Mistaken Identity

Mistaken Identity
Mistaken Identity
Falling for him was her greatest mistake. That was what Gemila Prescott realized when she watched the video of her father and twin sister's brutal death. He had caused their deaths. Her father and twin sister didn't deserve to die like that. Harry Robinson is a well known drug dealer and leader of the most notorious mafia gang known as the SCORPIONS. He wasn't aware of Gemila being a twin and so to him, she's already dead. Little did he know his men had killed the wrong Prescott. She should never have fallen for a mafia boss as dangerous as he was and now? It was time for her to get revenge on him. She was ready to make him pay for the pains she felt but along the way, will buried feelings wake up and jostle their way into her heart, into the way of her revenge?
10
|
115 Chapters
Mistaken Identity
Mistaken Identity
Heartbroken after her boyfriend’s betrayal, Raina Ross drowns her sorrows in alcohol. Drunk, she mistakenly has a one-night stand with Asher Storm, who mistakes her for someone else. A tragic accident the next morning leaves her with amnesia and mistaken identity as Avery Wellesley, the widow of a powerful family. Seven years later, Raina returns with her twin sons, and Asher reenters her life, determined to uncover the truth about the woman he can’t forget. As Raina’s memories return and she falls in love with Asher, secrets unravel, forcing her to face betrayal, love, and danger as she fights for her true identity and the safety of her family.
10
|
150 Chapters
Hot Chapters
More
Mistaken Identity
Mistaken Identity
Gabrielle "Gabby" Crisostomo will not allow some wealthy guy to take advantage of her sister, and she couldn't let any man just leave her sister after they got tired of her, so she decided to kidnap the bastard who ruined her sister's life. However, she made such a huge mistake of kidnapping the wrong person, a wrong person who happened to be the billionaire Jayden Andrada, and Jayden Andrada will not hesitate to get back to the woman that caused him to lose a very important business deal, just because of a stupid mistaken identity.
7.3
|
48 Chapters
Mistaken Bride Identity (English Version)
Mistaken Bride Identity (English Version)
Lyka is a simple woman, jolly, funny and kind-hearted. She accepted her fate when her father died. She became a nanny in her own house because of her stepmother but she never blamed her father for marrying again before but now she seeks freedom. One day, her cousin Kyla visited her and brought her away from her miserable life. They hung out together and even bought her everything she needed. She thought Kyla was just so good to her because they were relatives. Days passed, when Lyka heard a sudden news that her stepmother wanted to sell her to those loan sharks. She was terrified and immediately planned on escaping. She went far away even though she didn't want to leave her younger step brothers. She doesn't have a choice but to go far away.  On her new journey, new life, new apartment, her cousin Kyla suddenly showed up and begged her to act as her substitute as a bride. She immediately said no even though they really look alike. But things changed when Lyka knew her cousin was in danger. She made a choice to agree with the said plan.  She was anxious to meet her husband. Kyran was not fond of this kind of arrangement but was forced to have her beside him. Would they click with others or would it be a disaster?
Not enough ratings
|
5 Chapters
Mistaken Identity: I'm Not A Mistress
Mistaken Identity: I'm Not A Mistress
My best friend and I go to a music festival together. There, my brother's girlfriend locks me in the toilet. "Young women these days are so shameless—I can't believe you had the nerve to seduce my CEO boyfriend! I'm going to teach you a lesson today since your parents obviously didn't raise you right!" She refuses to listen to my explanation. She pours dirty water all over me before slapping me in public and stripping me. Then, she brands me with an insult. By the time my brother arrives, I'm tormented beyond recognition. "I can explain, Spencer! I thought you were lying when you said she was your sister!"
|
10 Chapters
MISTAKEN
MISTAKEN
He is an egomaniac and a self-centered human who only opened up to his dead ex. And she is a young professor of psychology who once had everything she ever dreamed of. She looks like his first love. And he reminds her of her fiancé. They cross paths and are drawn to each other for two different reasons. Firstly, Anna thinks Dylan has a piece to her past while Dylan thinks Anna is his first love. In fixing the misunderstandings between themselves, they begin to see reasons why they were mistaken or not.
10
|
31 Chapters
Hot Chapters
More

What Are Fan Theories About The Alpha'S Unknown Heir Identity?

9 Answers2025-10-22 06:50:02

I get a little thrill picturing the rumor mill around 'The Alpha' — it's been a hive of wild but oddly convincing theories about who the Unknown Heir might be.

One camp swears it's the quiet lieutenant who always stands just off-camera: the scar on his wrist, the old lullaby he hums, and that single scene where he refuses to kneel. Fans point to parallels with training sequences from chapter three and a line dropped by the elder during the auction episode. Another popular idea is the twin switch — the supposed 'dead' sibling who was actually smuggled out and raised under a different name. People love the dramatic reveal of a hidden twin because it explains contradictory childhood memories and two items that looked identical in the archives.

