Romance English Series

Romance English series depict love stories, often focusing on emotional relationships, courtship, and personal growth, set against diverse backdrops from historical eras to modern-day settings, blending heartfelt moments with dramatic or comedic elements.
Enticing Series 1: Nightmare (English)
Enticing Series 1: Nightmare (English)
Asper Reign Dahlia ran away from home when she learned that her father wanted her to marry a cruel prince. She then had an unbelievable encounter with a dangerous mafia boss, Caspian Jyn in the city where she was hiding. Slowly, they became friends without her knowing his real identity. But what happened when she faced a life-and-death situation because of him? Will she be able to face a dangerous problem when all she did before was run away from every problem she knows she can't control? Will she finally have the courage to face this problem even though she knows that it will bring nothing to her but a nightmare?
Not enough ratings
99 Chapters
Governor's Possession (Savage Men Series) ENGLISH
Governor's Possession (Savage Men Series) ENGLISH
Jane and her friends were quietly working on their project at school when she suddenly heard a scream. Curious, she glanced out the window and saw a group of unknown men attacking a man. The next day, she met Rodrigo Navarro, the most powerful person in their area. The person who would change her peaceful life. How long could she hide from the young man if he was already claiming her as his own? PS. This is an English version of my story.
10
68 Chapters
A ROMANCE WITH MY GAY BESTFRIEND (ENGLISH)
A ROMANCE WITH MY GAY BESTFRIEND (ENGLISH)
"No, way! I don't want Heaven to marry that guy Tita, Tito!" I'm kinda shock when Ethan spoke, I didn't expect him to speak like that. "And I don't want Ethan to marry that girl Tita, Tito!" Mom and dad look disappointed. "Why are you always against each other's marriage? Are you two--" I don't know why I suddenly think of this right now but I don't care anymore! "W-We have a relationship! I love Ethan that's why I don't want him to marry another girl!" I turned my gaze to Ethan, he looked shock but then he suddenly held my hand. "Y-Yeah, Heaven is right, mom! We love each other that's why I don't her to marry him! The girl I want to marry is Heaven!" "WHAT??" "I thought you two are just friends..." "Best friend..."
Not enough ratings
5 Chapters
The Seven Sins Series: Luca Lindenhurst (English)
The Seven Sins Series: Luca Lindenhurst (English)
"Are you sure you want to do this?" Mist inquired. Carnation bit her bottom lip and looked down at the papers she was holding. "You can't back out once you sign the contract." She remained silent, so Mist spoke up again, "think about it twice." "It's still possible to quit," Mist suggested. She shook her head repeatedly. "No. . . I've made up my mind." "You're pretty desperate, aren't you?" "My family is in serious debt, and this is the only way I can pay it off." "You're so lovely. You don't belong here. But what options do I have? People like you are exactly what our business requires. Desperate women willing to cling to a knife's edge." Carnation placed the paper on the wooden table. She took a deep breath and quickly signed the contract before returning it to Mist. With a melancholy look, the woman accepted the contract and said, "you can no longer revoke what you have already signed. From today, you are now Mr. Lust's property." Carnation's heart was torn apart by the news. She traded her freedom and pride for the sake of money. When Carnation's father was admitted to the hospital after being diagnosed with lypmhoma. Their family's small business went bankrupt. Carnation had to drop out of college and work to support her family. In serious depth, she had no choice but to work in Casa de Lujuria, an exclusive nightclub owned by Luca Lindenhurst, a Seven Sins Association member.
10
126 Chapters
Wildest Beast [Hillarca Series 01] [ENGLISH VER]
Wildest Beast [Hillarca Series 01] [ENGLISH VER]
Maybe true love is the biggest obstacle of all. All Chaldene Azeria Tacata wants is to experience the normal course of life, just like everyone else. That would make paying the rent a problem. When her cousin's company recommended something. She immediately applied, she just didn't expect that her boss would be the arrogant and rude man at the hospital. Her anger started, but she was suddenly slapped for realization. "Excuse me?" She made a mistake! It was a different person in front of her, she thought she wouldn't be hired anymore. But he still accepted her… what if the simple course that Azeria wanted suddenly became chaotic? She falls harder for him, and it's too late to know that the love she has...it was forbidden. It is unclear whether they will be two at the end because Rezoir Israel Hillarca's family is the reason why his mother disappeared. Chaldene then decided...she decided to stay away from him because even though she loves him so much. They are not meant to be...his like the wildest beast that can break her into pieces.
10
48 Chapters
Curves and Basketball a BBW romance series
Curves and Basketball a BBW romance series
Meet Essence and Kymoni two Big Beautiful Plus size women fresh out of highschool and straight into college life. They ate far away from their small town in South Carolina. But are they ready for everything this new world will throw and them. Let's find out. Join me on this new roller-coaster ride!
9.8
412 Chapters

