Who Wrote You More Than Anything In The World Novel?

2025-10-17 23:20:49 217

4 Answers

Joseph
Joseph
2025-10-18 00:20:51
This is one of those titles that feels instantly familiar but is annoyingly slippery when you try to pin it down. 'You More than Anything in the World' does not pop up as a clear, single entry in major English-language catalogs or library listings under that exact English title. What I find happens a lot is that romantic-sounding phrases like this are literal translations of titles from Chinese, Korean, or Japanese web novels, or they’re the kind of name used by fan-translators on platforms like Wattpad or web forum translation threads. Those translations often omit the original author’s name or replace it with a handle, which makes tracing the real author tricky.

If I had to guess how this one ended up in conversation, it’s probably either a fan-translated webnovel with an online pseudonymous author or a less widely distributed indie title whose English name is a direct, not official, translation. My usual routine in this situation is to search for the phrase in quotation marks plus likely original-language scripts (Chinese characters, Hangul, or Japanese), check webnovel aggregators, and scan the metadata on any page that hosts the text for an original title or ISBN. It’s a small obsession of mine—hunting down original authors feels like solving a tiny mystery.

Bottom line: there isn’t a definitive, widely-published author attached to the English phrase 'You More than Anything in the World' in mainstream databases, which points to it likely being a fan or literal translation of a work whose original title and credited author live in another language. That ambiguity makes the chase part of the fun for me.
Ella
Ella
2025-10-18 02:11:09
Okay, so I get the urge to know who wrote 'You More than Anything in the World'—I'm the kind of reader who’ll spend an afternoon digging through comment sections to find an author credit. From where I stand, that exact English title tends to show up as a translated name rather than an official English release. In my experience, many romance and slice-of-life web novels get informal English titles that differ from any bookstore edition, and the credited name ends up being a username or a translator tag instead of a clear authorial credit.

When I’ve run into this before, the trick that worked was looking for context clues on the page where the story appears: are there Chinese characters, Hangul, or kana near the heading? Is there an author handle like 'by MoonlightWriter' or a translator note at the bottom? Another useful angle is to search for fan communities that discuss the piece—Reddit threads, Tumblr posts, or Discord servers often track down original authors and sometimes even provide links to the native-language source. If the novel was ever uploaded to a fan-translation site, the translator’s post often links back to the original or at least mentions the source site.

I know that’s a lot of detective work, but that’s part of the joy for me—finding the original voice behind a translated title feels like an affectionate little victory. I always end up learning more about the culture and publishing scene behind the story, which is the real payoff.
Angela
Angela
2025-10-20 18:38:38
That title's a slippery one, and I love digging into these little bibliographic mysteries. 'You More than Anything in the World' is a phrase that gets used as an English rendering for multiple romance and contemporary novels across different languages, so the short truth is: there isn't a single definitive author tied to that exact English phrase unless you specify the edition or the original language. What I can do instead is walk you through how to pin down the exact author quickly and explain why this confusion happens — I've chased down unclear credits like this more times than I can count, and it's kind of a satisfying treasure hunt.

First, the reason this comes up is translation and localization. Many Asian-language titles (Japanese, Korean, Chinese) or even some indie English self-published romances get translated into English with similar sentimental phrases like 'You More than Anything in the World,' 'I Love You More Than Anything,' or 'The One I Love Most in the World.' Different translators and publishers choose different English wordings, and a fan-translated web novel can end up circulating under a title that isn't the publisher's final choice. So when you search for the phrase, you might find several entries — some official, some fan-made, some retitled editions. To find the true credited author, check the book's metadata: the copyright page (in a physical copy), the ISBN entry, or entries on library databases like WorldCat or the Library of Congress if it's been cataloged.

If you only have a cover image or a snippet of text, reverse-image search the cover and search key lines in quotes on Goodreads or Google Books — those will usually surface the publisher page where the author's name is listed. On retailer pages (Amazon, Book Depository) scroll down to the product details and look for 'Author' and 'Publisher.' For translated works, pay attention to both the original author's name and the translator; sometimes the translator gets prominent placement and the original author is listed with a parenthetical original-language name. In the case of web novels or self-published works, check the platform (e.g., Wattpad, Royal Road, or a publisher's indie imprint) because the listed author there is usually the right one even if an English title varies.

