'Ethics' as a title works because the book thrives on tension. It’s about a scientist hiding breakthrough tech from greedy investors, framing ethics as a battleground. The author contrasts cold corporate policies with the protagonist’s heated moral struggles, using the title to spotlight how ethics can be weaponized or ignored. Even the cover—a cracked gavel—hints that justice and ethics aren’t always aligned.
Naming the novel 'Ethics' feels like a mirror held up to society’s contradictions. The story follows a nurse stealing medication to save homeless patients, juxtaposing illegal acts against humanitarian ideals. The author doesn’t preach but instead paints ethics in shades of gray—like how the wealthy villain donates to charities while exploiting workers. The title’s simplicity sharpens the irony, making every chapter a silent debate about whose morals we’re meant to root for.
The title 'Ethics' is a bold choice, reflecting the novel's deep dive into moral dilemmas that blur the lines between right and wrong. The protagonist, a corporate whistleblower, grapples with sacrificing personal stability for truth, mirroring real-world debates about integrity versus survival.
The author uses the title to challenge readers: is ethics a rigid code or a fluid concept shaped by circumstance? Side characters—a conflicted lawyer, a hacker with a vigilante streak—add layers, showing how ethics fracture under pressure. The title isn’t just a theme; it’s a provocation, asking us to question our own boundaries when faced with injustice.
The novel 'Ethics' explores how people redefine morals under duress. A teacher hides a student’s crime to protect them, forcing readers to weigh loyalty against law. The title’s starkness echoes throughout the plot, where every choice feels ethically ambiguous. It’s less about answers and more about the weight of questioning.
2025-06-23 18:37:31
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The Billionaire’s Forbidden Desire(One contract. One rule)
Juliana Rosewood
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“You weren’t supposed to fall for me.”
A bitter laugh escapes me before I can stop it. “Then what exactly did you think this was going to be?”
Alexander stays silent.
“This vacation,” I continue, my voice rising. “The way you touch me. The way you look at me when you think I’m not watching. Sleeping in the same bed every night and holding me. What was I supposed to feel?”
**************** Ethan Cole has nothing left but debt, a sick sister to protect, and pride he was ready to lose. So when Billionaire Alex Veyron offers him a simple arrangement, he signs. The contract comes with money, protection, no deadline, but has only one rule…..
Do not fall in love.
It should have stayed professional.
Instead, stolen glances turn into heated nights. Power games turn into obsessions, and the man Ethan was supposed to use becomes the only one willing to burn the world for him.
When secrets from the past refuse to stay buried, Powerful enemies circle and Family ties twist tighter than either of them expected, love might be their only way out.
But in a world ruled by money and control
Breaking the one rule might cost them everything.….
"Cum now, princess." Zeke ordered as he flicked open the lock on the cock cage around Eli's cock and his body convulsed as the long-denied orgasm tore through him.
---------
“I need you to—fuck—I need you to hurt me.”
There. The silence came. Not shameful. Not violent. Just truth.
Zeke ripped the shirt from Eli’s back. calculated. His belt snapped once. Eli flinched, eyes wild.
“You don't get color,” Zeke said flatly. “You say red, I won't stop. And until I'm sure you're tamed, I don’t care if you beg. You wanted to feel something? You’re going to feel everything.”
The first crack of the belt made Eli jolt. The second had him gasping.
By the fifth, he was moaning.
By the seventh, he whispered Zeke’s name like a prayer.
------
Two lovers. Then three. Eventually four. A relationship built on dominance, obsession, and unrestrained desire.
No contracts. No safe words. No rules—just raw, brutal fucking. A war of ownership. A battle for control. A dangerous game that turns a dominant into a trembling switch under the right hands.
What happens when a dominant with a submissive lover becomes the fixation of another dominant—one with darkness in his veins and sadism in his smile?
What happens when the confident, untouchable dom unravels, his hidden masochism dragged to the surface by the only man ruthless enough to tame him?
What happens when a discarded, shame-soaked nymph, branded an abomination by her family, falls into the hands of three lovers who have no intention of letting her go—who will worship, ruin her, and show her that her hunger isn't sin... it's survival?
A twisted journey of control, obsession, and raw desire—unfolding across three sinful tales:
Loved in the Dark. Fucked into Obedience. Seduction and Sin.
The novel is mainly about the forgotten British poet/writer named C. J Richards who lived in Burma/Myanmar in colonial times and he believed himself as a Burmophile. He served as I.C.S (Indian Civil Servant) and when he retired from I.C.S service, he was a D.C (District Commissioner) and he left for England a year before Burma gained its independence in 1948. He came to Burma in 1920 to work in civil service after passing the hardest I.C.S examination. He wrote several books on Burma and contributed many monthly articles to Guardian Magazine published in Burma from 1953 to 1974 or 1975. Though he wrote several books which had much literary merit to both communities, Britain and Burma (Myanmar), people failed to recognize him.
The story has two parts: one part is set in the contemporary Yangon (then called Rangoon) in 2016 context and a young literary enthusiast named “Lin” found out unexpectedly the forgotten writer’s poetry book and there is surely a good deal of time gap that led him into a quest to know more about the author’s life. The setting is quite different comparing to colonial Burma and independence Myanmar (Burma), early twentieth century and 2016 which is a transitional period in Myanmar.
The writer’s life is fictionalized in the novel and most of the facts are taken from his personal stories and other reference books. It is a kind of historical novel with a twist and it has comparatively constructed the two different periods in Myanmar history to convince readers, locally and abroad more about history, authorship, humanity, colonialism, and transitional development in Myanmar today.
The first thing I did after being reborn was add penicillin, a drug the patient was severely allergic to, into his pre-surgery medication administration record.
