Greater Fool: The Troubled Future Of Real Estate

ABO Personality Quiz
Take a quick quiz to find out whether you‘re Alpha, Beta, or Omega.
Scent
Personality
Ideal Love Pattern
Secret Desire
Your Dark Side
Start Test
Loving My Real Estate Tycoon
Loving My Real Estate Tycoon
The Milford Vineyards of west Kentucky are beautiful and lined with row after row of lush grape vines. As Willa drove past them she thought back to her childhood days spent with her best friend Kaysea Milford running down the grape laden rows. Today Kaysea's family was throwing a wine tasting party to celebrate the launch of their newest red wine. It was sure to make a grand mark amongst the nation's red wines. After college Willa and Kaysea both went back home to join their family's prospective businesses. Neither of them were lacking for anything as both family's were very well off. Willa's family owned a large dairy farm just to the east of where the Milford's land was situated. The Stockholm Farm spanned thousands of acres and many grocery stores in the state as well as others in the country were being supplied with filtered milk from their dairy. Two generations of the Stockholm family had been working the dairy farm and making the business a billion dollar entity. The day Willa went to the Milford's wine tasting party she encountered Grey Langly. The real-estate tycoon from Frankfort who was an architect by trade. She accidentally bumped into him while carrying a glass of red wine in her hand and spilled the contents down the front of her dress. "Oh my!" "Pardon me miss" exclaimed Grey! "Let me get you something to wipe up that mess." When Willa locked eyes with Grey she instantly fell silent and couldn't speak. His dark eyes and handsome face rendered her speechless. She couldn't move and her heart raced. "Are you ok?" Grey asked. Kaysea immediately walked over to rescue Willa from the embarrassing situation. Grey, let me introduce you to my best friend Willa Stockholm.
Not enough ratings
|
31 Chapters
TROUBLED
TROUBLED
She is just a good girl trying to impress her parents. He is a bad boy who only joined this website so he could get a couple of bucks. He has tattoos, a bad attitude, smokes, has no care in the world and has a horrible past back in England. He can't stand her because she is a little spoiled brat who listens to everything her parents tell her. She can't stand him because of his mockery and stupid sarcastic comments. It's hard to hate someone who has a panty dropping smile, someone who awakes all your sexual desires, someone who changes you into the best version of yourself. Live your life like everyday is the last and one day you will be right. Previously Known as Rent a Christian boyfriend.
10
|
51 Chapters
Troubled Heart
Troubled Heart
Makayla Hopkins - I promised myself I’d never get involved with a politician, but Stacey Sherbourn changed everything. Now I know the truth, and it’s uglier than I ever imagined. Her lies aren’t just personal—they threaten everything I care about. Armed with proof of her corruption, I’ve come to the Colorado Rockies to stop her before she can destroy the pristine wilderness she’s so eager to sacrifice. But what I didn’t plan for was Lilac Ray. Fierce, sharp, and breathtaking, she’s everything Stacey isn’t—and everything I can’t afford to be distracted by. Lilac Ray- When Makayla Hopkins arrived in the Rockies, I knew she wasn’t just another hiker seeking solace. She came with purpose—and danger. My half-sister Stacey had already done enough to destroy these mountains, and I wasn’t about to trust her ex, no matter how determined or charming she seemed. But Makayla’s not who I expected. Beneath her cool, tech-savvy exterior, there’s a fire that matches my own. The closer we get to taking Stacey down, the more I realize the real danger might not be trusting Makayla—it might be falling for her. Book 6 in the Ravenwood Series. It can be read as a standalone. However, to learn about the characters and past events that may be referenced, you should check out the rest of the series. Book 1 - The Princes of Ravenwood (staring Makayla's triplet cousins Darius, Elijah, and Forrest) Book 2 - Chasing Kitsune Book 3 - Expect the Unexpected Book 4 - Out of My League (staring Makayla's cousin Reese) Book 5 - Man's Best Wingman (staring Makayla's cousin Clay featuring her in a supporting role)
10
|
45 Chapters
Bright Future With Him
Bright Future With Him
Kathryn Michaels is a country bumpkin with an honest personality. She's also a timid woman who tends to make careless mistakes at work. Just one glare can easily make her burst into tears. Chris Albert is the most well-known man in Harborlean. He's a cruel and bloodthirsty man with a penchant for brutal and inhuman methods. No woman dares to pine after him even though he's blessed with gorgeous looks. Unexpectedly, a woman actually manages to sneak into his room and sleep with him while he's drunk! Just as Chris scours the world for the mysterious woman, he realizes that his secretary is putting on more weight each passing day. With a dark expression on his face, he coaxes, "Tell me, Kathy. Were you the woman from that night?" Kathryn meets the dangerous man's eyes before shrinking away from him in fright. "N—No!"
9.5
|
1343 Chapters
For the Greater Good
For the Greater Good
After being away for three years on a special mission, I saw a prenatal examination report on the passenger seat of my CEO wife's Maybach. Fiona Geller told me, "My sister died so young. I must leave her a child. It's just a test-tube baby with my brother-in-law. It's not an affair." The brother-in-law in question, Phillip Stanton, sent Fiona's pregnancy photos to my parents, mocking me for using his sperm to produce a baby with Fiona. My parents suffered a heart attack upon learning the news and were hospitalized. Fiona looked aggrieved. "Don't get so worked up, honey. One of the twins can have your surname!" I looked at her, completely giving up hope. I then called the unit.
|
10 Chapters
Her Troubled Bully
Her Troubled Bully
Being bullied from middle school till high school by one of the popular boys in school is like living in hell for Jennifer Greene. She is quiet and just wants to get through High School without stress, but it seems fate has other plans for her. Meet Reece Morgan, the gorgeous bully. He is hell bent on breaking Jennifer in other to fight his demons. Will he succeed?or will she be able to save him from the dark hole he was stuck in?.... keep reading to find out.
8.8
|
42 Chapters

