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Something Stolen, Something Cruel, Something Walked Away
Something Stolen, Something Cruel, Something Walked Away
I went to my best friend's place for her birthday, and out of nowhere, she started complaining. "I'm so jealous of you," she said. "Your boyfriend has basically no sex drive." "Mine's the complete opposite. He wanted it seven times last night. I was crying so hard I lost my voice, and he still wouldn't stop." I gave her a sympathetic smile. "That just means he's crazy about you. Unlike mine—he's practically celibate. Like a monk." She raised an eyebrow, casually stroking the two-million-dollar ruby bangle on her wrist. "He's not bad," she said, a hint of smugness in her voice. "He was with his ex for five years, but he still chose to marry me behind her back. He was so afraid she'd push for marriage that he faked going bankrupt and told her he had ALS. "The girl wouldn't let go, though. She sold her blood, her kidney—whatever it took—to scrape together money for his treatment. "She was working the graveyard shift at a factory, while he and I were fooling around in a twenty-million-dollar villa." I froze. To help my boyfriend Nathan Whitley pay for his ALS treatment, I had done all of those things. Before I could even process it, the door opened, and a tall, sharply dressed man walked in. "Babe," he said, "I got that strawberry flavor you like. How about wearing that silk nightie tonight?" Our eyes met. I stood there, frozen in shock, a chill running down my spine. It was Nathan Whitley—the man who was supposed to be broke, bedridden, and dying of ALS.
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9 Chapters
Unexpected Something
Unexpected Something
The mysterious heir of the Ace Corporation Inc, Devian Ace, indeed the richest man in Asia, rather cold-blooded, found a young and beautiful girl, Arien, unconscious... . . "Who are you ?.. Why are you here ?" . . "I saved your life, you owe me, isn't it ?" . . Little did they knew they had a long way to go... . . Together!!! °I welcome you to read my novel 'Unexpected Something'. You can enjoy a great love story of Devian and Arien and witness their never-ending love which is boundless of all superficial problems. They've proved us that there is nothing above love in this world. Starting from clashes to romance, let's witness their happy ending together... So let the game of fire and ice begin...°
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96 Chapters
Something wild
Something wild
It started out as a not-so-innocent flirtation, running away omega Annie simon can't resist the powerful man on the motorcycle...or his tantalizingly erotic promises. Long-haired and leather-clad,Jacob kerr is strong,sexy,powerful Alpha has searched for his mate for years,when he finds the fierce and reckless annie , he determined to protect his mate to give her the ultimate lesson in pleasure, if she's willing. And all she can say is yes......
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33 Chapters
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Something Good
Something Good
June was someone ordinary, everything changes when a ridiculously hot stud, Andrew walks into her life and then it was a roller-coaster ride. Join them in their little rendezvous. Stay with them as they overcome all the odds for love.
Not enough ratings
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11 Chapters
Something Immortal
Something Immortal
This book is for the people who feel as if they are alone. This book isn’t just about a love story but also about trauma that comes with wanting to be loved. I don’t condone anything that this book is about. This is awareness. Somewhere in this world this happening to so many people. This is for them. For them to know you aren’t alone, you are heard, and it is NOT your fault. These topics need to be talked about. You will fall into their lives, feel connected to at least one of these characters. And some you will despise. You will see everyone’s point of view and what they think. Giving you breaks from certain characters. I hope you love and see the potential within this novel. And if you have triggers, please don’t read. This book is filled with triggers to help people see that they are heard! To spread awareness! With much love- Marie Dallas ❤️
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12 Chapters
Something Gained.
Something Gained.
Silent, unforgiving and strikingly gorgeous, Rylan Parker is a cold-hearted businessman. An intimidating CEO, perfectly fitted in tailored suits and with a soft side reserved only for his little daughter. He can't afford to fall for anyone and definitely not for the blue-eyed blonde he met at the diner. But when his grandfather's will demands he gets himself a wife, a contract-marriage seems to be the only option. Living under the same roof with the woman he is undeniably attracted to can't be that hard! He just had to make sure of one thing. He does not fall for his sensitive little wife. But that was never really a choice, was it? * * * * Sweet, charming and affectionate, Elena Smith is mostly an emotional mess. Between working two jobs and worrying about her father’s medical bills, she has no time for relationships. But when the hot, arrogant billionaire puts forward a proposition, she’s left to make a choice, a difficult one. The fact that he is ridiculously attractive wasn’t a reason enough for Elena to put her signature on a marriage-contract with a complete stranger. But her father?....Perhaps. What’s two years anyways? Just a little too much time to come out of this with her heart unscathed.
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56 Chapters

Does The New Anime Have Something To Talk About?

