If you loved the interstellar chaos and existential dread of 'Doctor Who: Wild Blue Yonder,' you might wanna check out 'The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet' by Becky Chambers. It’s got that same mix of quirky crew dynamics and deep-space weirdness, but with a cozier, almost slice-of-life vibe. The Wayfarer crew feels like a found family, and the universe they navigate is full of surprises—some heartwarming, others downright unsettling.
For something a little darker, 'Blindsight' by Peter Watts dives into first-contact horror with a chillingly logical alien threat. It’s less about running down corridors and more about the sheer terror of the unknown, but if 'Wild Blue Yonder' left you craving more existential sci-fi, this’ll hit the spot. Also, 'Annihilation' by Jeff VanderMeer—that book’s like if the TARDIS landed in a nightmare version of a nature documentary.
'House of Suns' by Alastair Reynolds has that epic, time-spanning scope 'Doctor Who' fans adore. It follows clones traveling the galaxy over millions of years, encountering civilizations and mysteries that feel straight out of a Who special. The scale is mind-bending, but the emotional core—loneliness, memory, and what it means to be 'human'—keeps it grounded. Plus, there’s a sentient spaceship that’s basically if the TARDIS got existential and started quoting poetry.
For a fun, fast-paced romp with similar 'two characters trapped in surreal danger' vibes, try 'The Martian' (if you haven’t already). Stranded astronaut Mark Watney’s humor and resourcefulness feel very Doctor-ish, and the science-y problem-solving is oddly comforting. If you want more timey-wimey stuff, 'The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August' plays with loops and consequences in a way that’d make the Doctor nod approvingly.
You know what scratches that 'Wild Blue Yonder' itch for me? 'Piranesi' by Susanna Clarke. It’s not sci-fi, but the labyrinthine setting and the protagonist’s eerie, childlike wonder mirror the Doctor’s own chaotic charm. The mystery unfolds like a puzzle box, and the atmosphere is thick with that same 'what even IS reality' energy. Also, 'This Is How You Lose the Time War'—epistolary romance between time-traveling rivals? Yes please. The prose is so lush it’s like reading a love letter to the universe itself.
2026-02-25 13:44:13
5
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Wild Dreams [Story Collection]
Nooriva
6
35.6K
Wild Dreams
️ EXTREME CAUTION ️
Adults 18+ Only
This book contains raw, unfiltered sexual content that may trigger spontaneous arousal, sleepless nights, and an immediate need for privacy. Cold showers not included.
Close the door. Lock it. Turn off the lights.
Inside these pages, strangers turn into addicts, good girls beg to be ruined, and powerful men fall to their knees for just one taste. Every story is a fevered fantasy made flesh: silk sheets torn by desperate hands, whispered commands that explode into screams, bodies pushed past every limit until the only word left is “again.”
You’ve been warned: once you open this book, you won’t stop until you’re trembling, soaked, and utterly spent.
This is a book of shifter short stories. All of these stories came from readers asking me to write stories about animals they typically don't see as shifters.
The stories that are in this series are -
Welcome to the Jungle,
Undercover,
The Storm,
Prize Fighter,
The Doe's Stallion
The Biker Bunnies
The Luna's Two Mates
⚠️WARNING
This is a filthy, no-limits collection.
Prepare yourself for raw and sinful content that will soak your underwears and leave you aching. These stories dive deep into dark desires including rough non-con to dubcon, forbidden claiming, age-gap seduction, group love making, degradation, public humiliation, taboo relationships, and intense multi-partner scenes.
This is not a sweet romance.
This is wet, boundary-pushing smut that will make you blush and squirm when no one is watching.
Reader discretion is highly advised.
But if you want stories that hit hard,turn you on or craves wild, intense, and deliciously wicked moments with zero apologies…
Then dive in.
Welcome to Wild books (Naughty collection) where good girls get claimed raw and secrets are soaked in sin.
Let the depravity begin.
Out of the frying pan and into the fire!
You would think with the root word "fair" in fairies would deem the creatures sweet and gentle. Right?
Fuck no!
I died in Ancient Pompeii's catastrophic demise along with my lover Brixtius, and I was once again tossed through time.
