Short take from a casual reader: I can’t definitively name a single creator for 'Scar of Summer' without more context, because that title seems to appear in multiple small works and fan pieces. If you give me a line, an image, or where you saw it, I’ll try to trace the earliest source.
Meanwhile, here’s a quick checklist you can run yourself: search an exact sentence in quotes, check the Wayback Machine for earliest uploads, scan library catalogs for printed versions, and look on fanfiction sites for similarly titled works. Often the earliest timestamp or the ISBN/copyright page reveals the real creator. Drop me a snippet and I’ll help dig.
I get why this question bites — titles like 'Scar of Summer' float around fan circles and small presses, so they can be maddening to pin down. I’ve dug through web archives and forums before trying to trace that kind of thing, and in my experience there are three common outcomes: it’s an indie short published on a blog or Tumblr, it’s a fanfiction that spread without clear authorship, or it’s a translated title that changed in the process.
If you want to hunt it down, start with the obvious: paste a memorable sentence from the piece into quotes on Google, check Google Books and WorldCat for printed versions, and search on Archive.org or the Wayback Machine for old pages. Look at upload timestamps and uploader profiles on sites like Wattpad, AO3, or fanfiction.net — sometimes the original handle slipped into an early comment. If you find multiple copies with different credits, follow the earliest timestamped source; that’s usually the closest to the original creator. If you want, tell me a line or where you saw it and I’ll help dig a bit more — I love a good literary mystery.
Okay, quick practical take: I’ve chased down lost short stories and odd web serials before, and 'Scar of Summer' sounds like one of those titles that could belong to several works. First move is to collect context — where did you encounter it? A forum post, a PDF, a translated site? That matters. Next, search exact phrases from the piece in quotes, check Google Books, WorldCat, and library catalogs, and run the URL through the Wayback Machine to see earlier versions.
If it’s a fanfic, check Archive of Our Own or fanfic.net for tags or author notes; many writers drop a real name in their profile. If it’s in a small zine or indie anthology, ISBN metadata or the editor’s notes usually lists the original author. I once found a ‘lost’ short story that had been reposted under multiple names; tracing the earliest timestamped upload solved it. If you paste a line or link, I’ll try the sleuthing with you — I’m often nosy about provenance.
This one made me pause because titles like 'Scar of Summer' can be slippery — they get reused across mediums. From my late-night reading stints I’ve seen the same title pop as a short story, a fan poem, and even as a song title in different corners of the internet. That means there might not be one single creator: you could be looking at a fan-circulated piece with no clear attribution, or a small-press author whose work never hit major catalogues.
A neat trick I use: search for the title plus keywords like ‘short story’, ‘author’, ‘zine’, or the language of the piece, and filter results by oldest date. Also try social networks — Reddit threads or Tumblr tags sometimes point back to the original author. If you suspect it’s a translation, hunt down translator credits; translators often note the original author’s name. If you can share where you first read it (screenshot, forum, site), I’ll happily poke around — I enjoy these little literary treasure hunts and the rabbit holes they open.
2025-08-28 17:38:51
11
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Scars
Jessica Lauer
9.7
259.2K
"I, Amelie Ashwood, Reject you, Tate Cozad, as my mate. I REJECT YOU!" I screamed. I took the silver blade dipped in my own blood to my mate mark. Amelie only ever wanted to live a simple life out of the spotlight of her Alpha bloodline. She felt she had that when she found her first mate. After years together, her mate was not the man he claimed to be. Amelie is forced to perform the Rejection Ritual to set herself feel. Her freedom comes at a price, one of which is an ugly black scar."Nothing! There's nothing! Bring her back!" I scream with every part of my being. I knew before he said anything. I felt her in my heart say goodbye and let go. At that moment, an unimaginable pain radiated to my core. Alpha Gideon Alios loses his mate, on which should be the happiest day of his life, the birth of his twins. Gideon doesn't have time to grieve, left mateless, alone, and a newly single father of two infant daughters. Gideon never lets his sadness show as it would be showing weakness, and he is the Alpha of the Durit Guard, the army and investigative arm of the Council; he doesn't have time for weakness. Amelie Ashwood and Gideon Alios are two broken werewolves that fate has twisted together. This is their second chance at love, or is it their first? As these two fated mates come together, sinister plots come to life all around them. How will they come unite to keep what they deem the most precious safe?
"Where is he?" He asked as he titled his head and glared down at me. His scar on the eye made him look even more horrifying. I wonder how many scars he has on that face of his which he hides.
I was terrified but I tried my best to stay calm and composed because his mere presence makes me want to run away and hide somewhere where he can never find me but I fail to hide and not only I risked my life but his too.
"He...is not w-with me." I said and he raised his right eyebrow where the scar stood proudly.
"Really, hazelnut?" He asked as he caressed my cheek with his pointed knife, knocking my soul out for a fraction of a second.
***
Sebastian Martinez a 27 years old, cold, stern and brooding leader of a gang named 'the scars'. He hides his face from the world but his eyes are enough to send people down hill. The scar on his eye defines his ruthless acts. Not a killer but enough to traumatize you. But is he only a gangster or something far more dangerous than that?
