Fabrice del Dongo? Oh, he’s the kind of character you’d either want as your best friend or scream at for being too reckless. I first met him in Stendhal’s novel during a summer binge-read, and he’s stuck with me ever since. Born into aristocracy but raised with this weird mix of privilege and neglect, he’s got this fiery spirit—joins Napoleon’s army as a teenager, gets tangled in duels, and falls headfirst into love like it’s a sport. His arc is wild: from battlefield chaos to prison escapes, all while wrestling with his conscience. The part where he’s imprisoned in the Farnese Tower? Pure drama, but also weirdly poetic—like his whole life’s this grand, messy opera.
Reading about Fabrice feels like peering into a kaleidoscope of 19th-century Europe—all glittering ambition and shadowy betrayals. He’s not your typical hero; more like a charming disaster. Take his obsession with Waterloo: he rushes there dreaming of heroism but ends up lost, literally and morally. Stendhal’s genius is how he uses Fabrice’s naivety to expose the absurdity of war and politics. And then there’s Clelia, the prison governor’s daughter he falls for. Their love story’s got this Gothic intensity, all whispered vows and barred windows. What fascinates me is how Fabrice grows—from a boy chasing glory to a man who realizes happiness might just be a quiet life far from the spotlight. The ending wrecks me every time.
Fabrice is the heart and soul of 'The Charterhouse of Parma,' a novel that swept me off my feet with its whirlwind of romance and political intrigue. He's this impulsive, passionate young nobleman from Italy, caught between his dreams of military glory and the messy reality of love and power. Stendhal paints him as almost naive at times, charging into battles and affairs with equal fervor, but that’s what makes him so compelling.
What really stuck with me is how Fabrice’s idealism clashes with the cynicism around him—like his infatuation with the Duchess Sanseverina, which feels both tender and doomed. The way he navigates the Napoleonic Wars and later the petty court politics of Parma is like watching someone dance on a tightrope. You root for him even when he makes reckless choices, because his heart’s always in the right place. By the end, his journey leaves you wondering about the cost of chasing dreams in a world that rewards cunning over virtue.
Fabrice is that guy who makes you yell at the book—like, 'NO, DON’T TRUST THAT DUKE!' but he does anyway. His charm lies in how human he is: flawed, romantic, and a bit clueless. Stendhal throws him into every dramatic scenario—war, prison, secret affairs—just to see how he’ll flail through it. My favorite moment? When he sneaks into Parma disguised as a merchant. Classic Fabrice: equal parts brave and ridiculous. You finish the novel feeling like you’ve lived a whole lifetime alongside him.
2026-03-31 01:25:48
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The Italian Bride of the Bratva King
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“…Should anyone here know of any reason that this couple should not be joined in holy matrimony, speak now or forever hold your peace."
"I do!" A sharp voice bombed the church. Frowning, I turned my head toward the owner of the voice who dared to object to My wedding.
And there He stood. My vicious rival. The man I hate the most. The Pakhan of Bratva! Aleksandr Fedorov.
"On what ground do you object?" The priest demanded.
My face was turning red in anger while He smirked with his eyes set on mine. "Because this bride is already married to me.”
I blinked up at him. Married to him!? What the hell was He saying!
*****************************
No one knows that it's a fake marriage. A contract marriage to fulfil the last condition of taking over Cosa Nostra.
I didn't hear what the Priest was saying, nor did I pay attention to my groom.
The white wedding gown was the last step for my crown. I, Aria Salvatore Knight, was going to be the first female Capo dei capi. The one who was going to make history in the world of organised crime.
But my hopes and dreams died because of him. My reputation was shattered because of him. He made me a joke in Cosa Nostra and now it's his turn to pay for his sins.
Love, betrayal, killing, conspiracy, suffering whatever it costs, Aria knight was determined to become the first Female capo of Cosa Nostra. It has been her aim since her childhood. But what would happen when she was rewarded with the unwanted title of something on her head too, which would create big havoc in Cosa Nostra?
The Bratva Queen!
Well, Let's dive into the bloody story of the Ice Princess and the Merciless Monster.
The fight for freedom does not end after the death of the old Earl William, and the power-hungry seniors do not seem to stop here, so begins the story of the ascent of a young man, a last offspring of the Derby counts, who will fight for his fate, escaping the attacks. to which he is subjected by his enemies...
Julian Silas is a man living as a shadow. After the suspicious death of his father, a legendary royal jeweler, Julian’s treacherous stepfather seized the family’s prestigious workshop, forcing Julian into a life of clandestine labor. While his stepbrothers parade around high society in Julian’s designs, Julian remains locked in the cellar forge, known to the world only as a common servant. His only connection to his true identity is a pair of heirloom cufflinks—exquisite silver swans bearing the "Cigna," a secret mark used by his ancestors to authenticate their greatest works.
Across the capital, Queen Althea is fighting a war of her own. Her advisors are pressuring her to enter a loveless political alliance to stabilize the crown. Defiant, she hosts a grand masquerade, declaring that she will choose a consort based on character, not a pedigree curated by the council.
When Julian arrives at the ball in a suit of his own tailoring, he and Althea share a night of genuine connection, discussing the beauty of creation and the weight of duty. But as the clock strikes midnight, a palace security breach forces Julian to flee. In his haste to scale the garden wall, one of his Cigna cufflinks is torn from his sleeve and falls into the dewy grass.
The Queen finds the token, but rather than sending her guards to find a man who "fits the suit," she turns to her greatest strength: her intellect. She recognizes that the "Cigna" isn't just an ornament—it’s a Coded Sign.
I loved him for all the dangers he passed
Aurora Martin, A charming sweet innocent girl with a beauty so bright it could blind one’s eyes, Taken away from prying dangerous eyes and never to be seen in the actual world! Aurora dreams of her Prince Charming in a white robe and white flying horse to take her away from the cactus.
But what happens when her prince charming comes in form of a dying man...?
This is a tangled inspired romance but with it’s own twists and turns..
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In the third book of my novel series The 5 Ace, I present in front of you all a tale of a knight and his precious. The Knight knowingly committed a mistake, a mistake so grave that he hurt the person he loves in the process, his precious. What will his precious do? Will she be able to forgive her knight or will give him the punishment he wouldn't have even thought of?
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Well, the story doesn't only revolve around the knight, his precious, and the grave mistake but also around the evil who had already played the cards. The evil has been leading ever since the game started, and getting an inch closer to his win with every move. Will the knight and his precious be able to fight back or will get played?
Tune in to the mystery-thriller and romantic journey of The Knight And His Precious to be mindful of all the answers.
A love potion.
The wrong man.
And a marriage that changes everything.
When apothecary Rebecca Rosewyn accidentally gives her forbidden potion to the kingdom’s most feared man, Knight Commander Gideon Malik, she expects death. The law is clear: anyone who brews a love potion faces execution.
But Gideon doesn’t fall under her spell.
He never needed a single drop of it to begin with.
Instead of letting the Queen execute her, he proposes marriage, drawing her into a world she barely understands.
Now Rebecca must survive a palace filled with masks, navigate the Queen’s deadly games, and confront a past that threatens to burn them both. Because falling for Gideon was never part of the plan.
And she’s not sure it’ll save her this time.