that networks use to chase high stream counts and social buzz, and I’d binge it the second it drops, no question.

What Books Are Similar To Society'S Child: My Autobiography?

3 Answers2026-01-05 05:04:59

Reading 'Society's Child: My Autobiography' reminded me of how raw and unfiltered personal narratives can be. If you resonated with Janis Ian's candid storytelling, you might love 'Just Kids' by Patti Smith. It's another deeply personal memoir that captures the struggles and triumphs of an artist navigating a turbulent world. Smith's poetic prose and vivid recollections of her relationship with Robert Mapplethorpe mirror Ian's honest exploration of fame and identity.

Another gem is 'The Liars' Club' by Mary Karr. It’s a memoir that doesn’t shy away from dark family secrets and personal chaos, much like Ian’s work. Karr’s voice is both sharp and lyrical, making her story unforgettable. For something more recent, 'Educated' by Tara Westover offers a similar blend of resilience and self-discovery, though set against a radically different backdrop. These books all share that unflinching honesty that makes 'Society's Child' so compelling.

Who Is Bride In 'God Help The Child'?

3 Answers2026-03-21 19:04:09

Bride is the central character in Toni Morrison's novel 'God Help the Girl,' and her journey is one of the most hauntingly beautiful yet painful ones I've encountered in literature. Born with dark skin to light-skinned parents, she grows up enduring rejection and cruelty, even from her own mother. Morrison doesn’t just tell a story about race or beauty—she digs deep into how trauma shapes identity. Bride renames herself as an adult, shedding her birth name 'Lula Ann,' as if trying to escape her past. But no matter how much she transforms her appearance or succeeds professionally, the scars remain. The way Morrison explores self-worth, love, and healing through Bride’s fractured relationships—especially with Booker—left me thinking about it for weeks.

What’s fascinating is how Bride’s physical transformation (white clothing, shaved head) mirrors her emotional unraveling. It’s not just a story about suffering; it’s about the messy, imperfect path to reclaiming oneself. The scene where she literally begins to regress physically, losing her curves like a child, is surreal yet symbolic. Morrison doesn’t offer easy answers, and that’s what makes Bride so real—her pain, her mistakes, and her quiet resilience stayed with me long after I finished the book.

Is The Fifth Child A Horror Novel?

3 Answers2026-01-26 03:45:07

Doris Lessing's 'The Fifth Child' unsettles me in a way few books do—it’s not horror in the traditional sense, with jump scares or monsters (well, not the supernatural kind), but it feels horrific. The slow unraveling of Harriet and David’s perfect family because of Ben’s existence is psychological dread at its finest. Lessing crafts this unease through mundane details: the way neighbors stop visiting, the family’s quiet desperation. It’s more 'Rosemary’s Baby' than 'The Shining,' where the horror lives in societal rejection and parental guilt.

What chills me most is how Ben isn’t just a 'bad kid'—he’s something other, and Lessing leaves that ambiguity throbbing like an open wound. The real terror? That love might not be enough. That some things can’t be fixed. I finished it in one sitting and then stared at my walls for an hour, questioning everything about family and normality.

What Are Books Similar To Stay Wild My Child?

4 Answers2026-03-11 17:17:19

If you loved the whimsical, nature-inspired vibes of 'Stay Wild My Child', you might dive into 'The Wonderful Things You Will Be' by Emily Winfield Martin. It has that same tender, dreamy quality celebrating a child's potential and connection to the world. The illustrations are lush and imaginative, almost like walking through a fairy tale forest.

Another gem is 'Where the Wild Things Are' by Maurice Sendak—it’s a classic for a reason! While it’s more adventurous, it shares that primal, wild-child spirit. For something quieter but equally magical, 'The Night Gardener' by the Fan Brothers feels like a whispered secret between the pages, blending wonder and growth in a way that reminds me of 'Stay Wild'.

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