How Does After We Fell Fit Into The After Book Series Order?

4 Answers2025-10-17 16:05:56

Count me in: 'After We Fell' is the third main novel in the 'After' sequence, coming after 'After We Collided' and right before 'After Ever Happy'. If you read the series straight through, it's basically book three of the core four-book arc that tracks Tessa and Hardin through their most turbulent, revealing years. This book leans hard into family secrets, betrayals, and more adult consequences than the earlier installments, so its placement feels like the turning point where fallout from earlier choices becomes unavoidable.

There are a couple of supplementary pieces like 'Before' (a prequel) that explore backstory, and fans often debate when to slot those into their reading. I personally like reading the four core novels in release order—'After', 'After We Collided', 'After We Fell', then 'After Ever Happy'—and treating 'Before' as optional background if I want extra context on Hardin’s past. 'After We Fell' changes the stakes in a way that makes the final book hit harder, so for maximum emotional punch, keep it third. It still leaves me shook every time I flip the last few pages.

When Did The TV Series Set In That Summer Premiere?

4 Answers2025-10-17 12:10:20

Sun-drenched teen drama vibes hit different for me, and the show you're asking about — 'The Summer I Turned Pretty' — actually premiered on June 17, 2022. I dove into it the moment it dropped on Prime Video, partly because I loved the book and partly because the trailers sold that exact nostalgic, sunlit mood that screams beach towns and complicated feelings.

The premiere felt like the start of a long, lazy summer: soft cinematography, warm color palette, and a soundtrack that leaned into indie pop and washed-out guitar lines. Beyond the date, what sticks with me is how the series translated Jenny Han's tender, messy coming-of-age moments to screen. It’s the kind of show that makes you want to rewatch scenes for the small, perfectly framed moments — a glance across a porch, a late-night conversation on a dock — and the premiere set that tone right away. I was half excited and half pensive after watching that first episode, which is exactly what a summer romance-adjacent story should do.

Are There Plans For A Seven Summers Sequel Series?

4 Answers2025-10-17 17:34:05

Bright-eyed and still giddy, I’ve been scanning every update about 'Seven Summers' like it’s my part-time job. Officially, there hasn’t been a straight confirmation of a full sequel season from the original producers or the platforms that picked it up, which is always the kind of silence that drives fans wild. That said, there’s chatter—creatives talk about specials, reunion episodes, or even a movie-length epilogue when a show has a passionate fanbase and solid streaming numbers.

I personally think a sequel could work if it leans into the things that made the original sing: the chemistry between the leads, the quieter slice-of-life beats, and a lean, purposeful script that doesn’t try to top itself with gimmicks. If the cast is available and the writer wants to revisit the characters with a meaningful time jump, I’d be ecstatic. Either way, I’m keeping my playlist on repeat and fingers crossed for some official news—would love to see where the story goes next.

What Is The Complete Reading Order For The Alchemyst Series?