My favorite, though, is the messy, political theory: the heir isn't purely blood-related but is the product of a secret pact — an adopted child from a rival house meant to seal peace. It fits the narrative's recurring theme of identity being constructed rather than inherited, and I can't help picturing that reveal scene with rain and an old oath. It would sting and be beautiful at the same time.

What Clues Reveal The Pack'S Nemesis Identity In Book Two?

9 Answers2025-10-22 08:57:05

Grinning at how many tiny breadcrumbs the author left, I started picking through the little details in 'The Pack' book two like a detective with a favorite magnifying glass.

First, the way 'Nemesis' knows private pack lore that only inner members use — the offhand references to the Moon Oath, the Old Howl, and the childhood nickname of the alpha — that's a big flag. There are also physical echoes: the silver notch on the talisman, a limp on the left leg, and the particular scent of smoke and cedar that follows certain scenes. A seemingly throwaway line about who used to sleep in the attic becomes huge when a photograph later shows the same attic with someone who matches 'Nemesis' features.

Beyond visuals, there are behavioral clues: a habit of leaving one cup half-full, quoting a lullaby when angry, and an oddly specific knowledge of a locked cellar. When I put those together with timeline slips — the suspect being unaccounted for during two key nights — the reveal becomes less shocking and more satisfying, like watching a puzzle click. I loved how the clues reward anyone who pays attention; it feels earned and clever, which made the reveal very fun for me.

When Does The Rejected Ex-Mate Secret Identity Reveal The Truth?

7 Answers2025-10-22 02:50:36

The reveal in 'The Rejected Ex-mate' hit me like a sucker punch—I wasn’t ready for how personal and messy it got. It doesn’t happen in the earliest chapters; instead the author delays it until the stakes are real, so the unmasking comes around the midpoint-to-late stretch of the story. In the version I read, the rooftop confrontation at the end of the second major arc is where the truth gets dragged into the light: secrets spilled, motivations exposed, and a whole pile of resentment finally named.

That scene is crafted to land emotionally rather than just shock. You get a slow burn beforehand—tiny clues and awkward glances—and then the character’s facade collapses during a raw confession that forces everyone to re-evaluate their history. It felt earned, messy, and oddly cathartic; I closed the chapter buzzing and a little sad, in the best way.

What Soundtrack Songs Are In The Bourne Identity Movie?

9 Answers2025-10-22 14:34:47

The music in 'The Bourne Identity' is basically built around John Powell’s tense, propulsive score with a single pop-ish bookend: Moby’s 'Extreme Ways'. I love how Powell mixes frantic strings, jittery percussion, and those little repeating motifs that follow Jason Bourne everywhere — you’ll hear them as short cues on the official soundtrack album often labeled things like 'Main Title', 'Bourne' or 'Memory'. Most of what you hear during the chase and sneak scenes is instrumental score: quick staccato strings, low brass pulses, and electronic textures that give the movie its nervous energy.

The one full song with lyrics that most people recognize is Moby’s 'Extreme Ways', which plays over the end credits and became an iconic close to the film. The album release collects the film cues into track names that map to scenes (car chases, fights, the quiet identity moments), and listening to it outside the movie actually highlights Powell’s craft — how he builds atmosphere without getting in the way. I still get goosebumps when that final chord hits and 'Extreme Ways' begins; it really seals the movie for me.

Which Order Should I Watch The Bourne Identity Movies?

9 Answers2025-10-22 23:45:57

If you want the cleanest emotional ride and the most satisfying detective-turned-action arc, watch the films in their release order: 'The Bourne Identity', then 'The Bourne Supremacy', then 'The Bourne Ultimatum'.

Those first three are the heart of the saga—Matt Damon's Jason Bourne grows from confused survivor to a man systematically uncovering a world built to erase him. The pacing and tone change subtly across the three, and seeing them in release order preserves the reveals and character beats. After the trilogy I’d slot in 'The Bourne Legacy' if you’re curious about how the programs spun off into other operatives; it’s a solid companion piece but follows a different protagonist and tone.

Finish with 'Jason Bourne' if you want a later epilogue-ish chapter that tries to reconnect with Bourne’s past while pushing the surveillance/state themes into a modern setting. Honestly, starting with the trilogy feels like the best way to fall into that world and appreciate how the filmmaking shifts over time—gritty, messy, and utterly addictive.

Is The Colossal Titan'S Identity Revealed In Attack On Titan?

4 Answers2026-02-11 16:27:37

Man, the reveal of the Colossal Titan's identity in 'Attack on Titan' was one of those moments that just hit differently. I was binge-watching the anime with friends, and when it happened, our jaws collectively dropped. The way the story built up to it—layer by layer, hint by hint—was masterful. It wasn't just a shock for shock's sake; it recontextualized so much of the early narrative. The betrayal, the motivations, the sheer weight of that character's actions suddenly made eerie sense.

