Second Sleep

Deep Sleep
Deep Sleep
Celeste is a young peasant girl who is pursued by a god who wants to make her his wife against her will.
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Sleep with Uncle Noah
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After being cheated by her beloved boyfriend, Joan Green decided to revenge him. She slept with his uncle, her future uncle-in-law, Noah Hugo, the last kid in the Hugo family, almost the same age with her Ex-boyfriend Fletcher. He was a top and outstanding billionaire in the entire state, having women by his side or sleeping with them was never his desire. Work and Women, are his whole world. Joan contacted and seduced Noah via her private account but she was rejected because Noah knew who she was. 「Wanna F?」 「Pretty. But I don’t fuck my nephew’s girl.」 Joan was furious when she saw his reply, but she didn’t expect that Noah would drink with her at the same pub.She was embarrassed and wanted to escape from him. But he asked her the same question「Wanna F?」 and then... Joan slept with him all night. After she wake up, she just found out that Noah knew her full name. He even knew her cousin Karen Green. That meant Noah knew Joan’s ex-boyfriend betrayed her? Or did he also play trick on her and regard her as a joke!? Joan was in a rage and delete him directly! What if Noah was a scum like Fletcher, then he would never contact Joan again and showed everyone that Joan was a stupid woman. But why? Noah's message was lying on her list again: 「Give me one more chance.」
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Sleep With Me, Dear Husband
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"What do you think, Kenzo? Do I look sexy in this" pushing the door open to his suite room, he was met with the most unexpected scene, with sprawled legs on both sides of the bed, a book in her hands, in a flowy lacy thin white gown which stuck dangerously to her body, doing absolute justice to her perfectly rounded boobs which poked out dangerously through the see-through night gown, his long distance wife was right there, on the bed. She finally looked away from the book which was seated on both palms of her hands, she tucked it aside and then raised her head up, her eyes meeting his. "Missed me, dear husband?" Three weeks and four days ago was their 7th year wedding anniversary, and she wasn't available, she was never available, not for the first, second, fifth, nor sixth. So, why was she here now? After years of living totally apart despite being married, their main focus was their company, or at least, hers. They married for love, people think they didn't, they think it is a contract marriage, they married for love, or maybe just him. He married her because he loved her and he thought she did too, but maybe he was wrong. Why was she here now? This is a short, fast-paced romance designed to keep you hooked from the first page to the last.
Not enough ratings
46 Chapters
Second Chances
Second Chances
Ayda has been living alone as a rogue since she lost her son during his delivery. She was immediately rejected by her mate, the Alpha, who blamed her for the loss of their son and left her to die. Dimitri is an Alpha in the middle of a pack war. His mate died in childbirth, leaving him a single father, alone, heart-broken, and with an infant son to care for. Now, nine years later, he refuses to allow his son, his only family, to be murdered by an attacking pack. When Dimitri hides his son, Cathal, during an attack, the opposing pack finds him and begins to surround the young Alpha, ready to kill him. Ayda sees what’s happening and jumps in, unwilling to stand by while a child is murdered in front of her. She puts herself between the pup and attacking pack, nearly dying while protecting the young pup. When he returns, Dimitri finds the woman barely alive after protecting his son. Cathal tells him how the woman saved him, and he quickly orders her and Cathal to be taken to the pack hospital while he goes after the pack who attacked his son. The pack members, not knowing what Ayda did, scoff at her, thinking that she is a rogue that their Alpha took pity on. She leaves, sneaking away during the battle to go back to her home in the woods. When Dimitri returns and finds her gone, he is furious and now must hunt for the woman who not only saved his son but has rekindled feelings that he hasn’t had since his mate died. Can these two people, brought together by fate, work through the grief of their loss to find a way to happiness, a second chance for both of them.
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Second Chance
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Here I am, sitting in my truck driving back home. I can't believe dad has finally decided to step down and he wants me to become the new Alpha. I can't believe that has been 10 years since I left. It's been 11 years since I lost my mate. 11 years since my younger siblings were born. 11 years since I became depressed and I was on a journey of self destruction. The loss of a mate is the worse thing we can ever go through. Follow Leon’s journey in becoming a powerful Alpha and getting a second chance in , but will he take it? Will his mate accept a broken ? A broken Alpha. Book Twoo of My LycanNow it's Leon’s turn.
9.3
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Second Chance
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Elena the only daughter of a business tycoon meets and falls in love with the son of a carpenter. Her mother was a socialite that wouldn't settle for less including a poor son-in-law. Elena falls pregnant and she has to make a choice between her husband and twins or lose all Anthony gets tired of Elena's inability to take a stand for their marriage, which her mother was hell-bent on destroying. He makes a decision that separates a mother from her child, a wife from her husband. Innocent lives must suffer the consequences of their action
10
32 Chapters

How Does The Ending Of Second Sleep Explain Civilization?