4 Answers2025-10-17 14:28:00

I've always had a soft spot for the wild, globe-trotting magic of Michael Scott's series, and if you want the clean, satisfying way to experience it, stick to the publication order — it’s how the mysteries, reveals, and character arcs land best. Here’s the complete reading order for the core series, in the order the books were released:

1) 'The Alchemyst: The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel' (Book 1)
2) 'The Magician' (Book 2)
3) 'The Sorceress' (Book 3)
4) 'The Necromancer' (Book 4)
5) 'The Warlock' (Book 5)
6) 'The Enchantress' (Book 6)

Those six are the main backbone — the big, cinematic arc that follows Sophie and Josh, Nicholas and Perenelle Flamel, and the whole parade of mythic figures crashing into modern life. I like to read them straight through because the cliffhangers and the slow burns (especially character reveals and the growing mythology) were clearly plotted to reward readers who follow the sequence. The books jump between scenes and historical/cultural touchpoints, so the order helps you keep track of who’s allied with whom and why certain legends matter at particular beats.

Beyond the main novels, there are a few extras scattered around. Michael Scott released short pieces and extras (sometimes available on his website or as bonus material in special editions) that expand on side characters, history, and small adventures that don’t always change the main plot but add flavor. If you’re the kind of fan who wants every scrap of world-building, those are fun detours after finishing the main six — especially the little vignettes that spotlight single characters or legendary moments mentioned in passing in the novels. There are also illustrated covers, audiobooks, and translations that can offer a fresh experience if you want to revisit the story from a different angle.

If you haven’t started yet, my personal take is to savor the first two books slowly — they’re where most readers fall in love with the tone and the interplay between modern teens and immortal legends. By the end of book three you’ll be completely hooked. And if you’ve already raced through them and want more, tracking down those short extras or a good audiobook narrator can rekindle the fun. I still catch myself thinking about a few scenes and smiling at how Scott blended real myth with quirky modern details — it feels like a mythic road trip, and I loved every mile.

What Is The Reading Order For Gabriel S Rapture Series?

5 Answers2025-10-17 05:05:44

If you're lining these up on your shelf, keep it simple and read them in the order they were published: start with 'Gabriel's Inferno', then move to 'Gabriel's Rapture', and finish with 'Gabriel's Redemption'. That's the core trilogy and the story flows straight through—each book picks up where the last left off, so reading them out of order spoils character arcs and emotional payoff.

I dug into these when I was craving a dramatic, romantic sweep full of intellectual banter and a lot of... intensity. Beyond the three main novels, different editions sometimes include bonus chapters, deleted scenes, or an extended epilogue—those are nice as optional extras after you finish the trilogy. If you enjoyed the Netflix movie versions, know that the films follow the same basic progression (a movie for each book) but they adapt and condense scenes, so the books have more interiority and detail.

A couple of practical tips: if you prefer audio, the audiobooks are great for the tone and the emotional beats; if you're sensitive to explicit content or trauma themes, consider a quick trigger check before you dive in. Overall, read in publication order for the cleanest experience, savor the Dante references, and enjoy the ride—it's melodramatic in the best way for me.

Who Discovered The New Power In The Book Series Timeline?

5 Answers2025-10-17 20:45:32

I was totally hooked the moment that revelation landed in the middle of the timeline — it felt like the floor pulled out from under the whole plot. In the internal chronology of 'The Shifting Epoch', the new power is formally credited to Lord Elias Verne because his public demonstration during the Sundering Era is the first event most scholars and characters recorded. Elias gets the statue, the ceremony, and the official plaques in the capital. That’s what the timeline shows on paper.

But reading carefully, and loving the messy bits, I saw the hints that the power was actually discovered earlier by a lower-profile figure: Mira Tal, a ledger-keeper from the Outward Markets. Her journal entries, tucked into a footnote in the middle books, describe the experiments and accidental rituals that produced the phenomenon Elias later polished into spectacle. So in my head the thrilling truth is that the timeline separates discovery from discovery's fame — Mira found it, Elias made it history, and the books delight in that messy, human gap. It still makes me grin whenever the credits roll in my head.