Aurora James is a girl who stays in her own life as a writer but also has a small boutique. Her life is normal and she has lots of dreams to achieve but her past keeps haunting her down.
What will happen when fate will bond these two in the most unexpected way?
Ari expected another quiet summer at her family’s beach house—long days of swimming, lazy nights by the fire, and harmless chaos with her brother. But when the boy's next door returns—steady and guarded, wild and unpredictable—everything shifts. A story of reckless nights, hidden glances, and a love that refuses to stay buried—Where the Summer Wind Blows will sweep you into a summer you won’t forget.
She had it all not until everything fell apart. Now, the only thing she has left... is a second chance.
Aria Richmond was the girl everyone wanted to be very beautiful, rich, and admired. With her flawless looks and queen-bee status, no one dared to cross her path, she was cruel, arrogant and wicked. But when a new girl named Hope enters the scene and steals the attention of the one boy Aria secretly loves, jealousy ignites a cruel plan that spirals far beyond control.
One night changes everything. A fire. A fall from grace. A face she barely recognizes.
Now scarred, broken, and alone, Aria must face a world that no longer bows to her presence. But beneath the ashes of who she once was lies a girl yearning to be seen not just for her beauty, but for her heart.
Beneath Her Scars is a story about pain, healing, and the power of unexpected kindness. It’s about how the ugliest moments in life can lead to the most beautiful transformations.
A Vanished girl. A broken boy. A word that haunts them all.
When Summer disappears without a trace, Kai's world collapses into grief and panic. Ria loves him silently, forbidden by blood and circumstance. Jia mocks him, hiding her own scars. Lilith enters, fragile and haunted, her dreams echoing Summer's fate.
On a campus where shadows whisper and rivalries burn, Kai is pulled into a web of obsession, betrayal and forbidden desire. Every chapter ends with cliffhanger, every chapter hides a secret, and one word binds them all: Until...
Have you ever tried pleasing someone your whole life?
You do whatever they want you to do, you ignore yourself and your needs just to please them?
You put them first as your priority in hope to earn thier trust,
But then they don't acknowledge or appreciate your efforts, instead they compare you to your peers,
Lecture you in public, complian about every mistake you make, give advice but never encourage.
Always want you to be perfect, makes you feel useless and worthless with thier hurtful words, and sometimes even wish for your death.
Well if you've ever felt this way, you would be the same as Whitney Hayes.
In the midst of a secret crush on her childhood friend and an overbearing mother,
Let's find out if Whitney would get true happiness in Hidden Scars
Book cover credits goes to the real owner/s
When I turned the last page of 'scar of summer' on a rainy afternoon, the room felt quieter than usual — like the book had sucked some sound out of the world. For me the twist lands hard: the protagonist isn't the innocent seeker of truth everyone (including themself) believed. The big reveal is that the trauma at the heart of the story was caused by the protagonist, not an outside villain. All those clues — the gaps in memory, the oddly defensive flashes when certain places are mentioned, the recurring motif of mirrors — suddenly click into place as suppressed guilt and an invented scapegoat unravel.
It’s a bitter kind of catharsis. The scar in the title works on two levels: a literal wound and the psychological mark of what they’ve done. I love how the author scatters tiny details that read like throwaways until you re-evaluate them after the reveal. I closed the book feeling unsettled but strangely relieved, like someone finally naming a shape you’d been half-fearing in the dark.
There’s a neat duality in 'Scar of Summer' that always gets me thinking about what a scar actually means. If you’re asking strictly about the biggest physical scar, the obvious candidate is the large, jagged mark on the antagonist’s torso — the one that’s shown in close-ups during the flashbacks. It’s wide, uneven, and almost map-like, running from the chest to the ribs, and the animation/literary description makes it feel like a landscape of past battles. Whenever that scene pops up I find myself squinting at the background details the creators slipped in around it.
But if you zoom out and talk about scars as emotional leftovers, the main protagonist carries the deepest wound. It’s less visible — a tremor in their voice, a ritual they avoid, the way they freeze in sunlight — yet it shapes every choice they make. The story treats that internal damage as larger than any cut or burn because it keeps coming up in dialogue and character beats.
So my short take: physically the antagonist’s mark is the biggest, but thematically the main character’s emotional scar is the one the whole story is built around. If you’re rewatching, pay attention to how lighting and framing change when either scar is focused on — the creators love subtle visual callbacks.
I get excited thinking about timelines, and with 'Scar of Summer' the first thing I do is look for internal clues rather than just release dates.
If you're trying to pin it down, check character details: scars, maturity in dialogue, who’s alive and who’s referenced in past tense. If the protagonist talks about a 'last winter' event or mentions a city rebuilt, that nudges the story to a post-event timeframe. Also watch for tech and fashion cues—small things like a new comms device or a changed uniform often mark years of difference.
From my perspective, most clear placements come from official extras like artbooks or author interviews. If those aren’t available, timeline-savvy fans usually treat 'Scar of Summer' as taking place after the main arc because characters carry consequences (both physical and emotional) that feel resolute rather than introductory. Either way, I love piecing it together with screenshots and transcripts over a mug of too-strong tea; it turns sleuthing into a cozy hobby.