The Other Me

The Other Half Of Me
The Other Half Of Me
Kira Kristen has always been the hated, maltreated girl. Being a hybrid, the werewolves at her pack house hated her so much, but she had to bear all this because of her mate, Austin who was the Beta of the pack. On a certain night, her Alpha calls her and informs her of her banishment from the pack house. Kira Is devastated and angry too. She storms out of the pack house in anger and decides to leave without informing her mate. That night, an unfortunate event occurs. She is involved in a ghastly motor accident and she dies in the process. Her body dies, but her soul doesn't. It resides in the body of a girl; Mirabel who has been in a coma for 2 years...... How will she get back to her former body? and above all, how can she convince Austin Harrington, her mate that she is Kira Kristen
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101 Chapters
THE OTHER ME WANT MY MAN
THE OTHER ME WANT MY MAN
Liam had only one perfect moment—the day he was to wed Marcus, the love of his life. Yet, in such an irony, the wedding was disrupted by a jealous admirer, and within one terrible mistake, Marcus was killed by a bullet. Profound sadness ruled over Liam until a mysterious supernatural creature showed up, offering him a second chance. The catch? The price would be made known in the future. Hopeless and shattered, Liam agreed. But something went wrong. Rather than waking up in his past, Liam got into a different version of his world—New York, 2020. A world where Marcus was still very much alive but hadn't had the chance to meet him yet. And a world where another version of himself already existed—Daniel, a ruthless Mafia lord feared by everyone. While Liam pursues his mission to reunite with Marcus, he uncovers a shocking revelation: the same tragedy is destined to happen again. But this time, it's not only Marcus that is in jeopardy. Daniel—the cold, relentless Mafia boss—has his own plans, and they all seem to revolve around him. At this moment, with love, danger, and a man who is him but isn’t, Liam must find a way to outplay fate. Because if he fails, he won’t just lose Marcus again—he might lose himself.
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34 Chapters
The other one
The other one
Her twin gets missing on her eighteenth birthday. The Fae court seems to be hiding something about her sister disappearance and her recluse father acts like he doesn't care. Left with no option, A powerless Fae journeys to find her sister. Discovering secrets and even secrets admirers on the way.
8.7
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40 Chapters
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The Other Woman
The Other Woman
She was his wife on paper for three years, but his heart always belonged to his girlfriend. They were in love for 15+ years.. Childhood sweethearts, then lovers. Each other's firsts. Each other's forever. Kiyara was the only love of his life. But one cruel incident. Forced him to marry someone else. Shattering three heart into pieces. **** This is there story. The people who loved. And paid the price for it. 𝑻𝑯𝑬 𝑶𝑻𝑯𝑬𝑹 𝑾𝑶𝑴𝑨𝑵 A story no one dares to tell. Story of three people. Kiyara Raghav Natasha
10
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78 Chapters
The Other Woman
The Other Woman
I discover that I'm a homewrecker after dating my boyfriend for a decade. We're looking at marital homes when his wife seeks me out. She beats me up in public and rips my hair out, yet all he does is hurry to her after I've pushed her to the floor. Why? Because she's pregnant. Later, he gets a divorce and begs me to marry him. "I'm begging you, Madison. Forgive me this once."
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8 Chapters
Other side
Other side
The novel is about a contemporary married couple on bad bases. Including hatred. But the arrival of the third person will change the cost of their living not only into a nightmare but also make them discover love
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5 Chapters

Is 'Bruiser' Appropriate For Young Adult Readers?

3 Answers2025-06-16 10:56:11

I think 'Bruiser' sits right on the edge of appropriateness. It's got that raw, visceral emotion Neal Shusterman does so well, but man, some scenes hit like a truck. The themes of abuse and identity are handled with care, but there's no sugarcoating the pain. The violence isn't gratuitous, but it's intense enough to make you flinch. For mature teens who can handle 'The Hate U Give' or '13 Reasons Why', this is gold. Younger readers might struggle with the emotional weight though. The brotherhood dynamic adds warmth, but the psychological depth demands a reader who won't just skim surfaces.

How Did The Broken Dolls Movie Change The Original Book?

5 Answers2025-10-17 05:03:59

the way 'Broken Dolls' made that leap is a textbook example of creative translation. The original novel is this slow, seeping psychological work that lives inside the protagonist's head; the narrative voice is intimate, claustrophobic, and unreliable, with long passages dedicated to interior life and the backstory of the town that creates the dolls. The movie, constrained by runtime and craving cinematic momentum, trims and combines whole subplots (a few side characters and an extended family history get cut or merged), switches perspective away from constant interior monologue to a more external point of view, and rearranges scenes into a tighter, sometimes non-linear sequence so the visual story hits emotional beats faster.

One of the biggest shifts is tone and emphasis. The book leans heavily into ambiguity — is the horror supernatural or the product of trauma and grief? The film chooses to give viewers more concrete visual cues: it literally shows the antagonist's machinery and gives the dollmaker a clearer, more menacing presence. That makes it scarier in a series-of-jumps, creature-feature kind of way, but it loses some of the novel's eerie, whispering dread that comes from not knowing. The movie also introduces a romantic subplot and a few new scenes designed to humanize the lead in a way that plays well on screen but wasn't in the book; the novel's protagonist is lonelier and more morally messy, whereas the film smooths a couple of edges to make the character more sympathetic and relatable to a general audience.

A lot of the book's richness lives in its small details and thematic layering — the socioeconomic commentary, the slow-building sense of memory and guilt, and long reflections on how communities treat the vulnerable. The film hints at these ideas visually (set dressing, costume, the recurring motif of cracked porcelain), but because of time it focuses on spectacle: cinematography, practical effects for the dolls, and a score that leans into menace. Fans of the book who loved the languid chapters and interior puzzles might feel shorted, while viewers new to the world often praise the movie for making the story accessible and visually haunting. Personally, I enjoy both versions: the book for its deep, unsettling interiority and the film for its bold visual language and the way it amplifies certain emotional moments. They aren't the same creature, but each version highlights different strengths of the same story, and I find myself revisiting them both depending on whether I want to be unnerved slowly or jolted awake by a well-executed jump scare.

What Is The Plot Of The Glass Pyramid: A Story Of The Louvre Museum?

4 Answers2025-12-10 19:13:42

I stumbled upon 'The Glass Pyramid: A Story of the Louvre Museum' while browsing for art-themed novels, and it instantly grabbed my attention. The story revolves around a young architect named Claire, who lands a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to work on the Louvre's iconic glass pyramid project. But as she dives deeper, she uncovers a hidden conspiracy tied to the museum's ancient artifacts. The blend of architectural passion and historical mystery kept me glued to the pages.

The book isn't just about the pyramid's construction—it weaves in themes of art theft, secret societies, and Claire's personal journey as she battles skepticism in a male-dominated field. What I loved most was how the author made the Louvre feel alive, almost like a character itself. The tension between modernity and tradition plays out beautifully, especially in scenes where Claire clashes with preservationists. By the end, I was itching to visit the Louvre again with fresh eyes.

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