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Craved By My Ex-Alpha Mate

Craved By My Ex-Alpha Mate

The sequel to Rejected Luna. Even though it may be read as a stand-alone, I recommend reading the first book before. * JANE - I believe my suffering is over. Vishal and I are married, and we have a daughter who loves us just as much as we adore her. And we had our friends, so I dared think this was my "Happily Ever After." How wrong I was! He appeared in my nightmares and every other dream I had that night. I saw his image in a mirror. And then came an inauspicious day when he invaded our celebration. He forced me to choose between going with him or witnessing my loved ones perish. RICHARD - Villains aren't born. They are created. Just like my messed-up upbringing and constant rejection from the only lady I'll ever love. Years ago, I rejected her, but now I'm back for her. I'm completely enamored with her, yet all she felt for me was disdain. It was forgivable; I could overlook her bratty attitude until her dumb second-chance partner left me to die. Now I'm back to exact my vengeance. Jane is mine, and if this reality doesn't allow us to be together, I have to take her to a realm where the two of us can still be together. *********************************** When Richard Brown arrives with an unstoppable army of wild wolves, he separates Jane from her family. But she wouldn't be his, at least not in this reality. As a result, he had to take her to a parallel dimension where they had yet to meet. In a world where he was the fearsome Alpha CEO, and she was the secretary by day and a stripper at night.
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Mga Madalas Itanong

Anyone else feel like portal fantasy got a serious upgrade recently? For ages it was all 'chosen one kid finds a door to Narnia' stuff, which is fine, but the genre exploded once it got gritty and adult. Look at 'The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue'—the portal there is more of a metaphysical deal with a devil, but she moves between times and lives, which hits that same itch. The real trendsetter, though, is 'The Scholomance' trilogy by Naomi Novik. El's dimension is a nightmarish magic school that literally tries to eat students, and the portal mechanics are baked into the world's survival rules. It's less about a wardrobe and more about navigating a lethal, sentient ecosystem. That shift from discovery to brutal necessity feels very now.

Then there's the whole LitRPG and progression angle where portals are systematized. 'Defiance of the Fall' basically starts with Earth getting merged into a multiverse—the portal is the entire apocalypse event. You get cultivation and stats instead of just wonder. I think that's a huge part of the appeal now: the portal isn't just a plot device, it's the foundation for a new rule set. The popularity seems tied to that desire for complex world-building where crossing over means learning a harsh new logic, not just seeing talking animals.

My personal favorite deep-cut is 'The Ten Thousand Doors of January'. It's a love letter to the trope itself, where the doors are fading and the act of writing about them holds power. It's popular for a reason, but feels quieter than the massive series. Honestly, the most popular ones right now are probably the isekai-style web novels on platforms like Royal Road, where modern people get dumped into fantasy worlds with their knowledge intact. That's the real beating heart of the trend outside traditional publishing.

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