167 Results with the "Literary Fiction" genre
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Chapter III – In the Matter of the Hanging of Duncan Jopp begins with a courtroom scene that shakes young Archie Weir to the core. Watching the proceedings unfold under the command of his father, Lord Hermiston, Archie is confronted by the sheer finality of justice rendered without mercy. Duncan Jopp’s guilt may be established, but it is the spectacle of his punishment—and the cold, almost theatrical authority behind it—that unsettles Archie most. He sees not only the law at work but a system that…
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39.8 K • Ongoing
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Chapter III – Dawn O’Hara, The Girl Who Laughed Trashed opens with Dawn gradually emerging from the physical and emotional strain that once confined her to a sickbed. Her steps into the open air feel like small rebellions—lounging on benches, watching people and nature with the detached curiosity of someone learning to breathe again. She finds a quiet joy in doing nothing, a luxury previously reserved for others while she had once chased news headlines with feverish intensity. These idle hours, spent…
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Chapter II – Derrick Vaughan–Novelist begins with the bright anticipation of summer and an invitation that would change the course of Derrick’s life. Calverley of Exeter organizes a two-week cruise aboard the Aurora, and among the select guests is Freda Merrifield—a recent school-leaver with a freshness that captivates instantly. Derrick, though accustomed to social ease, is struck not by Freda's beauty alone but by the sincerity of her manner and the ease with which she engages the world around…
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35.2 K • Ongoing
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CHAPTER II – Dawn O’Hara: The Girl Who Laughed begins with Dawn recounting the slow process of healing under the roof of her sister Norah and brother-in-law Max. After a breakdown triggered by the pressure of life in New York, she finds herself in the quiet care of their home, a place that operates on warmth, predictability, and an overzealous faith in the healing power of eggs. While the constant rotation of boiled, poached, and scrambled dishes becomes a source of mild torment for Dawn, it also…
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86.3 K • Ongoing
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Chapter
Chapter II – Father and Son
Chapter II – Father and Son unfolds within the silent walls of Hermiston, where distance defines the relationship more than any shared blood. Adam Weir, Lord Justice-Clerk, governs not only the court but also his household with the same sternness and absence of warmth. His role as a judge has consumed whatever gentleness may once have lived in him, leaving behind a man whose affection is buried beneath command. His son Archie, bright and perceptive, senses this void from early childhood. Though provided…-
39.8 K • Ongoing
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Chapter II – Dawn O’Hara, The Girl Who Laughed Trashed begins not with drama, but with eggs. Dawn finds herself removed from the frenzied chaos of New York and placed into the gentle rhythm of life at her sister Norah’s serene home. There, in a quiet room that smells of lavender and fresh linens, she confronts the peculiar monotony of convalescence. Meals revolve around eggs—soft-boiled, scrambled, in custards and in puddings—each bite a reminder of how far she’s come from the caffeine-fueled…
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Chapter I – Derrick Vaughan–Novelist opens with Sydney Wharncliffe’s personal account of a man the world sees as an overnight literary success. Wharncliffe aims to correct this misconception, explaining that Derrick Vaughan’s path was not marked by sudden fame, but by years of steady, passionate work. Public admiration, though sincere, often misses the quiet perseverance behind his rise. Newspaper sketches and magazine features may capture his likeness, but they fail to convey the depth of…
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Chapter I Hiram’s Hospital
Chapter I begins by introducing Reverend Septimus Harding as a figure whose life moves in harmony with the steady rhythms of Barchester’s cathedral and community. He is not just a clergyman; he is also the warden of Hiram’s Hospital, a charitable home originally established to support elderly working men. Over the years, the foundation’s landholdings have appreciated greatly, transforming a once modest endowment into a sizeable income, the benefits of which flow chiefly to Mr. Harding. This financial…-
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Chapter I – Life and Death of Mrs. Weir begins not with grand drama, but with a quiet imbalance that defines the Weir household. Adam Weir, cold and commanding, operates with a sense of order that leaves little room for affection. His wife, Jean Rutherford, gentle and devout, struggles silently beneath the weight of her husband's unyielding expectations. She comes from a lineage known for boldness, but in her, that fire has softened into meekness. Her piety is sincere, but it isolates her rather than…
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39.8 K • Ongoing
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CHAPTER I – Dawn O’Hara: The Girl Who Laughed begins with Dawn in a New York boarding house, recovering from an unnamed but clearly taxing illness. The sterile room, sparsely furnished and cold in demeanor, becomes slightly more bearable with the touch of scarlet carnations—gifts that inject a flicker of color and life into her surroundings. Her attempt to distract herself through whimsical one-sided conversation with the flowers confuses her blue-and-white clad nurse, who misinterprets the chatter…
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86.3 K • Ongoing
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