I was completely absorbed by the way 'At First Spite' closes, and honestly I think the ending lands the way it does because the book is trying to balance a classic rom-com payoff with something messier and more honest about real-life hurt. On a surface level, the finale gives you the emotional reconciliation and grovel that readers of slow-burn hate-to-love romances expect—Matthew is forced to reckon with the fact that he wrecked Athena’s plans and stability, and the story gives him room to apologize, make amends, and try to rebuild trust. That structure is deliberate: the plot arcs toward accountability first, then toward intimacy, so the ending is both a romantic resolution and a repair sequence for the damage he caused. Publishers Weekly and Library Journal both highlight how the novel threads humor and heartfelt moments together while leaning into those grown-up reckonings, which helps explain why the book wraps on a reconciliation that feels like earned closure for some readers. Beneath that rom-com scaffolding, though, the ending also insists on showing Athena’s interior work—her anxiety, depressive episodes, and the vulnerability that comes with having your life overturned. Olivia Dade doesn’t erase those pieces; she lets them shape the conclusion. The breakup and the subsequent grovel aren’t just plot devices, they’re a test of whether Matthew truly understands Athena’s limitations and whether he can support her without infantilizing or controlling her. That tension explains why some readers feel the third-act fallout is necessary and cathartic: it forces meaningful conversations and visible change rather than a whisper-and-forget reconciliation. Reviews and reader reactions have repeatedly pointed out that mental health is a major throughline here, and that the grovel and repair scenes are meant to show growth rather than a simple tidy happy-ever-after. Still, the ending won’t land for everyone, and the book knows that. Some critique the way Matthew inserts himself into Athena’s life or how certain scenes read as cringe to some readers; others praise the depth of the grovel and the emotional honesty. That split reaction makes sense to me: the author chose to give a grown-up, imperfect reconciliation instead of an escapist, consequence-free romance, and that will feel either rewarding or grating depending on what a reader hopes to get from the story. For my part, I appreciated that the finale kept Athena’s agency visible and didn’t paper over the harm— Matthew’s redemption is hard-won, not automatic. The ending left me satisfied because it balanced laugh-out-loud rom-com beats with a serious look at accountability and recovery, and because it honored the characters' emotional work rather than pretending everything was fine overnight. I closed the book smiling, a little teary, and oddly comforted by how messy and human it all felt.
2026-01-01 18:47:08
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Giselle Stone has been with Jonathan Lawson for seven years, but that means nothing to him compared to the excitement and novelty of being with someone new.
She's always considered herself someone who could protect other people's relationships, but Jonathan's heart is one that she can't keep.
When she realizes it's over between them, she tells him she wants to call off the engagement.
Jonathan's gaze is cold as he confidently says, "You'll regret this, Giselle."
Everyone is waiting to see her make a fool of herself, but the man behind her wraps an arm around her waist. He rests his jaw on her shoulder as his warm breath fans over her.
"Do you know what's the most vindicative thing to do when getting revenge on your ex? Marry me, Gigi. That way, you'll be Jonathan's aunt."
Maya is a 23 year old orphan girl who has lived in multiple homes since the death of her parents. She had one passion. To reach the highest height in her career. A few years after reaching the mid-height of her career, she comes in contact with Mark, a well known billionaire betrothed to the heir of the largest shipping and logistics company. Mark is arrogant, wealthy and yet, breathtakingly handsome. These two fall in love but Maya hides her feelings, fearing rejection whiles Mark hides his, because of pride. He calls Maya a low life girl who is not worthy of his love. As the tables turn, Maya meets Tom who is a perfect embodiment of her description of a dream man but will she be able to let go of her feelings for Mark? Will Mark be able to love her and give up the heir of the largest shipping company? Will Maya be able to reciprocate Toms' love or will she forgive Mark for how he despised her? Let's find out as the story unfolds....
During an argument with my fiancé, he lost his temper and slapped me across the face in front of the entire family and guests. That same day, I called off the engagement and blocked him on every last platform so that he could not reach me.
No one could believe it. After all, we grew up together. Everyone knew I had been in love with him since we were kids, and we were supposed to get married right after college.
He just stood there, looking lost. "Why, Gia? Over a slap?"
I held his gaze. "Sì. Over a slap."
I received a call the day before my wedding. "Miss McPherson, someone has thrashed your venue."
I rushed to the hotel in confusion only to meet a woman waving my wedding photo. "You homewrecking skank! You seduced my husband and spent his money on this wedding!"
The crowd believed her and went wild. Even the hotel manager piled on me. "I knew something was fishy when the groom never showed up! You're not his real wife!"
The crowd turned into a violent mob. In that chaos, I miscarried.