Will The Hedge Knight Be Adapted Into A TV Series?

5 Answers2025-10-17 03:54:20

partly because 'The Hedge Knight' is one of those stories that feels like it was born to be watched. I first read the Dunk and Egg tales curled up on a weekend, and they hit different from 'Game of Thrones' — smaller scale, more honor-and-adventure, with a warmth that would translate beautifully on screen. Over the years there have been persistent reports that HBO and the team behind the big Westeros projects were interested in adapting 'Tales of Dunk and Egg' for television, and that makes sense: the novellas are contained, character-driven, and could be shaped into neat season arcs (one novella per season, or two shorter arcs in a single season). From a storytelling angle, that’s ideal — you get the fluff of tournaments and knighthood mixed with the slow political murmurings of the realm.

That said, Hollywood is famously slow and full of starts and stops. Even promising projects can sit in development forever while rights shuffle, showrunners change, or corporate priorities shift. If a network really wants to do justice to 'The Hedge Knight', they’d need to keep the tone lighter than 'Game of Thrones' while not undercutting the stakes; casting a believable, earnest Dunk and a charismatic, quietly cunning Egg is key. Production would likely lean into lush medieval sets and tourney spectacles — expensive, but doable if the creative team sells the emotional core as much as the spectacle. I also love imagining how a soundtrack or a slightly brighter color palette would set it apart from the grim, grey palette of earlier Westeros TV.

Realistically, whether it becomes a series depends on timing and the right champion inside a studio. If it does get greenlit, I’d hope for faithful adaptations of 'The Hedge Knight', 'The Sworn Sword', and 'The Mystery Knight' across a few seasons, with room to expand into other short stories or original material that feels true to Martin’s tone. If not HBO, another streamer might pick it up — fan interest is loud enough that someone would want to try. Personally, I’m already daydreaming about the jousts and small, human moments playing out onscreen; I’d tune in every week to see Dunk stumble into trouble and Egg quietly steer the ship, and I’d be grinning through all of it.

Are There English Translations Of Barrister Parvateesam Available?

5 Answers2025-10-17 07:46:39

I get excited whenever this book comes up in conversation — 'Barrister Parvateesam' really is one of those classics that travelled beyond its original language. Yes, there are English translations available, though they come in different shapes: full translations, abridged versions, and pieces included in anthologies or academic studies. Over the years, translators have tried to keep the comic timing and the gentle nostalgia of the original while making the colonial-era settings and local idioms accessible to English readers.

If you're hunting for a readable edition, look out for versions that include a translator's introduction or notes; those help a lot with names, social customs, and jokes that otherwise feel opaque. Some editions are bilingual, which is a delight if you know a bit of Telugu and want to compare paragraphs. Retailers, university libraries, and secondhand bookstores often carry different printings — and occasionally you'll find scanned copies in digital archives. Personally, I prefer editions where the translator hasn't smoothed out every cultural oddity: the rough edges are where the charm lives, and a good translation will let those edges breathe rather than flatten them into modern English. Finding the right translation felt like discovering a new side to a familiar friend.

For casual reading, a clean modern translation will do; for deeper appreciation, a bilingual or academically annotated edition is worth the extra effort. I've re-read multiple English versions and each time I notice something new, which is exactly why I keep recommending this book to friends.

How Does The Marriage Plot Influence Contemporary Romance Films?

1 Answers2025-10-17 18:41:11

Lately I’ve been tracing how that old-school marriage plot — you know, the trajectory from courtship to domestic resolution — keeps sneaking into modern romance films, but now it’s wearing a lot of different outfits. The classic novel structure (think Jane Austen’s world in 'Pride and Prejudice') originally treated marriage as the narrative endgame because it meant social stability, economic survival, and identity. Contemporary filmmakers inherited that tidy architecture — meet, fall in love, face obstacles, choose commitment — but they’ve repurposed it. Instead of only validating marriage as an institution, many movies use the marriage plot to ask, challenge, or even dismantle what marriage means today. That makes it less of a fixed finish line and more of a dramatic lens to explore characters’ values, power dynamics, and personal growth.