6 Answers2025-10-22 02:40:52

I'm hooked — the new anime absolutely gives people something juicy to chew on. From the first episode I felt that familiar jolt: bold visuals, a hooky opening theme that slaps, and a main character who isn't just charming but layered. There are moments that feel crafted for sharing — a perfectly timed close-up, a twist that reframes a relationship, and an episode cliffhanger that had my group chat lighting up for hours. The animation studio clearly put effort into key frames and cinematic staging; some scenes hit with a clarity and force that made me rewind just to savor the director's choices. Even the background details seem packed with easter eggs for eagle-eyed viewers, which always ramps up the conversation online and at conventions.

What really fuels debate, though, is how the show plays with expectations. It borrows recognizable beats — think a protagonist with moral grayness, a mentor who vanishes at the wrong time, or a bureaucracy that feels both familiar and uniquely twisted — but it flips at least one of those beats in a way that kept me guessing. People are discussing not only plot spoilers but thematic threads: identity, power and the cost of ambition, and the way memory is used to manipulate truth. Fans are split on pace: some praise the lean, compact storytelling while others wish the show lingered longer on quieter character moments. That division alone creates sustained chatter — theories, clip compilations, AMVs, and fanart that explore what the anime hints at but doesn't fully explain.

On the practical side, it’s spawning cosplay-worthy designs and a soundtrack that people are adding to their playlists. If you love dissecting symbolism or speculating about where arc threads will converge, there's a lot to unpack. If you prefer full emotional payoffs earlier, it might feel intentionally teasing. For me, it’s been the perfect mix of spectacle and substance: episodes that get you excited and moments that linger in the head for days. I'm looking forward to seeing how the second half resolves the promises it made — and I’ve already bookmarked a few scenes as favorites for future rewatching.

What Happens At The End Of Something Of Value?

2 Answers2026-03-25 05:26:21

The ending of 'Something of Value' by Robert Ruark is a gut-wrenching culmination of the racial and cultural tensions brewing throughout the novel. Set during Kenya’s Mau Mau uprising, the story follows Peter McKenzie, a white settler, and his childhood friend Kimani, a Kikuyu who becomes entangled in the rebellion. The final scenes are a brutal confrontation—Kimani, now a hardened rebel, leads an attack on Peter’s farm. In the chaos, Peter’s wife is killed, and Peter himself is forced to hunt down Kimani. When they finally face each other, it’s not as friends but as enemies, and Peter kills Kimani in a moment of tragic inevitability. The novel doesn’t offer easy resolutions; instead, it leaves you with the heavy cost of colonialism and fractured relationships. Ruark’s unflinching portrayal makes you question whether anything of value was truly preserved in this conflict—land, loyalty, or humanity itself.

The last pages linger on Peter’s hollow victory. He’s alive, but everything he cared about is gone: his family, his friend, even his sense of justice. The title echoes ironically—what ‘value’ remains is debatable. The land? The cycle of violence continues. The friendship? Shattered beyond repair. It’s a bleak but powerful commentary on how systemic oppression corrupts even personal bonds. I finished the book feeling drained, thinking about how history repeats itself when empathy fails. Ruark doesn’t let anyone off the hook—neither the settlers nor the rebels—and that’s what makes the ending so haunting.

Who Are The Main Characters In Confessions Of A Forty-Something F**K Up?

3 Answers2026-01-14 21:43:32

The heart of 'Confessions of a Forty-Something Fk Up' revolves around Nell Stevens, a woman navigating the messy, hilarious, and often relatable chaos of life after her expected path crumbles. She’s our flawed but endearing guide—self-deprecating, sharp-witted, and achingly honest about societal pressures to 'have it all.' Her best friend, Cricket, is the grounded counterbalance, a mom-of-three who still knows how to drag Nell into adventures. Then there’s Edward, the ex-fiancé whose departure kicks off Nell’s spiral, and Arthur, the gruff yet secretly sweet older neighbor who becomes an unexpected confidant. The cast feels like a warm, dysfunctional family, each character reflecting a different facet of adulthood’s absurdities.

What I love is how Nell’s relationships aren’t just background noise. Cricket’s chaotic energy mirrors Nell’s internal struggles, while Arthur’s gruff wisdom sneaks in life lessons without saccharine clichés. Even secondary characters, like Nell’s freelance clients or her parents’ gentle nagging, add layers to her journey. It’s a story where the 'side' characters never feel sidelined—they’re the scaffolding holding up Nell’s hilarious, heartbreaking reinvention.

