Quick, practical plan: if you love visuals, start with the manhua of 'Master Devil Do Not Kiss Me' to get invested fast. If you crave depth, begin with the web novel or published volumes and read straight through from chapter 1. After the main story, hunt down extras — side chapters, epilogues, and any author notes — since those often answer loose threads.
One tip from my own reading: keep track of which translation you’re using; some fan scripts reorder or cut content. Mixing formats (novel then manhua) gives the best balance between plot detail and aesthetic enjoyment, and it’s how I ended up appreciating small character moments I’d otherwise have missed.
If you’re impatient and want a punchy first impression, dip into the manhua of 'Master Devil Do Not Kiss Me' first — the visuals hook you immediately and give a clear sense of tone and character design. Read the manhua straight through, but keep an eye out for chapter tags like 'extra' or 'side chapter' which might be optional or out of sequence. After the manhua, go back to the web novel or published novel to get the deeper character thoughts and expanded scenes that the comic omits.
A useful habit: whenever a scene in the manhua feels rushed or confusing, look up the corresponding novel chapter — that usually clears things up. Also, if official translations exist, prioritize them for accuracy and completeness. For completionists, finish with bonus arcs and author afterwords; they often explain motivations or add small epilogues that round out the story.
If you want the most faithful emotional ride, I’d start with the original web novel and then move to the manhua — that’s the order that filled in all the small character beats for me. Read 'Master Devil Do Not Kiss Me' from chapter 1 of the web novel (or the officially published novel volumes if you can get them), because the novel contains extra scenes, inner monologues, and author notes that the comic trims. After finishing the main novel arc, switch to the manhua to enjoy the visuals and the redesigned pacing; you’ll catch little moments the art emphasizes differently.
Once you’ve done both, go back and hunt for the extras: side stories, epilogues, and any bonus chapters or author-post chapters. These are often labeled as 'extra', 'side', or 'omake' in translations. If you care about translations, try official releases first; fan translations can be great but sometimes reorder or summarize content. Personally, rereading favorite arcs with both formats side-by-side made some scenes hit harder, and I loved spotting how an artist interpreted a single line from the novel into a whole panel.
On a rainy weekend I binge-read both formats of 'Master Devil Do Not Kiss Me' and learned a simple rule: follow publication order but prioritize the original text for canon detail. Start with the web novel (chapter 1 onward) if you want raw canon and all the extras — this is where the plot, character arcs, and side chapters are first laid out. Then read the manhua adaptation to see how scenes were condensed or visually emphasized; treat the manhua as an interpretation, not a replacement.
For chronological clarity, keep this reading pattern: primary novel chapters in sequence, then any labeled side stories or interludes the author published (they sometimes slot between main chapters), and finally the manhua volumes. If translations diverge, scan translator notes — they often explain collapsed chapters or omitted filler. Personally, combining both gives the most satisfying emotional and visual experience, and I recommend bookmarking favorite chapters so you can flip between text and art when you want that extra punch.
2025-08-29 12:16:26
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After nine years, Carlos became widely known as “The Devil” on court. Hot, famous, and rich, he became every woman's desire. He returned to Braeton City and came face to face with… the girl he left behind.
***
"Why did you leave without a word?” Kate asked, looking straight into his grey eyes.
"You were my world, but you did not see me,” Carlos replied.
It was funny how the tables turned because after Carlos left, all Kate could see was him.
***
Book 4 of The Wright Family Series
Book 1: Mommy, Where Is Daddy? The Forsaken Daughter's Return
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Book 3: I Kissed A CEO And He Liked It
Book 5: I Fell For The Boy His Daddy Was A Bonus
Each book can be read as a standalone.
Follow me on social media. Search Author_LiLhyz on IG & FB.
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I got curious about this a while back and went digging: yes, you can find English translations of 'Master Devil Do Not Kiss Me', but the situation is a bit mixed. There are fan-translated scanlations floating around on community-driven sites and reader hubs, and those are the most common way English readers have been able to access it. The quality ranges from rough machine-assisted translations to careful volunteer edits, so expect inconsistency between chapters.
If you want the cleanest experience, try searching on MangaDex or similar aggregator/readers and use the series title plus alternate spellings — sometimes it's listed differently. Also check subreddit threads or Discord groups dedicated to translated comics; people often share links or note when an official license drops. Personally, I prefer waiting for an official release when possible, because the art and lettering look better and creators get paid, but scanlations can fill the gap if there’s no English publisher yet.
Been thinking about this exact thing myself, since the series is kind of a puzzle. 'The Daughter of Evil' is the main series, with four volumes. You absolutely have to start with those. They lay out all the foundational lore about the Elphegort royal family, the Black Magic, and the tragic story of Allen and Riliane. The 'Miss Devil' books, specifically 'The Daughter of Evil: Miss Devil' and 'The Daughter of Evil: Miss Devil -Green Version-', are spin-offs. They focus on Germaine, the 'Devil', and they take place after the main series events. So reading order is pretty straightforward: main series first, then the Miss Devil books. I tried jumping into 'Miss Devil' once out of curiosity and was completely lost on who half the characters even were, so trust me on this sequence.
There's also 'The Daughter of Evil: Praeludium of Red', which is a prequel. Most people recommend reading it after the main series too, since it hits harder when you know how everything ends up. The way the narrative voice shifts between books is fascinating—from the almost mythic tragedy of the main series to Germaine's more cynical, pragmatic viewpoint in her spin-offs. It really enriches the whole thing if you follow the publication order.