Which Scary Things Are Inspired By Real-Life Events?

3 Answers2025-10-19 19:11:58

Exploring the eerie landscape of horror often leads me to unsettling truths rooted in real-life events. Take 'The Conjuring' series, for instance; the haunting premise is inspired by the real-life investigations of Ed and Lorraine Warren, paranormal investigators. Their encounters with demonic forces add a chilling layer to the supernatural elements portrayed. It’s wild to think that behind those ghostly possessions and spine-chilling atmospheres, there are actual cases that created such fear and curiosity, pushing the boundaries of fear right into our living rooms.

Then, there’s 'Psycho,' a classic that draws from the life of Ed Gein, a notorious killer whose gruesome actions shocked America in the 1950s. Gein’s crimes inspired not just 'Psycho' but also 'The Texas Chainsaw Massacre' and 'Silence of the Lambs.' It's fascinating yet horrifying to consider how a singular, horrifying figure can shape an entire genre, turning our fascination with the macabre into larger-than-life cinematic experiences.

Peering deeper into true crime lends an unsettling realism to these tales, making small towns feel like potential settings for these dark narratives. When you realize these stories have real-world roots, it transforms the horror into something almost palpable, leaving you with an atmosphere of creepiness that lingers long after the credits roll. It becomes a blend of fear and morbid fascination that’s hard to shake off, right?

Is 'Cryptonomicon' Based On Real Historical Events?

4 Answers2025-06-18 11:47:22

Neal Stephenson's 'Cryptonomicon' is a brilliant weave of fact and fiction, deeply rooted in real historical events but spun into a wild, imaginative tapestry. The novel draws heavily from World War II cryptography, particularly the work at Bletchley Park and the Enigma machine, blending it with modern-day tech intrigue. Historical figures like Alan Turing appear, though fictionalized, alongside entirely made-up characters navigating a world where data is the new gold.

The book’s WWII sections are meticulously researched, capturing the tension and innovation of codebreaking, while the 1990s storyline—centered on digital currency and underground data havens—feels eerily prescient. Stephenson doesn’t just retell history; he reimagines it, asking how secrets shape power. The line between reality and fiction blurs, making the past feel alive and the future inevitable.

Is 'The Likeness' Based On A True Story Or Inspired By Real Events?

4 Answers2025-06-28 09:10:25

'The Likeness' isn't directly based on a true story, but Tana French drew heavy inspiration from real psychological phenomena and unsolved mysteries. The core premise—a detective impersonating a dead girl with an uncanny resemblance—echoes the unsettling nature of doppelgänger legends and cases of mistaken identity in criminal history. French also taps into the eerie dynamics of close-knit groups, reminiscent of cults or isolated academic circles where loyalty blurs reality.

What makes it feel 'true' is its psychological depth. The protagonist's struggle to maintain her cover mirrors undercover cops' real-life battles with identity erosion. The setting, a decaying manor housing a peculiar group, mirrors Gothic true crime locales like the Cecil Hotel. French blends these elements into a fiction that feels plausible, even if the events themselves aren't documented.