The hospital leadership exploded.
“Have you lost your mind?”
“Are you trying to kill the patient?”
I smiled as I accepted the suspension notice they handed me.
In my previous life, I had been the lead cardiac surgeon for this operation. Back then, I refused a request from my wife, Shannon Wright, whose childhood friend, Jonah Hill, wanted to use my patient as ‘practice’ during the surgery.
Right there in, Shannon threw a tantrum and demanded a divorce. In the chaos, she ripped out the patient’s blood transfusion line and even knocked over the blood bags, causing the wealthy patient to die on the table. However, they pinned the entire medical malpractice scandal on me. With the security footage wiped clean, I was sentenced to death in the end.
My parents sold everything they owned and gathered eight million dollars. They gave the money to Shannon, begging her to hire a lawyer and help overturn my case. Instead, she told them that she and Jonah had been having an affair. From the very beginning, I had only been their scapegoat.
The shock shattered my parents. While driving home in a daze, they lost control of the car and plunged off an overpass bridge. Both of them died on the spot.
Now, when I opened my eyes again, I had returned to the very day of that wealthy patient’s surgery.
In a world ravaged by global nuclear fallout, I struggled to survive alongside my fragile, sweet-faced best friend, dodging one radiation storm after another.
The route to the Central Safety Zone was blocked—we had no choice but to use two detonators to blast open the tunnel. Otherwise, we would be caught in the storm, our bodies rotting away until we either dissolved into blood sludge or turned into zombies.
…
In my previous life, I had risked everything to secure those detonators, only for my best friend to hand them over to a complete stranger without hesitation. "They have elderly people and children on their side too," she said earnestly. "One detonator can save many lives. Iris, you can't be selfish."
I was so furious my blood pressure nearly exploded, but with no other option, I went straight into a horde of zombies to steal backup detonators. I lost an arm in the process, drenched in blood and barely standing. Yet, she complained that I was covered in gore and had frightened the children.
After finally regrouping with the main convoy, I rushed to deliver the formula for anti-radiation medicine to the research institute so that more people could be saved. But she accused me of stealing supplies and trying to flee, which led to my expulsion from the base, and death, my body rotting away under the radiation.
When I opened my eyes again, there was still one hour left before the radiation storm hit. I looked down at the two detonators in my hand, then at my pitiful, tear-brimmed best friend—and I smiled.
Since she loved being a good person so much, this time, I would let her be one to her heart's content.
A one night stand changed everything forever for Phoenix Alec, Isis Talon's best friend. But what could get worse than getting pregnant after a one night stand and never seeing the man again? Nothing.
Except that when Isis found a job where her boss wants a sexual relationship with her by force, he turned out to be the man her best friend had a one night stand with and got pregnant for - the Billionaire CEO of the best and most famous tech company in the whole of Europe.
The billionaire playboy, Omarion Yandel had only one aim after he went through a very bad heartbreak; to break every woman he met afterwards just like his ex did him. When he employed Isis as a worker in his company, he also wanted her to serve his personal services.
But what happens when Isis says no to the man nobody dared say no to? He vowed to turn her into a sex addict who would beg him to have sex with her on a daily basis.
When sex turns into love, friendships into hatred, relationships into betrayals, exes into enemies, and an unwanted pregnancy surfaces, only then will everything get worse.
The protagonist in 'Ethics' is Professor David Kane, a brilliant but morally conflicted philosopher. His dilemma centers around a groundbreaking AI ethics paper he’s writing—one that could revolutionize how society views artificial consciousness. The catch? His research data came from an anonymous source who hacked into a corporate AI lab, violating countless privacy laws. David knows publishing means endorsing illegal methods, but suppressing it could delay critical ethical frameworks for decades. His wife, a corporate lawyer, pressures him to destroy the data, while his grad students leak snippets online, forcing his hand. The novel explores whether the ends justify the means when the stakes are humanity’s future with AI.
In 'Ethics', the tension between duty and desire isn't just philosophical—it's visceral. The protagonist grapples with societal expectations, like a soldier torn between orders and conscience. Duty is portrayed as chains: rigid, unyielding, often cold. Desire, though, burns—wild and unpredictable. The novel shows how characters rationalize betrayal, bending morals to fit longing. A magistrate sacrifices his reputation to save a lover; a scholar abandons her research to chase a fleeting passion. The brilliance lies in showing how neither path is pure. Duty can be selfish (clinging to honor), and desire selfless (love that demands sacrifice). The conflict isn't resolved but dissected, leaving readers to squirm in its messy humanity.
What stands out is how 'Ethics' frames this struggle through contrasting environments. Urban settings amplify duty’s weight—laws, hierarchies, the gaze of others. Rural interludes let desire breathe, with open fields mirroring unrestrained impulses. The prose itself shifts: clipped sentences for duty, flowing metaphors for desire. It’s a masterclass in showing, not telling, the war within.
I’ve dug deep into the author’s bibliography, and 'Ethics' stands as a standalone masterpiece—no direct sequel exists. The author’s style leans into self-contained narratives, each exploring distinct moral labyrinths. However, their later work 'Morality’s Edge' echoes similar themes: the cost of integrity in a corrupt world. Fans of 'Ethics' will spot the familiar razor-sharp dialogue and layered characters, though the setting shifts to a cyberpunk dystopia.
The author’s short story collection 'Shadows of Conscience' also revisits ethical dilemmas, particularly in 'The Weight of Silence,' where a nurse confronts triage during a pandemic. While not sequels, these works feel like spiritual siblings, threaded by the same obsession with human choices under pressure. The absence of a sequel almost feels intentional—leaving readers to wrestle with 'Ethics' unresolved questions.