For fans of the icy landscapes in 'Hans Brinker,' 'The Snow Queen' by Hans Christian Andersen is a must. It’s darker but shares that fairy-tale quality and winter magic. On the lighter side, 'Mr. Popper’s Penguins' is a hilarious romp with a snowy backdrop. And if you want historical depth, 'The Midwife’s Apprentice' by Karen Cushman has that same gritty yet hopeful tone about overcoming odds.
Books like 'Hans Brinker' often mix adventure with moral lessons. Try 'Black Beauty' for another nineteenth-century tale where perseverance shines. Or 'Pollyanna'—it’s sunnier but同样 teaches resilience. Both feel like warm hugs with a side of life wisdom.
I’d recommend 'Little House in the Big Woods'—Laura Ingalls Wilder’s storytelling has that same nostalgic, detail-rich feel as 'Hans Brinker.' Or dive into 'Swallows and Amazons' for outdoor adventures with kids taking charge. Both books leave you feeling like you’ve lived another life entirely, just like Mary Mapes Dodge’s classic.
Growing up, I adored 'Hans Brinker or The Silver Skates' for its blend of adventure and heartwarming family dynamics. If you're looking for similar vibes, 'Heidi' by Johanna Spyri is a fantastic pick—both stories revolve around resilient kids navigating challenges in picturesque European settings. Another gem is 'A Little Princess' by Frances Hodgson Burnett, which shares that mix of hardship and hope, though set in a boarding school.
For historical flavor with youthful protagonists, 'The Wheel on the School' by Meindert DeJong captures a small-town community working together, much like the Dutch village in 'Hans Brinker.' And if it's the ice-skating element you love, 'The Frozen Waterfall' by Gaye Hiçyılmaz has a modern twist but keeps that wintry, coming-of-age spirit.
If you're drawn to the wholesome, old-world charm of 'Hans Brinker,' you might enjoy 'The Secret Garden'—another classic where kids find strength in unexpected places. I’d also throw in 'Treasure Island' for adventure seekers; it’s got less skating but tons of thrills. For a lesser-known option, 'The Cottage at Bantry Bay' by Hilda van Stockum offers cozy Irish countryside vibes with sibling bonds front and center.
2026-02-22 05:03:52
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His Dangerous Love On Ice
Quinn Sullivan
9.9
109.7K
"Let's play a game."
"What game?"
"One that involves you not screaming."
★★★★★
I'd been the perfect girlfriend to my star hockey player for two years.
Stood in the rain at his practices. Drove hours just to watch him warm benches. Wore his jersey like it meant something.
And he repaid me by fucking his way through half of Chicago—including the sister of the one man he's been obsessed with for years.
Zane Mercer.
The NHL's most dangerous player. My stepfather's worst enemy. And the man who looked at me like I was something worth destroying the world for.
One impossible offer.
One desperate bet.
One night that changed everything.
Zane doesn't do fake. He doesn't do half measures.
When he tells me I'm his for two months, he means it. In every way that matters.
But Zane has secrets buried so deep they connect to my family's past in ways I never imagined. Dark secrets. Deadly ones.
What starts as a transaction turns into obsession.
What starts as revenge turns into something I can't walk away from.
And what starts as a lie might be the only truth that matters.
They say some men are too dangerous to love.
They're right.
But I was never good at following warnings.
**********
This book contains explicit sexual content, dominant/possessive behavior, morally gray characters, family conflict, and themes that may be triggering. Intended for mature readers 18+.
This isn’t your normal hockey romance. It’s dark, raw, and unrelenting—where obsession, desire, and power collide, and nothing is off-limits.
Noah’s a rising hockey star with a mouth that gets him in trouble and a body built to break rules. Sterling is the team's billionaire owner—older, untouchable, and dangerously in control.
They were never supposed to cross that line.
But one reckless moment changes everything.
Now, Noah can’t stop thinking about the man who sees right through him. And Sterling? He’s losing control in ways he swore he never would.
It was supposed to be a mistake.
It’s starting to feel like an obsession.
“You kissed me like it meant something,” Samantha whispered.
“Then disappeared like I never existed.”
Anthony stared at her, jaw tight. “You heard half a sentence and ran. I spent years thinking you regretted me.”
-----------
Samantha Meadows just got the chance of a lifetime, skating at Nationals with Anthony Vale, the golden boy of the rink in figure skating… and the most insufferable man she’s ever met.
He’s arrogant, untouchable, and still technically partnered with his injured and possibly returning teammate, while She’s picking the broken pieces of her career after her ex dumped her for a flashier and better partner.
Now forced into a temporary pairing, they have days to master trust, chemistry, and choreography, or crash hard under the spotlight.
But the ice isn’t the only thing cracked. Anthony’s hiding a secret that could end his career… and hers. And when Samantha discovers the truth, she realizes she’s not just fighting for a medal… she’s fighting for her heart.
