So, quick and practical: I need the book title or author to be sure. Paperback editions sometimes change pagination and even add or remove short prologues/afterwords, so just knowing the chapter name isn’t always enough. If you have the paperback handy, open to the table of contents or use a page search in an e-book; search for 'Darkness Falls' and it should bring up the chapter heading.
If you don’t have the book, tell me the title/author or the ISBN and I’ll check the paperback edition for you — I love this kind of sleuthing and I can usually find the exact chapter and page info quickly.
When I don’t have the book in hand, I go detective-mode: first I check if the paperback is a direct reprint of the edition I already know. Many publishers keep chapter names identical across formats, so 'Darkness Falls' would usually be the same chapter title regardless of paperback versus hardcover, but page numbers will differ. I pop open Amazon’s 'Look Inside', Google Books preview, or a Goodreads entry — those often show a table of contents or snippets where you can see the chapter headings.
If those previews aren’t available, libraries and WorldCat listings can help: search the paperback ISBN or edition name, then compare the details. If you want faster results, give me the book title and author and I’ll check the paperback edition specifics for you; if it’s a popular title I can usually find which chapter contains 'Darkness Falls' within a minute or two.
I usually start by flipping to the table of contents or the back matter — that’s been my go-to when I’m hunting for a particular chapter title like 'Darkness Falls'. Paperback editions can shuffle page numbers around from hardcover or international prints, but chapter titles rarely change, so the ToC should point you straight to the chapter number and the page in the paperback. If you don’t have the physical copy, try the 'Look Inside' on Amazon or the preview on Google Books; those previews often include the table of contents too.
If the ToC is missing or the chapter name is ambiguous, another trick I use is searching within an e-book or a preview PDF: control-F for 'Darkness Falls' often brings up the exact chapter heading and surrounding text, so you can confirm whether it’s present in that edition. If you want, tell me the book title or author (or the ISBN on the paperback spine) and I’ll walk through the steps with that specific edition — I’ve dug through library stacks and digital previews enough times that I can usually spot edition differences quickly.
2025-09-05 13:39:02
26
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
FATED TO HIS DARKNESS
Angie Kosin
0
949
Amara’s life has always been ordinary—until the shadows begin watching her.
It starts with whispers in empty streets, footsteps behind her when no one is there, and glowing eyes stalking her from the darkness. She tries to ignore it… until the night a savage wolf-like creature hunts her down, leaving her bleeding and moments from death. Just when she’s about to lose everything, a mysterious man with haunting golden eyes appears, saving her with deadly power before vanishing without a trace.
But Kael is no stranger.
He is bound to her by fate itself, her sworn protector… and the darkness destined to consume her heart.
As terrifying visions and supernatural attacks grow stronger, Amara uncovers a hidden world of magic, ancient bloodlines, and a brutal war between realms. Within her burns a rare and dangerous power—a light prophesied to either end the war or plunge both worlds into eternal ruin.
Then she discovers the truth her late father died protecting.
He was never ordinary. He was a guardian of an ancient prophecy… one that marks Amara not as a saviour, but as a weapon both sides are willing to kill, or claim.
With enemies closing in and the truth about her existence unravelling, Amara must decide whether to trust the darkness calling to her… or risk becoming the very monster the prophecy fears.
Fated to His Darkness is a gripping dark paranormal romance filled with forbidden destiny, deadly secrets, and a love powerful enough to destroy worlds.
This is the fourth book to the Bloodstone series. It can be read as a standalone, but it will have cross-over characters from the series.
The dark realm is heavily guarded for a reason. Nothing good lurks beyond the border. Nothing good ever happens in a world full of darkness and evil intentions.
But sometimes, you have to tempt fate to save your soul.
Nesrin should know by now that tempting fate only leads to sorrow, poor decisions, and potentially deadly situations. But sometimes, the need to save someone else from their own fate clouds your judgement.
What will Nesrin do when she goes too far down the rabbit hole? What will happen when she is on the brink of death, and the only thing that can save her is losing a piece of her own soul too?
The clock is ticking, and the creatures lurking in the shadows can't help themselves when the chance to taste royal blood is on the line.
Leah Thompson was about to be married to her dream crush, Rowan but something happened that made her rethink her decision. she had two choice, either be with Rowan or leave him.
