That ending crept up on me like a slow sunrise. After chapters of the protagonist’s frantic crayfish hunts and star charts, the resolution is disarmingly simple: they stop chasing both. The last scene—just them lying in a field, accepting that some things can’t be caught or quantified—hit me harder than any dramatic climax could. It’s the kind of ending that makes you rethink your own obsessions. I finished it and immediately flipped back to reread the first chapter, and wow, the parallels.
The ending? Pure poetry. After all that restless searching—for the crayfish, for answers, for a place to belong—the protagonist stops running. The final pages are this quiet epiphany under the night sky, where they realize they’ve been counting stars to avoid looking inward. No big speeches, just stillness and starlight. It’s the kind of ending that makes you close the book and stare at your ceiling for a while, wondering about your own crayfish.
I adore how 'Catch a Crayfish, Count the Stars' wraps up. It’s not about grand revelations but small, human ones. The protagonist spends the whole story fixated on these seemingly unrelated goals—catching a crayfish like they did as a kid, and obsessively tracking constellations. The ending reveals how both were escapes from facing adulthood. In the finale, they sit by a lake, crayfish finally in hand, and just… let it go. The stars aren’t counted; they’re just seen. It’s a masterclass in showing growth without fanfare. Made me want to call my sibling and apologize for something I couldn’t even name.
Oh, this book’s ending wrecked me—but in that cathartic, 'I-needed-this' kind of way. The protagonist’s obsession with catching a crayfish (which turns out to be less about the crayfish and more about holding onto childhood) collides with their stargazing habit, symbolizing how we search for meaning in chaos. The finale isn’t some dramatic twist; it’s a soft, almost bittersweet realization that the things we chase sometimes catch us. The last chapter has this gorgeous scene where they finally sit still, watching the stars, and it feels like the whole story exhales. Perfect for anyone who loves endings that feel like a warm hug after a long journey.
The ending of 'Catch a Crayfish, Count the Stars' left me emotionally wrecked in the best way possible. It’s one of those stories where the journey feels so personal that the finale hits like a freight train. Without spoiling too much, the protagonist finally reconciles with their past, realizing that the crayfish they’ve been chasing and the stars they’ve been counting were metaphors for something far deeper—belonging and self-acceptance.
The last scene is this quiet moment under a starry sky, where everything clicks into place. It’s not a grand spectacle, just a whisper of resolution that lingers long After You close the book. The way the author ties together all those seemingly random threads—childhood nostalgia, Fractured relationships, and tiny acts of rebellion—is pure magic. I stayed up way too late finishing it, and the ending still lives rent-free in my head.
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Where Stars Don't Follow
Sunny Jin
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When my husband once again chooses to abandon me to celebrate his true love's birthday, I finally let go.
He takes his true love stargazing; I don't cause a fuss.
He buys her an expensive scarf, but all I do is smile. I even tell him to buy another hat—it's pretty cold.
He thinks I've finally learned to be obedient. However, he has no idea I've secretly renounced my citizenship to join Doctors Without Borders.
By the time he comes to his senses, I've vanished without a trace.
“I won't let time hinder our love, wait for me, I'm coming to get you.”
Two different person trying to straighten their lives, happen to switch paths they are taking.
Will this be a chaos? Or will they be able to find their lost stars?
PART 1 & 2 will be combined in one book, so you wouldn't be needing to search it again.
Enjoy reading!
On the first night of our graduation trip, Richard Clark, the class representative, suggests that we find our match via room numbers.
"Let your luck decide your fate! You'll get to stay in the same room with your partner regardless of gender! How exciting is this?"
Throughout my four-year college life, I've been in an underground relationship with Faye Lister for three years. No one knows about our relationship at all.
I dig out a ball from the box and wait for my turn to get matched.
When it's Faye's turn, she claims that her number is seven. That's when Richard raises his voice.
"The other person who gets Room 7 is… Xavier Jensen!"
Xavier, the guy whom Faye had once pursued in a grand fashion, shoots her a smile immediately.
Everyone cheers on them, claiming that even God wants them to be together. I'm the only one who doesn't say anything.
No one knows that I've heard Richard and Faye having a secretive conversation before the start of the game.
"Find the ball with a circular bump. That's the mark I've specifically left for you and Xavier."
As I watch Faye approach Xavier and arrange his collar with scarlet cheeks, I find myself smiling as well.
It turns out that I've wasted three years waiting for Faye to announce our relationship.
This time, I decide to be the one leaving this relationship.
When I was six years old, I became an actual dummy after playing a silly game with my older sister, Hannah Hubbard.
My mental age is stuck at six years old. Because of that, my grandma receives a huge shock, causing her condition to deteriorate.
Since then, Hannah has completely transformed into a brand new person. Thanks to her scholarship and her efforts to collect and sell trash, Grandma and I are able to survive under her care.
Hannah is such a prideful person, and yet when her classmates call her stupid nicknames, she doesn't get mad at them at all.
But if anyone is to call me an idiot, Hannah will seek justice for me no matter what.
That night, Hannah gathers me in her arms while crying soundlessly.
"My Oliver isn't an idiot at all. You just haven't grown up yet. Oliver, promise me that you will never leave me, okay?"
I just nod blankly. For the next three years, I cling to her like glue.
That is, until Blake Mueller appears in our lives.
When I'm done playing with the mud, I forget to wash my hands, so I accidentally soil Blake's white shirt with my soiled hands.
That's when Hannah suddenly breaks down emotionally and kicks me out of the house.