Can I Buy A Little Something Different As A Print Novel?

3 Answers2026-02-03 01:52:11

You can, and it's honestly one of my favorite little rabbit holes to fall into — printed novels don't have to be a plain paperback with a glued spine. Think of the physical book as part of the story: there are editions that fold, pop, slip in letters, or use type and layout as a narrative device. Classics like 'House of Leaves' or 'S.' are great examples of novels where the printing and extra materials become part of the experience, but you don't need to hunt down cult rarities to get something odd and wonderful.

Look for small presses, artist books, and limited runs. Zines and chapbooks often contain short novels or novellas printed in small batches — they're cheap, quirky, and usually hand-stapled or hand-bound. Kickstarter and Etsy are full of indie writers and book artists offering letterpress prints, accordion books, and hand-bound chapbooks. University presses and micro-presses sometimes release slipcased or illustrated editions of lesser-known works, and local letterpress shops will sometimes produce short-run novellas with gorgeous paper, deckled edges, and tactile covers.

If you like collecting, hunt at book fairs, zine fests, and comic conventions — I once found a tiny, perfect-bound novella with tipped-in postcards that felt like a secret. If you want to make something yourself, print-on-demand services like Lulu or Blurb let you design your own quirky edition: different paper, sewn binding, photos, folded inserts. I love how a little physical twist can turn reading into a tiny ritual, and finding those odd little prints always feels like a reward.

How Did Critics Review Something About You Lyrics?

2 Answers2025-08-26 16:02:20

I got pulled into this debate after somebody shared a link to 'Something About You' while I was watering my plants, and I found myself reading through a pile of reviews like it was a new comic drop. Critics tended to split into a few recognizable camps. One camp praised the song’s emotional clarity: they liked how the lyrics were compact, almost conversational, and how that made the feelings feel immediate. Those reviewers often talked about craft — neat internal rhymes, a memorable hook, and a restraint that lets the vocalist’s vulnerability breathe. From that perspective, the lyrics work because they don’t try to be everything at once; they aim for a single, relatable moment and hit it hard.

On the flip side, another group of reviewers complained that the words were too simple, leaning on well-worn phrases about longing and presence without offering a fresh metaphor or twist. I read one critique that compared the lines to text-message poetry — immediate and honest, but sometimes disposable. A few critics also argued that the production choices undercut the lyrics: when synth swells or dense reverbs flood the mix, the nuance of a line gets lost. That’s interesting to me because I think how a song is arranged can either highlight or hide lyrical detail, and reviews that focused on that felt pretty fair.

Then there were the outliers: essays that read the lyrics politically or biographically, trying to place the song in the artist’s career arc or cultural moment. Those pieces brought up context I hadn’t considered — how a simple pronoun change, the emphasis on ‘you,’ or the absence of traditional narrative elements can shift a song from cute to subversive. Overall, I felt critics were useful not because they agreed, but because they offered multiple keys to understanding the same lines. If you want a quick takeaway from the reviews: some loved the intimacy and craft, some wanted more poetic boldness, and a few said production choices decided the final verdict. Personally, after reading the critiques I went back and listened to a stripped live version, and suddenly a few of those supposedly ‘simple’ lines hit me like a gut punch.

How Does 'The Tell-Tale Heart' Explore Guilt And Madness?

5 Answers2025-11-27 03:15:15

Reading 'The Tell-Tale Heart' feels like being trapped in the narrator's mind—a suffocating spiral of paranoia and self-destruction. The way Poe crafts that relentless heartbeat isn’t just a sound; it’s guilt manifesting as something physical, inescapable. The narrator insists he’s sane while describing the murder with chilling precision, but his obsession with the old man’s 'vulture eye' and the way he unravels when 'hearing' the heart under the floorboards? That’s textbook psychological horror. Madness isn’t just losing touch with reality; it’s believing your own lies until they consume you. Every time I revisit the story, I catch new details—like how the narrator’s exaggerated senses (hearing 'all things in heaven and earth') mirror the hypersensitivity of someone drowning in their own guilt.

What’s wild is how relatable it becomes if you think about guilt on a smaller scale. Ever lied about something trivial and then overcompensated with weirdly specific details? Poe takes that human tendency and dials it up to a murderous extreme. The story’s power lies in its ambiguity—is the heart really beating, or is it the sound of his own pulse screaming in his ears? Either way, it’s a masterpiece of showing how guilt doesn’t need external punishment; it’s a self-inflicted torture.