This time I land in Medieval Europe, and like my previous two adventures, I run into my dead lovers' look-alike descendant. Except now, he's a Duke and a formidable warrior.
And me? The fairies dressed me as a boy, and I somehow have to survive this chivalric world! Why me?!
*This book can be read as a stand-alone. The story is full of erotic imagery and explicit content.*
She was an Elemental. He was Human. There was a Witch Hunt.
She was targeted. He refused to lose her. They had allies, they had enemies.
Blue Thunder’s legend goes deep enough that a trilogy won’t be enough to cover it.
In book 1, Follow Coralis Golmar, aka Blue Thunder, as she learns who she is while many people want her dead.
What will she be willing to do to protect her loved ones?
They walk among us, hidden in plain sight.
What if aliens weren't invading Earth—but living beside us, blending seamlessly into human society?
Meet the Spencer Brothers: Gabriel, Mitchell, Chase, Gailan, and Lucas—five irresistibly handsome alien dragon shifters who escaped their dying world to ensure the survival of their species. For years, they've lived quietly among humans, building successful lives while guarding a secret that could change the world forever.
This collection follows three of the five brothers as fate leads them to their destined mates on Earth. But finding love is only the beginning. As powerful enemies emerge, dangerous secrets threaten to unravel, and forbidden truths come to light, the brothers must fight to protect the women they love while keeping their true identities hidden from a world that isn't ready to know they exist.
Filled with romance, adventure, passion, and dragon-shifting heroes, these captivating stories will take you on an unforgettable journey of love, destiny, and sacrifice.
Discover how three extraordinary brothers find their happily ever after—and what happens when destiny refuses to stay hidden.
UPDATE: This three-book series is COMPLETED. The last two, plus a bonus story, will be published here soon.
If you're looking for books that capture the same whimsical, fast-paced, and slightly melancholic energy as Matt Smith's Eleventh Doctor, I'd highly recommend checking out 'The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet' by Becky Chambers. It’s got that same blend of quirky characters, heartfelt moments, and cosmic adventure. The crew of the Wayfarer feels like a found family, much like the Doctor and his companions, and the way they navigate the universe’s complexities is both fun and deeply moving.
Another great pick is 'All Systems Red' by Martha Wells, the first in the Murderbot Diaries series. It’s got a protagonist who’s equal parts snarky and vulnerable, kind of like Eleven’s mix of childlike wonder and ancient wisdom. The action is sharp, the emotions are real, and the humor is dry—just like an episode of 'Doctor Who' at its best. For something more classic, 'The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy' by Douglas Adams is a must. Its absurdity and heart are a perfect match for Eleven’s era.
If you loved the adventurous, time-bending vibes of 'Doctor Who: Tenth Doctor Tales,' you might enjoy 'The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy' by Douglas Adams. It’s got that same blend of witty humor, cosmic chaos, and a protagonist who’s always one step ahead (or behind) the universe’s madness. The Tenth Doctor’s charm and quick thinking remind me so much of Arthur Dent’s accidental heroism—just with more running and less tea.
Another great pick is 'The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet' by Becky Chambers. It’s a slower burn but captures the found-family dynamics and quirky alien encounters that make 'Doctor Who' so special. The way Chambers writes dialogue feels like a TARDIS crew banter session, and the universe-building is equally rich. Plus, if you’re into Ten’s moral dilemmas, this book’s got plenty of those too.
The Great Blue Yonder' has this unique blend of whimsy and melancholy that sticks with you. If you loved that, you might adore 'The Ocean at the End of the Lane' by Neil Gaiman—it’s got that same dreamlike quality, where childhood memories blur with something darker and more magical. The way Gaiman writes about loss and wonder feels like a cousin to Alex Shearer’s style. Another gem is 'Skellig' by David Almond; it’s quieter but just as profound, with its themes of friendship and the unexplained lurking in ordinary places.
For something more offbeat, 'The Last Unicorn' by Peter S. Beagle might hit the spot. It’s a fairy tale for grown-ups, bittersweet and lyrical, much like 'The Great Blue Yonder.' And if you’re after that mix of humor and heartbreak, 'The Book Thief' by Markus Zusak—though heavier—shares that same tender, almost poetic approach to life’s big questions. I still catch myself thinking about these stories long after the last page.