I once tracked down a similarly ambiguous title by tracing the ISBN back to a Japanese publisher's catalog and then finding the original title, which gave me the exact author and even led to interviews about the writing process — it felt like unlocking a bonus feature. If you spot an ISBN or a publisher name on the edition you have, that's the golden ticket; otherwise, try Goodreads and WorldCat for cross-referenced bibliographic records. Personally, I think these little sleuthing tasks are half the fun of being a book fan — you find the proper author credit, sometimes a translator who did an amazing job, and occasionally a whole fandom you didn't know existed. Hope this helps you track down the exact author for the edition you have in mind — I always enjoy uncovering who gave life to a title like that.
Tessa
Tessa
2025-10-22 23:29:44
Short and practical: I can’t point to a single, well-documented author for 'You More than Anything in the World' because that exact English phrase doesn’t correspond cleanly to a mainstream, officially published novel in major catalogs. From my experience, titles like this are most often informal English renderings of foreign-language works or fan-translation names, and the real author may be credited under a native-language title or a pen name. If you want to find the credited author, the fastest route I’d use is: search the phrase in quotes across webnovel platforms and social reading sites, add likely original-language scripts to your searches, check for translator notes or metadata on hosted pages, and look at discussion threads where fans share source links. Often the original author is listed on the native hosting site even if the English copy hides them, and sometimes the translator leaves a link. Doing that sleuthing always gives me a little thrill—uncovering the original author feels like rescuing the real source from a fog of translations.
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3 Answers2025-10-16 05:27:49
This title has been floating around niche translation circles and I dug into it over a few late-night searches — what I found is patchy but interesting. 'Prison-Trained, World Shaken' appears to be a fan-translation name rather than a direct original English title, which is why tracking a single, definitive author is tricky. Many online communities treat it as a localized rendering of a Chinese or Korean web novel where the original pen name isn’t always carried over; sometimes the credited writer is a handle or pseudonym that varies between translation groups. Because of that, mainstream bibliographic databases don’t always list a clean author entry for the English title. What I can say with more confidence is what inspired the plot and tone. The story leans hard into classic prison-revenge and rebirth tropes — think the structural DNA of 'The Count of Monte Cristo' and the redemptive grind of 'Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption' — mixed with cultivation/skill-up elements common in modern web fiction. You get the claustrophobic training montage of prison life, the slow-burn building of power or status, and then the eventual outward impact that literally shakes the world setting. It also borrows from martial-story and action-epic sensibilities: long payoffs, betrayals, and the sense that the protagonist’s forged strength will alter political and supernatural balances. If you want to trace the original writer, the quickest route is usually to look at the earliest translation posts or the original serialized chapter headers in Chinese/Korean on major web-novel platforms; those usually show the original pen name. Personally, I love how the hybrid inspirations make the plot feel both familiar and fresh — it scratches the revenge itch while delivering big, sweeping consequences, and that combination keeps me hooked.

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3 Answers2025-10-16 10:37:00
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Good timing—this is exactly the kind of hunt I enjoy. If you want to read 'Prison-Trained, World Shaken' legally, the safest starting point is to look for an official English release or the original publisher. If it’s a light novel or web novel that’s been picked up by a publisher, you’ll often find it on major ebook stores like Amazon Kindle, Google Play Books, or BookWalker. For serialized web novels, platforms such as Webnovel or Tapas sometimes carry licensed English translations. If it’s a manhwa/webtoon, check Webtoon (LINE), Tapas, Tappytoon, Lezhin, or Piccoma—those are where official English webtoons usually live. Another tactic I use is to search for the author or illustrator’s social media and the title in quotes—authors or official publishers typically announce licensing deals and provide links. Also look up the ISBN or publisher imprint; that’s a dead giveaway that a print/ebook edition exists. Libraries aren’t to be forgotten either: OverDrive/Libby and Hoopla occasionally carry translated light novels or graphic works, and borrowing is a legal way to read. If you instead find it only on scanlation sites or aggregators with unclear licensing, steer clear—that’s not legal and it harms creators. If no legal English option exists yet, consider supporting the creator via their official pages or Patreon so a licensed release becomes more likely. I’m honestly excited whenever a niche title finally gets an official release—makes the wait feel worth it.
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