At the height of my fury, I texted my secretary: [Cancel the wedding, and kick Matteo Brando out of my company!]
How dare he keep a mistress with my fortune! How dare she challenge me!
I will destroy them!
My husband—one of the top elites of Raventon Street, cold and ruthless to his core—keeps a stray orphan girl he rescued from the slums hidden in an apartment.
Rowena Fletcher is clean and fragile, like a newborn creature untouched by the world. And somehow, that innocence softens something in Micah Benson—a man who's spent years clawing his way through the brutal wilderness of capital.
He thinks this secret game of his goes unnoticed, but I find out anyway.
At the Benson family's charity gala, I smash his favorite antique vase in front of everyone. He doesn't even flinch as he simply signals the bodyguards to clean up the mess and then hands me a divorce agreement.
"Sign it, Sabrina. The penthouse in Ashbourne City is yours."
I burn the divorce agreement—and that's when he finally shows his true colors.
He freezes all my accounts and launches a hostile takeover of my gallery.
On the night the storm hits, I get a call from the hospital. My sister, Roberta Slater, has been in a car crash—she needs emergency surgery.
In the security footage, he stood there, watching coldly. "Sign the papers, or start planning a funeral."
I dropped to my knees and slammed my forehead against the floor, blood trailing down my face as I begged, "Micah, please… don't…"
A long, flat beep echoed from the other end of the line, slicing through the sound of rain. Then a voice on the line says, "We did everything we could."
However, I have gone back in time—to the day I first found out about Rowena.
This time, I no longer cry. Instead, I plan my divorce on my own terms. I call Valebrook Bank that same night and begin preparing for a quiet disappearance.
But the moment I truly vanish from his world, Micah loses his mind.
Using the relationship as a bridge to his revenge, Alexander has deep feelings of love for his wife, Kimbeerly Libason. Feelings of love that should have been buried deep in order to focus on the goal, instead made Alexander think twice between continuing or ending his revenge plan. Reluctantly, Alexander ended his plan and chose to leave the Libason family to heal his own wounds even though Kimbeerly was pregnant with his flesh and blood at the time. Kimbeerly loved Alexander so much. She was tormented by Alexander's decision to disappear from her life. A few years later, Kimbeerly reunited with Alexander. Kimbeerly suspected Alexander had a family because she saw him with a woman and a child. On the other hand, Kimbeerly's son continues to ask about his father's whereabouts and makes Kimbeerly confused to answer. How will their story end? Will Alexander and Kimbeerly reunite or just choose their own way of life so that they no longer hurt each other?
It's wild how 'Love at First Spite' turns its petty-project premise into a tidy emotional payoff for the protagonist, and I find that satisfying in a cozy-romcom way. The book opens with Dani discovering her fiancé cheated and her plan to build a literal 'spite house' next door as a way to get back at him—she buys the lot, ropes in friends, and needs an architect to make the dream spiteful-but-functional; that setup is the engine for everything that follows. What makes the ending make sense, for me, is twofold: character work and tonal promise. By the finale Dani has outgrown revenge as a driving force—her emotional arc is about reclaiming agency and deciding what actually feeds her joy, not what will wound an ex. Wyatt, the prickly architect she partners with, functions as a foil who forces Dani to confront how much of her plan is about performing strength versus actually healing. The narrative closes when both characters lean into vulnerability, communicate through the conflict that popped up mid-story, and step away from revenge toward a genuine relationship—a resolution that matches the book’s rom-com rules and the author’s own payoff in the epilogue. On top of that, Collins actually extends Dani’s wrap-up with a short epilogue and even extra touches (like a playlist) that underline the book’s feel-good intent—so the ending isn’t abrupt, it’s curated to leave you smiling rather than stewing. I finished the last page thinking the story did what it set out to do: turned spite into growth, and that feltearned to me.
The ending of 'I Hated You First' wraps up the chaotic romance between the two leads in a way that feels both satisfying and true to their fiery dynamic. After chapters of bickering, misunderstandings, and secret pining, they finally confront their feelings during a climactic argument at a mutual friend's wedding. The female lead, who's spent the whole story insisting she despises the male lead, breaks down and admits her jealousy when she sees him dancing with someone else. Instead of gloating, he kisses her—right there in front of everyone—and whispers, 'Took you long enough.'
What I love about this ending is how it subverts the typical enemies-to-lovers trope. There's no grand gesture or dramatic confession; it's messy and awkward, just like real emotions. The epilogue shows them bickering over wedding plans, proving their dynamic hasn't changed—they just finally embraced it. The author leaves a few threads dangling too, like the female lead's unresolved career conflict, which makes the world feel lived-in. Perfect for readers who want romance with bite.