What Happens In The Ending Of Khul-Khaal: Five Egyptian Women Tell Their Stories?

4 Answers2026-01-22 17:29:02

Khul-Khaal: Five Egyptian Women Tell Their Stories' is a powerful collection of narratives that gives voice to the lived experiences of women in Egypt, and the ending really ties everything together in a way that’s both poignant and thought-provoking. Each woman’s story reflects her struggles, resilience, and the societal constraints she navigates, but the closing segments leave you with a sense of quiet defiance. There’s no grand resolution—just raw, unfiltered truth. The final accounts linger on themes of survival, identity, and the small but significant acts of rebellion these women engage in daily. It’s not a happily-ever-after, but it’s real, and that’s what makes it so compelling.

One thing that struck me was how the book avoids tying everything up neatly. Instead, it leaves space for the reader to sit with the discomfort, the contradictions, and the quiet victories. The ending doesn’t offer solutions but amplifies the women’s voices, letting them speak for themselves without editorializing. It’s a reminder that storytelling itself can be an act of resistance, and that’s where the real power lies. The last story, in particular, lingers—it’s subtle, but the weight of it stays with you long after you close the book.

What Happens To Maia In 'Something Like Gravity'? Spoilers

5 Answers2026-03-21 18:40:57

Ever since I picked up 'Something Like Gravity', Maia's journey stuck with me for weeks. The story dives deep into her emotional turmoil after a traumatic car accident that leaves her physically scarred and grappling with PTSD. What really hit hard was how her relationship with Chris, a trans guy she meets during summer, becomes this unexpected anchor—both of them carrying their own wounds but finding solace in each other. The book doesn’t shy away from messy, raw moments, like Maia’s panic attacks or her strained family dynamics, but it also lets her slowly rebuild herself. By the end, there’s no magical cure, just this quiet strength in her choosing to keep moving forward, scars and all. It’s one of those stories that makes you ache but also leaves you weirdly hopeful.

What I loved most was how the author handled Maia’s anger—it’s not sanitized or pretty. She lashes out, pushes people away, and that feels so real for someone dealing with trauma. The romance isn’t a fix-all either; Chris isn’t her savior, just someone who understands what it’s like to feel broken. The way their connection grows—through photography, late-night talks, and shared vulnerability—is honestly beautiful. And that final scene where Maia finally confronts the driver who caused her accident? Chills. It’s not about forgiveness but about reclaiming her voice.

Can You Tell Me When Outlander Season 8 Will Premiere?

5 Answers2025-12-29 02:08:02

Big news for fellow time-travel addicts: Season 8 of 'Outlander' premiered on June 16, 2024, on Starz in the United States.

I was honestly giddy when the date dropped — it felt like waiting for a book release all over again. The season adapts material from Diana Gabaldon’s 'Go Tell the Bees That I Am Gone', so fans of the novels will recognize certain beats, and the production kept filming in Scotland to keep that lovely, rugged authenticity. If you’re outside the U.S., Starz usually partners with Prime Video and other local distributors, so the episodes tend to show up on streaming platforms in many international territories either the same day or shortly after the Starz premiere.

I’m already planning a rewatch of earlier seasons to get ready: re-immersing in the soundtrack, costumes, and those quiet character moments makes the new episodes land so much better. Can’t wait to see how the show wraps up those long-running threads — feels bittersweet but very satisfying to finally get this next chapter.

Does Prey Tell Have A PDF Version Available?

4 Answers2025-12-03 08:25:40

Man, I totally get the hunt for digital copies of books—I've spent hours scouring the web for PDFs of my favorite titles too! From what I've dug up, 'Prey Tell' by Linda Tirado doesn't seem to have an official PDF release as of now. Publishers often prioritize e-book formats like Kindle or ePub over PDFs, especially for newer releases. But hey, don't lose hope! Sometimes academic libraries or niche platforms host PDFs, so it's worth checking sites like Scribd or even reaching out to the publisher directly.

If you're looking for alternatives, the audiobook version is super engaging—Tirado's raw delivery adds so much to her already powerful writing. And if you're into similar themes, 'Nickel and Dimed' by Barbara Ehrenreich or 'Evicted' by Matthew Desmond make great companion reads. The struggle to find specific formats is real, but it's also part of the fun of being a book hunter!

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