I love how movies riff on that framework. Some stick to a romantic-comedy template where the wedding or a proposal remains the emotional payoff — think echoes of 'When Harry Met Sally' — but lots of indie and mainstream pictures twist expectations. '500 Days of Summer' famously reframes the plot by denying the tidy resolution, making the decision to wed irrelevant and instead centering personal insight and moving-on. 'Marriage Story' flips the marriage plot inside out, treating separation as the central dramatic engine and showing how two people can grow apart without melodramatic villainy. Cross-cultural takes like 'The Big Sick' use the marriage plot to explore family, immigration, and illness, where cultural expectations and medical crises shape a couple’s choices. Meanwhile, films such as 'Monsoon Wedding' show arranged marriage as complex social choreography rather than simply outdated tradition. Even genre-benders like 'La La Land' use the marriage/commitment axis to stage a bittersweet choice between romantic partnership and artistic ambition.

On a thematic level, the marriage plot in contemporary film is incredibly useful because it ties the personal to the structural. Directors use weddings, divorces, proposals, and domestic scenes as shorthand to talk about gender roles, economic realities, and emotional labor. Modern rom-coms often depict negotiation — who gives up a job, who moves, who handles parenting — which reflects broader conversations about equality and career. At the same time, the rise of queer cinema and stories about non-traditional relationships have stretched the plot: legal recognition, family acceptance, and alternate forms of commitment become central stakes. Cinematically, weddings and domestic montages are such satisfying visual beats — big ensembles at weddings for spectacle and conflict, or quiet domestic sequences to show the erosion of intimacy — so the marriage plot keeps offering rich set-pieces. Personally, I find this persistent reinvention delightful; it shows that a narrative fossil from centuries ago can still spark fresh questions about love, duty, and what we’re willing to build together.

Who Created The Comic Series Mister Magic?

1 Answers2025-10-17 03:00:16

That's a neat question — the name 'Mister Magic' isn't tied to any major, widely recognized comic series, so I think you might be remembering the title a little off. In mainstream comics people often mix up similar-sounding names: the big ones that come to mind are 'Mister Miracle' and 'Mister Majestic', both of which are high-profile super-powered characters with long publishing histories. 'Mister Miracle' was created by Jack Kirby as part of his Fourth World saga for DC Comics — Scott Free is the escape artist with a tragic backstory and a brilliant, weird Kirby mythos surrounding him. 'Mister Majestic' (notice the different spelling) is a WildStorm/Image character created by Jim Lee and Brandon Choi; he’s basically WildStorm’s take on the super-powerhouse archetype with a bit of that 1990s comics flavor.

If your memory really does point to a title exactly called 'Mister Magic', there are a few smaller or older possibilities that might fit. Indie comics, regional strips, or one-off minis occasionally use that kind of name and don’t always hit the big databases, so a self-published series or a short-run from the 80s/90s could exist under that title. There’s also the chance it was a comic strip or gag series in a magazine rather than a mainstream superhero book — those get forgotten more easily. Another mix-up that sometimes happens is with cartoon or animation names like 'Mr. Magoo' (a classic cartoon character) or real-life performers who used 'Mr. Magic' as a stage name in radio/hip-hop, which can blur together with comic memories.

All that said, if you’re thinking of a superhero escape-artist with cosmic stakes, it’s probably 'Mister Miracle' by Jack Kirby. If you’re picturing a 1990s powerhouse with glossy art and muscle-bound antics, then 'Mister Majestic' by Jim Lee and Brandon Choi is the likely candidate. I love how these small title confusions send you down trivia rabbit-holes — tracking creators and first appearances feels like detective work for fans. Whatever the exact name was in your head, chasing it led me to re-read some Kirby Fourth World panels and man, those designs still hit hard — there’s nothing like Jack Kirby’s imagination to make you daydream about bigger, stranger comic universes.

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