5 years after, Rowan met an unexpected person, it was Leah who changed her name into Amalia along with a little girl who seemed like him. He was confused at first but then all came hitting him in the face, it was his five years old daughter.
he found out after hiring a private investigator. doing his best to gain back Leah and his daughter, he did everything till Leah had to give in and move in with him.
after that they got a happily together with their baby boy and little girl
He’s dangerous, intoxicating… and I’m addicted. Every touch sets me on fire, every whisper drags me closer to the edge I shouldn’t cross. I should run—but I can’t. Because in his darkness, I’ve found a craving I can’t resist, a passion that devours me whole.
Some love destroys. Some love consumes. And some men… are worth surrendering everything for.
Miyuki Sakurai is a seemingly ordinary girl, coming from a poor family, and to earn money for college, she works in a bar. But no one knows that Miyuki is also a witch who, however, is terribly afraid of the dark. One day suddenly changes her monotonous life, as Miyuki meets two handsome men: Kai Ichatashiko, a psychologist who seems to understand her better than the others; and Aoi Takashima, an eccentric and independent musician to whom she is strangely drawn by his dark aura.
Which of them will win the heart of the fearful witch? And what is the secret that connects these two men?
“Don't test my patience. I have been very calm with you.”
“I don't want anything from you. Leave me!” Tears stung in the corner of her eyes as she endured the pain he was inflicting on her. “Nothing! I want nothing from you!”
“It is not up to you now. Is it?”
“It is!”
“Then you know nothing. Let me remind you of something,” he eyed her coldly. “I cannot let you flee because you don't want to stay here. I have made a promise to keep you and your brother safe. And I will.” She reared back. “No matter if you want it or not,” he was purely vicious with the words he was using. “I might scare you but they are very much formidable, vicious and willing to do to avenge whatever it takes,” he gestured to her trembling figure through his roaming eyes, “with that.”
“Never,” she shook her head. “I am not scared of your words. You are just trying to scare me with your words to make me listen to you!”
“Oh?” leaning forward, he almost shouted in her face, “I am not just trying to scare you. No. I am speaking the truth that you are willing enough to neglect!”
She shook her head violently, her thoughts pushing any logical facts away in her state. She was unwilling to listen to whatever he had to say even when somewhere she knew he was right. Just because he thought if he could use force on her, she would adhere to him? No! She was stronger than he thought she was!
“I don't belong to anyone. You don't have to take–”
“You belong to me.
”WARNING: This book contains strong language, dubious situations, deception issues, manipulations, abduction and dark romance.
I can tell you that 'Nightfall' by Mao Ni is a masterpiece with a rich narrative structure. The book is divided into 8 volumes, and within these volumes, there are a total of 745 chapters. Each chapter is meticulously crafted to build the intricate world and complex characters that Mao Ni is famous for. The story follows Ning Que, a young man with a mysterious past, as he navigates a world filled with political intrigue, martial arts, and supernatural elements.
What makes 'Nightfall' stand out is not just the number of chapters but how each one contributes to the overarching plot. The early chapters set the stage for Ning Que's journey, while the later ones delve deeper into the conflicts and relationships that define the story. If you're a fan of epic tales like 'The Legend of the Condor Heroes' or 'The Grandmaster Strategist,' you'll appreciate the depth and detail in 'Nightfall.' The chapters are relatively short, making it easy to binge-read, but the story's complexity ensures that you'll want to savor every moment.
I get a little shivery every time I see the phrase 'darkness falls' in a novel — it’s like the author has just dimmed the lamps in the reader’s head and invited us to squint harder. For me, it usually signals a hinge: a literal nightfall, sure, but more often a moral or psychological dusk. When the text says 'darkness falls' the scene often shifts from clarity to ambiguity; characters stop seeing each other and start seeing themselves, or their masks, in a harsher light.
On a craft level, authors use that line to compress time. It can mark an ending of innocence, the start of a chase, or the moment secrets stop being secrets. In some books it feels very cinematic — lights go out, the soundtrack swells — while in quieter novels 'darkness falls' can be almost clinical, the narrator noting the change like a scientist. I’ve seen it act as foreshadowing (a storm of events) and as punctuation for a turning point in a protagonist’s arc. Think of it alongside scenes where windows are shut, doors locked, or a single candle is blown out; the phrase makes those images stick.
Personally, I tend to read those moments slowly, cup my tea, and let the sentence sit. It’s a cue to brace for emotional weather. Sometimes 'darkness falls' means danger, sometimes relief — a character collapsing into sleep after trauma. Either way, it’s one of those small, potent phrases that anchors the novel’s mood and tells you: something significant just shifted, and you should pay attention.