853 Results with the "Fiction" genre
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Chapter
IN THE COACH-HOUSE
In the Coach-House opens with the gentle creak of old wheels and the hushed tones of men passing time with cards while the estate sleeps. The soft rustle of sleigh harnesses and flicker of oil lanterns offer the only light in the otherwise dim, dust-scented air. Stepan, the coachman, presides over the game while Mihailo the porter brings news from the main house—news sharp enough to still hands mid-play. A tenant has died by his own hand. The details trickle in like cold air through the wooden beams.…-
78.2 K • Ongoing
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Chapter
My Books and I
My Books and I begins with a quiet, familiar warmth, like stepping into a room where trusted friends await. The narrator speaks of books not as objects, but as living companions—each one ready to meet him wherever he stands emotionally. Some days require a light laugh, and Bill Nye is pulled from the shelf, his wit a welcome reprieve. On others, Stevenson is the voice of thought, offering reflections that move slower, deeper. The beauty lies in the choice; the right book always seems to present itself.…-
116.6 K • Ongoing
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Chapter
Part X — Buttered Side Down
Part X opens not with beauty but with boldness—an embrace that’s not marked by desire, but by gratitude. Pearlie Schultz, our heroine, stands in defiance of the traditional tale where plainness is only a prologue to physical transformation. Her story is not about what changes on the outside but what deepens within. When Millie Whitcomb suggests that beauty is overrated in fiction, it becomes the spark for a narrative centered on authenticity. Pearlie's features are not softened by fantasy; her curves…-
48.6 K • Ongoing
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Chapter IX brings a sharp turn of events as a moment of carelessness places Teddy Tucker in sudden danger. During a routine task, he ends up hurled by Jupiter, the bull, sparking chaos among the circus crew. Mr. Sparling's reaction is immediate and driven by fear, suspecting Teddy may have fallen into the Mississippi River. Without delay, the crew launches a search, while Mr. Kennedy scrambles to manage the restless elephants on the “Marie.” The lost gangway floats off into the river, further…-
101.4 K • Ongoing
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Chapter VII begins with a bold challenge to one of modern philosophy’s most influential traditions. Henri Bergson, in his evolving vision of thought and life, steps away from the rigid contours drawn by thinkers like Kant. Where Kant enclosed reason within the bounds of structure and critique, Bergson sees such confinement as inadequate for understanding the living, breathing nature of thought. Rather than treating knowledge as a construct examined through static methods, he asks us to view it as part of…-
57.6 K • Ongoing
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Chapter VII opens with Grigory Petrovitch Tsybukin sitting in quiet contemplation, no longer buoyed by the pride of his wealth. What once brought him respect and admiration now fills him with suspicion, particularly the money he counts each day, which he now fears may be counterfeit. This shift is not rooted in finance alone; it mirrors a growing sense that his life’s work, built through cunning and control, might have been hollow at its core. His grip on authority, once firm, now trembles beneath the…-
165.6 K • Ongoing
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Chapter III – The woman in the Alcove begins in a moment of pure disbelief for the narrator, whose world is upended by a shocking discovery. A priceless diamond—linked to a sensational murder—is found tucked inside gloves lying in her own handbag. Stunned and nearly breathless, she insists she has no idea how the jewel ended up there. The inspector’s demeanor is calm yet serious as he questions her. Though he does not voice outright accusation, the implications are clear. Someone placed the gloves…-
96.5 K • Ongoing
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Chapter
A Very Dull Affair
A Very Dull Affair begins in the comfortable drawing room of Mrs. Hilary Musgrave’s home, where conversation flows gently between the narrator, the hostess, her husband Hilary, and young Miss Phyllis. As tea is poured and pleasantries exchanged, Mrs. Hilary makes a bold assertion—her love for Hilary is steadfast and unmatched, a declaration made with such earnestness that it halts the narrator’s usual witticisms. Sensing an opportunity for diversion, she begins to recount the story of their…-
86.7 K • Ongoing
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Chapter
Chapter III — A Few More Lessons
Chapter III – A Few More Lessons follows Agnes Grey through one of her most taxing early days as governess to the Bloomfield children. Her optimism quickly dims as she realizes that her role demands more patience, strength, and skill than she anticipated. The process of preparing Mary Ann for the day proves exhausting. The child’s impatience and fussiness clash with Agnes’s inexperience, turning simple tasks into hour-long battles. Mealtimes bring little reprieve. A brief moment of civility at…-
106.0 K • Ongoing
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