love and relationships

  • Moira by Deepak Agrawal

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    That a woman’s mind is akin to a labyrinth of impossibility, best left on its own, is but a common cliche of the day. Mihika Singh, our kind protagonist, the prodigal but overly sensitive child, grows up to be a woman ruthless in pursuing her ambitions, yet rooted to her moral soil while breathing life to her dreams. However, with a career par excellence, she grapples to hold on to the reins of her love life. We live her story with her as she holds a mirror to her own heart to reflect on her approach to propinquity, commitment and pain, trying to make sense of it all. She isn’t perfect, she makes mistakes & she owns them too, taking lessons out of each one of them. As the seasons of her love life change, she explores different facets of intimacy in love, and each time rediscovers herself in it. In this long, tumultuous journey of moving only but ahead, does she stop for someone finally for what it’s worth? Or does destiny prove too strong a force to conquer? Let us hear it from her…

  • Prophecy of Love by T. Satterfield

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    Gabe Mendes thinks love will make his life worth living. But by the time he stumbles across Pythia—mystic and high priestess—he’s already failed miserably in love yet again. So in exchange for access to the universe of love he agrees to slay the black ram. But unlucky in love isn’t his only problem. Turns out—love isn’t even what he thinks it is. And the black ram, well, it might just kill him.
    Prophecy of Love, written in the genre of magical realism, is a romantic adventure of self-discovery packed with historic, scientific, and cultural information. It promises to demystify love while providing readers with a solid foundation for building healthy, loving relationships that still embrace the mystical.

  • Welcome Home, Soldier: A Military Romance by Ann Harlow

    0 out of 5

    After serving overseas in the military, Captain Tom Reilly arrives back home in California, excited to be reunited with his fiancee, Susan Jamison. They have not seen each other for two years and Tom wonders if the spark between them still remains. He wants to get back to the way things were but worries that he is not the same man he used to be.

    Susan is overjoyed to see the man she’s going to marry. That joy, however, is overshadowed by a guilty conscience. Susan has been keeping a secret from her fiance, one that will have a big impact on their relationship and future. The fear of losing him due to her trepidation has kept her from being completely honest with him for quite some time. When she finally reveals the truth to Tom, will it bring them closer together or ultimately drive them apart?
    Welcome Home, Soldier is a 33,164 word contemporary romance novella.