How Does The Math Of Life And Death Apply Math To Real Life?

3 Answers2025-11-14 06:32:33

Ever since I picked up 'The Math of Life and Death' by Kit Yates, I’ve been seeing numbers everywhere—not in a creepy way, but in those 'aha!' moments where math suddenly makes sense of the chaos around us. The book breaks down how math isn’t just abstract equations but a toolkit for navigating real-world risks. Like, Yates explains how probability can save lives during disease outbreaks by modeling spread patterns, or how game theory influences everything from traffic flow to vaccine distribution. It’s wild how often we unknowingly rely on math—like when GPS calculates the fastest route using algorithms or how error-correcting codes prevent your texts from turning into gibberish.

What blew my mind most was the chapter on medical testing. Yates shows how false positives in rare diseases can skew perceptions—something that feels counterintuitive until the numbers lay it bare. It’s not just about crunching data; it’s about questioning assumptions. The book made me realize math isn’t cold or detached—it’s deeply human, helping us weigh decisions from personal finance to pandemic policies. Now I catch myself estimating probabilities when I hear news headlines, and honestly? It’s empowering.

How Accurate Is The Eternal Zero To Real WWII Events?

2 Answers2025-08-24 17:45:11

The first time I sat through 'Eternal Zero' I got swept up in the emotion before my brain started picking at the history — you can feel how it tugs at family memory and honor. That emotional core is part of why the film and the novel hit so hard, but it also explains where accuracy gets blurry: it focuses on a single, sympathetic pilot’s story and uses that to explore loyalty, shame, and grief rather than to give a full military or political history of the Pacific War.

On the technical side, a lot of the aviation bits are pretty convincing. The Mitsubishi A6M Zero’s strengths and weaknesses — incredible maneuverability early in the war, long range, and the flip side of being very lightly armored with limited self-sealing fuel tanks — come through in the film’s dogfights and the way pilots talk about their planes. The timeline that leads to kamikaze tactics is rooted in reality too: by 1944–45 Japan had suffered crippling pilot and ship losses, and special attack units were formed as desperation measures. Where the movie departs more from mainstream historical consensus is in tone and implication. 'Eternal Zero' frames volunteer suicide missions largely through individual conscience and tragic nobility, which many historians say glosses over how social pressure, military culture, and sometimes outright coercion influenced young men. There’s also criticism that the film soft-pedals Japan’s wider wartime aggression and the ethical context of the conflict, which makes it feel selective rather than comprehensive.

So I treat 'Eternal Zero' as a moving personal narrative that contains many believable technical details and plausible human dynamics, but not as a balanced history lesson. If you want the emotional experience, watch the film; if you want the fuller, messier truth, follow it up with academic histories, veterans’ accounts, and documentaries that examine both kamikaze policy and the broader political choices of the time. Personally, I came away wanting to learn more about individual pilots’ letters and official records — those details made the movie stick, and they’re where history gets complicated in the best way.

Where Can I Find The Earliest Real God Name References?

3 Answers2025-08-29 01:56:12

If you want the absolute earliest places where actual god names show up in writing, I usually start in Mesopotamia because that's where writing itself first blooms. The proto-cuneiform tablets from the late 4th millennium BCE (Uruk period) already contain deity signs and early theophoric names—so you’ll see gods like Enki, An, and Inanna appearing as real written names rather than just images. Later, in the Early Dynastic and Akkadian periods, the names are far clearer in administrative lists, hymns, and royal inscriptions. For reading, check out translations of 'Enuma Elish' and the 'Epic of Gilgamesh' for Mesopotamian contexts, and look through online corpora like the 'Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature' and the 'Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative' for primary tablets and transliterations.

I also always compare Mesopotamia with Egypt when tracing earliest name-references. The Old Kingdom 'Pyramid Texts' (c. 24th–23rd centuries BCE) and earlier funerary inscriptions preserve names like Re (Ra) and Osiris in fairly early written form. Up in the Levant, the Ebla tablets (mid-3rd millennium BCE) list many gods in administrative and ritual contexts, which is a fascinating snapshot of local pantheons and can be browsed in publication collections of the Ebla archives.

A small practical tip from my museum-hopping days: the British Museum, Louvre, and Iraq Museum online catalogues are goldmines for images/transliterations if you want to see how names were actually written on clay or stone. If you enjoy digging, start with Mesopotamian lists and Egyptian pyramidal texts, then branch out to Vedic hymns like the 'Rigveda' for later Indo-Aryan names—it's a rewarding rabbit hole.