In a world where one mistake can cost everything, how do you trust the person who never lets you in… and still holds the pieces of your past?
NOTE: This book is emotionally intense with psychological stakes.
Noah Hayes was supposed to be starting over. A full scholarship and a future built on talent, not survival. As one of the university’s rising ice hockey stars, everything in his life should finally be falling into place, instead, it starts falling apart on day one when Chase Voss notices him. Beautiful. Cruel. Dangerous in a way that doesn’t need to be hidden. But Noah had bigger problems than a campus king’s grudge.
Drowning in debt and desperation, Noah takes a job he knows will cost him, but the man he stole from isn’t just powerful, he’s dangerous. Adrian Voss. Now Noah belongs to him, trapped in a world he never wanted. By day, he’s the university’s ice hockey star, by night, he moves product for a man who owns his life.
What started as hatred between Chase and Noah turns into obsession. What should be a rivalry turns into something neither of them can control. Chase falls hard and reckless, but Noah knows better than to trust something that feels like a weakness. And if Chase Voss wants him, then Noah will use him. Play him. Survive him.
But the deeper they get, the harder it becomes to tell what’s real and what’s manipulation. And in a world built on power and blood, love is the most dangerous mistake of all, because loving the wrong person could destroy everything, but walking away might be even worse.
Silver Preston was supposed to be America’s next figure skating champion. Until one devastating injury shattered her Olympic dreams and left her struggling to figure out who she is without the ice. Starting over at Yale should have been her chance to disappear. Instead, she finds herself constantly crossing paths with Eli Hayes, the university’s hockey captain. Confident, talented, and impossible to ignore, Eli seems determined to break through every wall Silver has built around herself. As old wounds, campus gossip, and the pressure of their futures threaten to pull them apart, Silver and Eli discover that healing is never as simple as walking away from the past. The closer they grow, the harder it becomes to ignore the connection neither of them expected. Set against the backdrop of elite sports, Ivy League life, and second chances, Ice is an emotional college romance about ambition, resilience, and finding the courage to choose your own future—even when your heart is on the line.
The only thing more dangerous than the game is the man guarding the crease.
Lyon Navarro has spent his entire career tearing down the San Diego Stormbreakers. As the city’s most ruthless journalist, he’s made an art form out of exposing the Alphas’ volatile tempers and their scandalous lives off the rink. He’s the man they love to hate—until a desperate management team offers him the biggest paycheck of his life to fix their image.
The assignment? Tame the six most notorious werewolves in the league.
But Lyon isn’t just dealing with professional athletes; he’s stepping into a den of apex predators who have been waiting for him to cross their territory. And they have no intention of playing nice.
Rafael Stone, the team’s intense, iron-willed captain, has made one thing clear: if Lyon wants to manage the pack, he’s going to have to survive them. But between the locker room tension, the high-stakes pressure of the season, and the way the pack’s gazes feel like a physical brand on his skin, Lyon realizes he’s no longer just reporting the story—he’s the one being hunted.
In a world of adrenaline, cold ice, and raw, lupine desire, Lyon is about to discover that the line between enemy and lover is thinner than a skate blade.
Six Alphas. One PR strategist. And a season that’s about to get very, very hot.
Beyond the Ice is a high-stakes, slow-burn MM hockey werewolf romance. Expect intense power dynamics, sizzling tension, and a pack that doesn't just want to win the cup—they want to claim their man.
If you loved 'The Blond Knight of Germany' for its gripping portrayal of aerial combat and the human side of war, you might dive into 'A Higher Call' by Adam Makos. It’s another incredible true story about chivalry in the skies, focusing on the encounter between a German pilot and a damaged American bomber. The way Makos weaves history with personal drama feels like watching a movie unfold—you can almost hear the engines roaring.
For fiction with that same blend of technical detail and emotional depth, 'The Blue Max' by Jack D. Hunter is a classic. It’s got that razor-sharp focus on pilot rivalry and the brutal politics of war, but with a protagonist who’s way more morally gray than Erich Hartmann. The dogfights are visceral, and the obsession with honor feels just as intense. I reread it last summer and still got chills during the climactic duel.
I've always been drawn to books that blend mystery with a deep sense of place, like 'Smilla's Sense of Snow.' If you loved the atmospheric tension and cultural layers, you might enjoy 'The Shadow of the Wind' by Carlos Ruiz Zafón. It's got that same haunting vibe, set in Barcelona with secrets buried in old books. The way Zafón writes feels like wandering through a labyrinth—every corner hides something unexpected.
Another great pick is 'The Snowman' by Jo Nesbø. While it's more of a straight-up thriller, the icy Scandinavian setting and the protagonist's personal demons echo Smilla's isolation. Plus, Nesbø's knack for weaving folklore into crime is just chef's kiss. For something quieter but equally immersive, try 'Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead' by Olga Tokarczuk. It's got that same quirky, introspective narrator and a wintery landscape that feels like a character itself.