853 Results with the "Fiction" genre


    • Masquerade Season Cover
      by testsuphomeAdmin Pauly, a disobedient but imaginative boy, routinely ignores his mother's warnings to stick to major roads on his way home from his cousins' house. Preferring quieter, scenic routes, he often takes a shortcut through the Alele Estate, where the guards recognize him. One day, after staying late playing with his cousins, Pauly encounters three mysterious masquerades blocking his path in the bush. Despite their eerie presence and out-of-season appearance, Pauly politely addresses them, intrigued by their vivid…
    • Chapter

      Manifest

      Manifest Cover
      by testsuphomeAdmin The chapter opens with the protagonist, a 26-year-old woman, discovering her first pimple and fixating on its presence. As she examines the blemish, her mother unexpectedly calls her "Agnes," a name that does not belong to her. This unsettling moment occurs during a mundane activity of sorting beans, where the protagonist takes pleasure in removing and killing weevils, drawing a parallel to societal exclusion. The mother's sudden use of the name Agnes, followed by her silent retreat, introduces an air of…
    • Story

      Mad Honey

      Mad Honey Cover
      by testsuphomeAdmin Mad Hon­ey (2022) by ​Jodi Picoult​ and ​Jen­nifer Finney Boy­lan​ is a ​mul­ti-lay­ered nov­el​ blend­ing ​mys­tery, court­room dra­ma, and LGBTQ+ themes. The sto­ry fol­lows ​Olivia McAfee, a bee­keep­er and sin­gle moth­er, whose son ​Ash­er​ stands accused of mur­der­ing his girl­friend, ​Lily Cam­pan­el­lo. As the tri­al unfolds, secrets about Lily’s trans­gen­der iden­ti­ty and Asher’s volatile behav­ior emerge, forc­ing Olivia to con­front her past—including her own escape…
    • Lord Foul’s Bane Cover
      by testsuphomeAdmin Lord Foul’s Bane intro­duces ​Thomas Covenant, an embit­tered lep­er shunned by soci­ety, who is vio­lent­ly trans­port­ed to the mys­ti­cal ​Land—a realm of sen­tient forests, Earth­pow­er, and sen­tient stone. Here, he is hailed as the rein­car­na­tion of the leg­endary ​Berek Half­hand, des­tined to wield the ​white gold ring​ against ​Lord Foul, the Land’s malev­o­lent deity. But Covenant, con­vinced this world is a delu­sion born of his…
    • Long Distance [1919] Cover
      by LovelyMay Long Distance opens with a striking contrast: Chet Ball, once a rugged lineman from Chicago, now rests in a quiet English hospital room, painting a wooden chicken with hands more familiar with climbing poles than holding a brush. His broad shoulders and sun-worn face seem almost out of place amid the dainty surroundings of Reconstruction Hospital No. 9. Though the toy he paints is small and colorful, it stands as a powerful symbol of how far removed he is from the grit and peril of his past life. The room…
    • Chapter

      Living

      Living Cover
      by LovelyMay Living begins not with celebration, but with quiet questioning. It asks what it means to live fully when one hasn’t built monuments or left behind famous words. The narrator wonders whether a life with no great deeds is still worth something. There’s no shame in not being widely known, the poem implies, as long as something good was done. To have lived with purpose, even briefly, carries weight. When a person gives their best effort to something greater than themselves, that becomes their…
      Fiction • Poetry
    • Letters to Dead Authors Cover
      by LovelyMay Letters to Dead Authors by Andrew Lang is a unique and imaginative collection of fictional letters addressed to great literary figures of the past, such as Shakespeare, Dickens, and Homer. In these witty and reflective letters, Lang pays tribute to their works, explores their influence on literature and culture, and humorously engages with their characters and themes. This charming book is both a celebration of classic literature and a playful meditation on the timeless connection between readers and writers.
    • LETTER–To W. M. Thackeray Cover
      by LovelyMay Letter to W. M. Thackeray opens with a tone free of rivalry or self-interest, allowing full appreciation of a writer whose literary grace has outlived the age that birthed it. Your work is remembered not as a product of duty, but of inspiration that struck with the urgency of truth. Unlike those who approach writing as mere occupation, you shaped your stories with the spirit of a wanderer who observed life from within and without. Critics who dismissed your vision as cold or cynical misunderstood the…
    • LETTER–To Theocritus Cover
      by LovelyMay Letter to Theocritus opens with a quiet reverence for the music of your verse, the kind that lingers like honey on the tongue or like the scent of warm thyme on a sunlit hillside. You wrote not just about shepherds and nymphs, but about a way of life untouched by ambition and marked by simple, golden joys. One wonders if the afterlife, should it exist, ever matched the beauty of your Sicilian days or whether your soul still roams valleys framed by olive trees and distant blue seas. Your lines gave those…
    • LETTER–To Sir Walter Scott, Bart. Cover
      by LovelyMay Letter to Sir Walter Scott, Bart begins with a tone that feels both personal and respectful, as the writer draws an image of Scott that is more than just literary—he is described like an old friend, always present in the background of one’s imagination. This connection does not fade with time, for the warmth of Scott’s character, his fairness, and his almost selfless joy in life leave behind an impression that no history book could erase. Whether he had risen to fame or remained a quiet figure…
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