4 Answers2025-08-24 17:38:26

The last chapters of 'The Second Sleep' landed on me like a cold wind off an abandoned harbor. Reading it on a rainy afternoon, I felt embarrassed at how easily we lose what we call civilization: the book makes that loss mundane, not dramatic. The ending folds the whole premise into a quiet revelation — that what looks like medieval order is actually the scaffolding of a broken future, and that myths, rituals, and holy texts have become the repositories for once-technical knowledge.

What really hit me was how the novel uses small details to explain big things. Ruined roads, fragments of metal, and church scribes who misread schematics as scripture show, in granular terms, how knowledge erodes: without schools, standard measures, and shared vocabulary, machines become monsters or miracles. The ending isn’t a flashy reveal so much as a sad accounting — civilization depends on mundane maintenance of records and trust across generations.

On a personal level, I closed the book thinking about my own bookshelf, all those dog-eared manuals and cookbooks. Civilization, Harris seems to say, is fragile because it’s made of habits and stories as much as of infrastructure. The last scene left me quietly nervous and oddly hopeful — maybe it takes a reset to make us value the ordinary threads that hold things together.

Which Characters Survive To The End Of Second Sleep?

4 Answers2025-08-24 10:00:51

If you mean Robert Harris's novel 'Second Sleep', I can totally go into spoilers — but I want to check first because people react differently to plot reveals. I can give you a spoiler-free summary of who’s left emotionally and thematically by the end, or I can list who literally survives and who doesn't, including some of the smaller characters. Which do you want?

I ask because the book leans on a big reveal about the world itself, and naming who survives without context can either be a tiny hint or a full spoiler. Tell me if you want a full, explicit list of surviving characters (names and fates), or a gentler description that preserves the twist. I’m happy to do either and can include chapter references if you want to flip back through the book while reading my notes.

How Long Is The Audiobook Of Second Sleep And Who Narrates It?

5 Answers2025-08-24 15:04:27

I've been meaning to catch up on 'Second Sleep' on audio for a while, so I dug into how these things usually work. There isn't a single universal runtime or narrator for audiobooks because different publishers release different editions (unabridged vs abridged, US vs UK, library vs commercial). That said, for a mid-length novel like 'Second Sleep' you can generally expect the unabridged audio to run somewhere in the ballpark of 8 to 11 hours depending on pacing and whether any bonus material is included.

If you want the exact length and the specific narrator, the fastest route is to check the listing on Audible, Libro.fm, your library app (OverDrive/Libby), or the publisher's site. Those listings always display the total runtime and prominently credit the narrator. I usually open the sample first to make sure I like the reader's voice — sometimes a narrator can make or break the experience — and then add it to my queue. If you tell me which platform you use, I can give more tailored steps to find the precise edition information.

What Is The Plot Of Second Sleep In One Paragraph?

4 Answers2025-08-24 01:51:59

I was pulled in by how quietly eerie 'Second Sleep' plays out: it follows a young priest sent to a rural parish after an older cleric dies, and what starts as a routine visit turns into a slow-burn investigation. As I followed him, he stumbles on relics and ruins that point to a technologically advanced past, and the society around him has regressed into a devout, quasi-medieval order that actively suppresses memories of what came before. The tension comes from the contrast between religious authority and forbidden knowledge, and between the curiously confident rituals of the present and the ghostly traces of the lost world.

Reading it felt like exploring a dusty attic where every object hints at a life you never knew: the protagonist's discoveries force him to question the myths he's been taught, and the book leans on atmosphere—muted roads, green hills, and a persistent sense that history is a loop. It isn't an action-packed apocalypse tale so much as an archaeological mystery about memory, power, and whether truth should be preserved or hidden, and that quiet moral murk stuck with me long after the last page.

Where Is Second Sleep Set And What Era Does It Portray?

5 Answers2025-08-24 11:13:03

If you pick up 'Second Sleep' thinking it's a straight historical novel, be prepared for a sly twist. The book is set in a remote English parish — a small, rural village that feels thoroughly medieval: stone churches, dim candlelight, and a society dominated by religious authority. Harris paints the landscape with all the textures of a 15th-century world, so at first glance the setting itself seems to belong to our past.

But here's the kicker I loved: the era it portrays is actually a future that has regressed. It's a post-collapse England where technological memory has faded into superstition, so the society reads like late medieval Europe even though it's centuries after a cataclysm that erased modern tech. That layering — future-as-past — is what makes the setting deliciously eerie. If you like books that play with history and memory in the way 'Station Eleven' or 'The Road' toys with apocalypse, this one will sit in your head for days.

Who Wrote Second Sleep And What Inspired The Story?

4 Answers2025-08-24 12:35:22

I got sucked into this book a while back and kept telling everyone about it — it’s written by Robert Harris. The novel is titled 'The Second Sleep' and it reads like a weird crossover between a medieval parish mystery and a slow-burn science fiction reveal. The plot follows a young priest who discovers something that doesn’t fit his world, and slowly the reader realizes the setting is actually a far-future society that has forgotten modern technology.