"Oliver Hubbard, you've dragged me down my whole life! Are you going to cause trouble for Blake as well? Can you please be more understanding and stop causing more trouble for me?"
Finally, an idea sparks inside my dim-witted brain for once.
It turns out that my existence brings nothing but misery to Hannah.
So, I hide inside the casket Grandma has custom-ordered for herself. There, I close my eyes and begin counting down quietly.
Three, two, one.
Let the game begin.
I could see the countdown above a person’s head when they had already decided to leave their partner. The day my father’s countdown hit zero, he slapped a lawyer’s letter on the breakfast table and walked out on my mother and me.
The day my best friend’s countdown hit zero, she finally threw her parasite of a boyfriend out of her apartment and changed the locks before sunset.
That was why I’d always been terrified of seeing a countdown above my fiancé, Lucian Bellandi. Luckily, for seven years by his side, the space above his head had stayed clean.
Lucian was the youngest Don the Bellandi family had ever seen. He owned the docks, the casinos, and half the South Side’s dirty money, yet he saved every soft part of himself for me.
Until last month, when he picked me up after a family auction. I looked up and saw blood-red numbers stabbing into my eyes.
[702 days, 14 hours, 22 minutes.]
Less than two years.
My heart tightened like a cold hand had closed around it. I started searching for an answer like a woman losing her mind. Had I done something wrong?
Then, during a blizzard by the lake, we ran into Mia Crane at the back entrance of the Bellandi Hotel. Lucian had just brought her into his charity foundation as a new assistant.
Snow clung to her hair and lashes. She was shivering from head to toe, but her smile was bright and painfully innocent.
Lucian pulled a black silk handkerchief from his breast pocket and handed it to her. His face was calm. There was nothing openly improper in the gesture.
But in that exact second, the countdown above his head jumped.
[327 days, 4 hours, 47 minutes.]
More than three hundred days, gone. And I knew I had found the reason.
After Ryan Spencer cheated on me again with his secretary, I completely lost it.
When my mind started to spiral, I grabbed the fruit knife off the table. I just wanted it to end.
“Why are you hurting yourself again? He doesn’t love you anymore?”
I looked up.
The sixteen-year-old Ryan was walking toward me, heartbreak written all over his face. His voice was gentle.
“Tell me who he is. I’ll make him pay.”
I stared into the bright, earnest eyes of the boy standing in front of me.
I didn’t say a word.
I simply lifted my hand and pointed at his face.
Later, Ryan was the one who had me admitted to a psychiatric hospital.
When the sedative began to wear off, the teenage boy appeared again, sitting by my bed.
He stared at the man outside who looked just like him. The light in his eyes faded little by little.
Then he spoke, his voice strained.
“I don’t care who he is. I’ll kill him.”
The sixteen-year-old Ryan never lied to me.
When he said something, he meant it.
The ending of 'The Crabfish' is one of those bizarre, darkly humorous twists that sticks with you. The ballad tells the story of a fisherman who brings home a crabfish (a crab or lobster) as a gift for his wife, only for it to hide under her skirt and pinch her. The doctor is called in, but instead of helping, he gets distracted and also gets pinched. It’s this absurd chain reaction where everyone who tries to intervene ends up suffering the same fate. The song ends with the crabfish triumphant, having caused chaos in the household, and no one managing to remove it. It’s a classic example of folk humor—simple, repetitive, and oddly satisfying in its ridiculousness.
What I love about it is how it subverts expectations. You think someone will eventually solve the problem, but nope! The crabfish wins. It’s like a precursor to those internet memes where the villain just keeps winning. The song’s structure is repetitive, with each verse adding another victim, which makes it great for sing-alongs. I first heard it in a folk music class, and it’s stuck with me ever since. There’s something timeless about its mischief.
Oh wow, talking about 'The Sea Mice and the Stars' takes me back! The ending is this beautiful, bittersweet crescendo where the sea mice—after their whole cosmic journey—realize they don’t need to reach the stars to find meaning. They’ve been carrying it with each other all along. The final scene shows them gathered on their tiny ship, staring up at the sky, but this time they’re laughing and sharing stories instead of obsessing over the distance. It’s like the author flipped the whole 'chasing dreams' trope on its head and made it about the joy of the journey.
What really got me was the way the illustrations shifted—early pages were all cool blues and lonely silvers, but the ending bursts with warm golds and purples, like the mice finally 'see' the colors in their own world. It’s one of those endings that lingers, you know? I finished the last page and just sat there hugging the book for a minute.
The final chapter of 'What Are Crustaceans?' wraps up with this beautiful, almost poetic reflection on the interconnectedness of marine ecosystems. It starts by revisiting some of the smaller species covered earlier—like barnacles and copepods—but then zooms out to show how these tiny creatures sustain entire food chains. The author describes a single crab’s journey from molting to becoming prey for a seabird, tying it back to themes of adaptation and survival. What stuck with me was how the book avoids a dry scientific tone; instead, it feels like a love letter to these often-overlooked animals. The last few pages even include anecdotes from researchers, like one who tearfully recounts finding a rare deep-sea crustacean after years of searching. It’s a humble reminder that science isn’t just about data—it’s about passion.
Personally, I closed the book feeling weirdly emotional. Crustaceans aren’t something I’d ever given much thought to before, but the way their lives mirror bigger ecological struggles—climate change, ocean acidification—hit hard. The chapter doesn’t preach, though; it just lays out the facts and lets you connect the dots. I found myself Googling local beach cleanups afterward, so I’d call that a win for impactful writing.