Is The Legend Of The Sea Based On Real Events Or Myths?

2 Answers2025-09-20 22:22:53

The mysterious world of 'The Legend of the Sea' really pulls you in, doesn’t it? I’ve spent hours lost in its tales of adventure and folklore. The show draws heavily from maritime myths and legends that have floated around cultures for centuries. Think about it: sailors often spun stories about mystical creatures lurking beneath the waves and treasures buried on forgotten islands. While some plot points are rooted in these myths, they’re artistically interpreted to create a more captivating narrative that resonates with our sense of wonder about the oceans.

If we dig a bit deeper, the idea of legendary sea monsters has origins in various cultures. Take the Kraken from Scandinavian folklore, for instance, pictured as a gigantic sea creature enticing sailors into its depths. 'The Legend of the Sea' taps into this element, mixing those age-old stories with fictional characters and events. When creators weave in historical settings and actual events—like major naval battles or notorious pirate tales—they bring a layer of authenticity that makes everything feel grounded yet fantastical. Who can resist that blend?

The series also reflects broader themes of exploration and discovery that parallel the Age of Sail, when many real explorers set out into the unknown. There’s something so thrilling about the idea of venturing into the vast, uncharted waters, not knowing what awaits you. In that respect, the show feels both like myth and a homage to the adventurous spirit of humanity! I'm personally enthralled by how the narrative invites viewers to ponder the unseen possibilities of the sea, urging us to embrace the stories that have shaped our view of the world. It’s a beautiful dance between reality and imagination, and I can’t help but love the escapism it offers.

So, to sum it up? Yeah, it definitely incorporates those captivating elements of myth while tying back to genuine maritime lore, pulling us in with both familiar and fantastical threads. Watching it feels like diving into a treasure chest of tales, each more enchanting than the last!

What Makes Real Life Mystery Books So Popular?

3 Answers2025-08-20 12:19:19

Real life mystery books have this magnetic pull because they tap into our innate curiosity about the unknown. I love how they blend facts with the thrill of a detective story, making history or true crime feel alive. Take 'The Devil in the White City' by Erik Larson—it’s not just about H.H. Holmes’ crimes but also the World’s Fair, weaving architecture and murder into a chilling narrative. These books often reveal how ordinary people confront extraordinary events, which is both relatable and awe-inspiring. The realism hits harder than fiction because it’s proof that truth can be stranger than imagination. Plus, piecing together clues alongside the author feels like solving a puzzle, and who doesn’t love that adrenaline rush?

Can I Download Own Your Past Change Your Future Novel For Free?

3 Answers2025-11-14 14:44:34

There's always a temptation to hunt down free versions of books we're curious about, especially when budgets are tight. But with 'Own Your Past Change Your Future', I’d really encourage supporting the author and publishers by purchasing it legally. I get it—books can be expensive, and not everyone can afford them. Still, pirated copies often come with terrible formatting, missing pages, or even malware risks. Plus, authors put their heart into their work, and they deserve compensation.

If money’s tight, check your local library! Many offer digital lending through apps like Libby or OverDrive. You might also find used copies online for a fraction of the price. I’ve stumbled upon some great deals on ThriftBooks or even Facebook Marketplace. It’s worth the wait to get a legit copy—you’ll enjoy the read way more knowing it’s ethical, and the quality will be top-notch.

Which Alternatives To Apache Kafka Support Real-Time Analytics?

4 Answers2025-07-11 07:26:11

As someone who's constantly diving into tech solutions for real-time data, I've explored several alternatives to Apache Kafka that excel in real-time analytics. One standout is 'Apache Pulsar', which offers seamless scalability and built-in support for multi-tenancy, making it a great choice for enterprises needing robust real-time processing. Another favorite is 'Amazon Kinesis', especially for cloud-native setups—its integration with AWS services makes analytics workflows incredibly smooth.

For those prioritizing simplicity, 'RabbitMQ' with plugins like 'RabbitMQ Streams' can handle real-time use cases without the complexity of Kafka. 'Google Cloud Pub/Sub' is another solid pick, particularly for GCP users, thanks to its low latency and serverless architecture. If you need edge computing, 'NATS Streaming' delivers lightweight performance perfect for IoT or distributed systems. Each of these tools has unique strengths, so the best choice depends on your specific needs—whether it’s scalability, ease of use, or cloud integration.

Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status