What inspired Harris? From what I’ve gathered, he’s always been fascinated by history and how societies remember (or misremember) the past. He wanted to imagine what would happen if our high-tech age collapsed and later generations turned our ruins into relics and superstition. You can feel his curiosity about the Middle Ages and about archaeology — the book plays with how artefacts get reinterpreted over time. If you’re into stories that ask how memory, belief, and objects shape history, this one hits that itch, and it left me thinking about what future archaeologists might make of our smartphones.

What Themes Does Second Sleep Explore About Religion And Power?

4 Answers2025-08-24 19:43:45

I've been chewing on 'Second Sleep' for days, mostly because it sneaks up on you: it looks like a medieval mystery but keeps pulling back the curtain on how religion and power can trade places. On one level the book is obsessed with the mechanics of control — how a religious institution can reshape memory and law to lock people into a new social order. The forbidden artifacts, the way technological memory becomes heresy, and the ritualization of ignorance all show faith weaponized as governance rather than comfort.

What really stuck with me is how the clergy in 'Second Sleep' function less like spiritual guides and more like archivists of what you are allowed to think. There’s an almost bureaucratic cruelty in preserving myths while erasing inconvenient history; it’s a slow, patient power that disciplines bodies and minds through liturgy, schooling, and public spectacle. The protagonist’s small acts of curiosity become politically explosive because knowledge itself is treated as a threat.

I kept picturing real-world parallels — book burnings, state-sanctioned narratives, even modern censorship dressed in moral language — and feeling this quiet dread that institutions can sacralize ignorance. Still, the book also leaves space for tiny rebellions: memories resurfacing, objects that refuse to be myths. That tension between imposed faith and fragile, stubborn truth is what I keep thinking about when I turn off the lights.

Has Second Sleep Received A TV Or Film Adaptation?

4 Answers2025-08-24 17:31:12

I get that itch to talk about adaptations whenever a book this cinematic pops up. I haven’t seen a TV series or film version of 'The Second Sleep' released anywhere, and I don’t recall any major studio putting out a finished screen adaptation. That said, the book feels tailor-made for a slow-burn miniseries: the layered reveal, the archaic post-tech world, and the mystery at its core would stretch nicely over several episodes.

If you want to keep tabs, I usually check the author’s pages and industry trackers like IMDb Pro, Variety, or the publisher’s news feed — rights can be optioned quietly and only surface months later. Personally, I’d love to see it handled as a BBC-style period piece with modern dread, something in the tone of 'The Handmaid's Tale' meets a historical mystery. I’m just a reader who likes imagining casting and directors, but whenever something this creepy-beautiful gets adapted well, it’s a joy to watch the world I pictured come alive.

Are There Deleted Chapters Or Alternate Endings For Second Sleep?

5 Answers2025-08-24 15:34:28

I’ve poked around this a lot over the years and can tell you what I’ve found from my own digging and from chatting with other readers.

If you mean 'The Second Sleep' by Robert Harris, there aren’t any widely published deleted chapters or official alternate endings that I’ve come across. I checked special editions, the audiobook release notes, and a few interviews with Harris; nothing concrete about an alternate ending surfaced. That said, authors sometimes revise material between drafts, and bits can show up in early review copies or in interviews where they describe scenes that didn’t make the final cut.

My usual checklist when I want to verify stuff like this: the author’s website and newsletter, the publisher’s announcements, archived ARC files on sites like LibraryThing or Goodreads, and fan communities. I once found a short excised scene for another novel hidden in an author’s newsletter, so it’s worth subscribing and keeping an eye on Q&As or special edition extras. If you want, I can help scan the latest interviews and forum threads to be extra-sure.

How Does 'Why We Sleep' Link Sleep Deprivation To Diseases?

4 Answers2025-06-29 21:40:05

In 'Why We Sleep', Matthew Walker meticulously connects sleep deprivation to a cascade of diseases. Chronic lack of sleep disrupts the immune system, leaving the body vulnerable to infections—studies show even a single night of poor sleep reduces natural killer cells by 70%. It hijacks metabolic health, triggering insulin resistance and weight gain by altering ghrelin and leptin levels. The brain suffers too: amyloid plaques, linked to Alzheimer’s, accumulate faster in sleep-deprived individuals.

Cardiovascular risks skyrocket as well. Blood pressure spikes without restorative sleep, and inflammation runs rampant, scarring arteries. Walker emphasizes that sleep isn’t optional—it’s a biological necessity. Every major system, from cognition to cancer defenses, crumbles without it. The book’s most chilling insight? You can’t ‘catch up’ on lost sleep; the damage is cumulative, like interest on a loan your body can’t repay.

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