What I love about this reveal is how it mirrors the series' broader themes of hidden truths and cyclical violence. The Colossal Titan isn't just a monster; it's a person with a history, a purpose, and a heartbreaking connection to the protagonists. That duality is what makes 'Attack on Titan' so compelling—it forces you to question who the real 'enemy' is. Even now, rewatching those early scenes hits harder knowing the truth.

How Does 'Know Thyself: Western Identity From Classical Greece To The Renaissance' Explain Identity Development?

4 Answers2026-02-14 13:31:10

Ever since I picked up 'Know Thyself', I've been fascinated by how it traces the evolution of identity like a grand, winding river. The book argues that self-awareness wasn’t always this introspective journey we think of today—back in Classical Greece, it was more about your role in society. Socrates’ famous 'know thyself' wasn’t about navel-gazing; it was about understanding your place in the polis. Fast-forward to the Renaissance, and boom—individualism starts creeping in. Artists like Michelangelo signed their work, and thinkers like Petrarch fretted over personal legacy. It’s wild how much feudalism and later humanism reshaped what 'self' even meant.

What really stuck with me was the book’s take on medieval identity—how faith kinda swallowed the self whole. You weren’t 'you' so much as a soul awaiting judgment. Then the Renaissance thawed that out with rediscovered classical texts and a growing itch for personal expression. The book ties this to everything from portrait paintings to early autobiographies. Makes you realize modern identity crises aren’t so new—just riffing on centuries of humans asking, 'Wait, who AM I?'

How Does Blade Runner 2049 Joi Affect K'S Identity Arc?

4 Answers2026-02-02 00:19:11

Watching K with Joi in 'Blade Runner 2049' felt like watching someone carefully rearrange a mirror to see a face he didn't know was his.

At first, Joi functions as validation for K — she orders his days, affirms his choices, and is literally marketed to be whatever he needs. That external affirmation matters because K's whole identity is provisional; he's a replicant trained to obey and doubt. Joi reflects his desires back at him and, crucially, tells him he matters. But that 'telling' is fragile: it's constructed by code and commerce, which complicates intimacy. When Joi asks to be more than a product, and when she temporarily inhabits Mariette's body, those moments expose the gap between projection and personhood.

Losing Joi pushes K into a sharper, lonelier kind of self-definition. Without that soft mirror, he has to hold the narrative of his life himself. He moves from being someone who accepts validation to someone who acts — the decision to seek out the truth about the child, to protect it, and ultimately to choose sacrifice for love rather than for programming, all show an identity forming through absence as much as presence. I still find that bitter-sweet shift haunting and strangely uplifting. I walk away thinking about how we all lean on reflections, but real maturity comes when we stop needing the mirror to stand upright.

How Does Age Shape Identity In Girl, Woman, Other?

3 Answers2026-02-04 09:51:16

Age hums through 'Girl, Woman, Other' like a subtle bassline that you only notice when you lean in close. The book layers lives so that youth, middle years, and old age are all speaking at once: you get sharp, impatient voices full of possibility alongside those that carry decades of choices, compromises, and quiet rebellions. For me, the most striking thing is how age doesn't simply mean decline or wisdom — it's a context that reshapes identity. Young characters are testing languages of belonging and sexuality; older characters keep the scars and small victories of earlier struggles. That contrast makes the novel feel alive and honest.

Evaristo's structure helps this: by moving around in time and perspective, she refuses a straight line from girlhood to old age. Memory and present moment braid together, so being older means having a collage of selves rather than a single conclusion. That allows identities to be revised — regrets revisited, loves reclaimed, vocations reinvented. Age becomes a set of tools and constraints: it gives some women authority and a kind of bravery, it also brings losses and different expectations. I loved how the book showed intergenerational ties — how a mother's past can be both a map and a warning, how younger women inherit both trauma and the language to resist.

Reading it made me think about my own timeline and how much of who I am is stitched from past versions of myself. 'Girl, Woman, Other' treats age as a material you work with, not just fate, and that idea has stuck with me.

How Does Cryptomnesia Explore Memory And Identity?

3 Answers2025-11-25 16:46:47

Cryptomnesia is such a fascinating concept, especially when you see how it plays out in stories that tackle memory and identity. I recently read this psychological thriller where the protagonist starts having vivid memories of events they never experienced, and it totally messed with their sense of self. The way the narrative unfolded made me question how much of our identity is truly ours—like, are we just a collection of borrowed memories? It’s eerie but also weirdly relatable because haven’t we all had moments where we’re not entirely sure if something happened to us or if we just heard about it?

What really stuck with me was how the story used cryptomnesia to blur the lines between reality and imagination. The character’s confusion felt so visceral, and it made me think about how fragile our grasp on identity can be. If you can’ trust your own memories, what’s left? It’s a theme that pops up in shows like 'Westworld' too, where characters grapple with implanted memories. The more I think about it, the more I realize how much of our personality might just be a patchwork of things we’ve absorbed without even realizing it.

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