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My Badboy Knight

My Badboy Knight

Book 1: My Badboy Knight Tasha: I should know better than to fall for another guy who might break my heart again. But Nate Adams stormed into my life, crumbling down the walls I began building around my heart. He makes me want to fall in love again. This time, with him. Nate: Tasha Quinn is the most beautiful girl I have ever seen. Everything about her is beautiful. Hot. Sexy. Perfect. I am fucking in love with her. I have always been in love with her. She is my sweetest addiction. Book 2: The Playboy King Diane: Leo King doesn't give a fuck about love, dating, or any other cupid shit like that. He never lacks enough women to fuck in bed, is annoyingly attractive, and constantly oversteps his boundaries around me. Just because he's the heir to the generational wealth of the King Family doesn't mean he can have any woman at his beck and call. College was supposed to be my chance to start my life afresh, away from my past traumas. But Leo King is making things very hard for me. And living with him is also not helping me at all. Leo: Diane Brandon is the pain in my ass. Ever since she started living with me after my sister Marissa relocated to France, she's been dictating to me how I should live my life in my own house. I hate how she also acts like she is some quiet angel with no demons. But everyone has a skeleton in their closet, whether big or small, and I can feel down to my bones that Diane is hiding something truly dark beneath that cheerful, seductive mask of hers. She is making my life miserable. A little dig-up for payback wouldn't hurt.
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I stumbled across Brandon Ness while looking for sci-fi with a military edge a few years back. I was deep in a 'Starship Troopers' and 'The Forever War' reread phase and his stuff popped up in a forum thread about overlooked authors. He's not a household name, which is a shame because 'The Aethereal War' duology really clicked for me—it's got this bleak, grind of a war against an unknowable alien threat, but the focus is less on the big battles and more on the soldiers trying to hold a line when command has no clue what they're doing. The tech feels grounded, which I appreciate.

He also wrote a standalone called 'Chrome Tide' that's more cyberpunk than military SF. That one's a neon-drenched corporate espionage thriller about data runners. It's faster paced than his war books, but keeps that same focus on characters operating in systems that are actively hostile to them. I remember the ending left things a bit open, almost like he planned a sequel that never happened. If you're into that genre mash-up, it's worth tracking down a used copy.

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