Man, that ending wrecked me in the best way! It's not your typical Hollywood resolution – no neat bows here. After all the tension built through missed calls and unanswered letters, the final act throws this curveball where the main character doesn't get on that plane to reconcile. Instead, they sit down and write one last letter they know will never be sent. The genius is in what's not shown – you hear a pen scratching, then the screenplay just cuts to black. Left our entire book club arguing for weeks about whether that silence represented acceptance or surrender.
What's brilliant is how it subverts the whole 'long-distance romance' trope. The distance wasn't just physical – it became emotional armor. That final scene where they each listen to the same song at the same time, continents apart? Chills. Made me dig up old mix CDs from my college years just to feel that bittersweet nostalgia.
The ending of 'A Million Miles Away' really hit me hard – it's one of those stories that lingers long after you finish it. Without spoiling too much, the protagonist finally reaches their breaking point after years of emotional distance, and the climax is this raw, quiet confrontation where words fail but actions scream. There's a scene where two characters just look at each other, and you realize everything they couldn't say across all those miles. The screenplay leaves some ambiguity too – like, is reconciliation possible, or is this just the beginning of another kind of separation? What stuck with me was how it mirrors real-life relationships where love isn't enough to bridge certain gaps.
Visually, the last sequence plays with this metaphor of windows – frames within frames, like the characters are always observing life rather than living it together. The final shot is a suitcase left half-packed in a hallway, which I interpreted as this perfect symbol of perpetual indecision. Made me think about my own friendships that faded not from drama but from slow, imperceptible drifting.
The screenplay's ending feels like a punch to the gut in slow motion. After all that buildup of cross-country yearning and almost-meetings, the conclusion lands on this painfully ordinary moment – someone washing dishes while the other leaves a voicemail that cuts off mid-sentence. The banality of it hurts. There's no dramatic farewell, just the realization that some connections dissolve gradually, like sugar in too much water.
What got me was the subtle callback to earlier scenes – that coffee stain on page 15 comes back in the finale as a blurred-out background detail, showing how even shared memories become indistinct with time. Makes you wonder if the story was about distance or about how we romanticize connections that were already fading. Left me staring at my phone's recent calls list differently, I'll tell you that.
2026-01-11 20:00:27
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But as they spend time together, Arthur begins to see Evelyn differently, and the freedom he once wanted no longer feels important. With Evelyn quietly slipping away and time running out, Arthur is forced to face a choice he never expected to make. When the hundred days end, will he still want his freedom—or will it already be too late to save her?
Alexa is a hardworking person. Always helping her mom after her dad disappear. One day of her existence, she met a guy named Daniel. Mirana the sister of Daniel have search planets by planet in order to kill her older brother. Daniel is the heir in Aleris and Mirana wants to kill him to take the throne. As soon as Mirana finds out that he’s on earth, she send thousands of ships to attack earth. Daniel without knowing the planned attack contacted one of his friends to help him get out of earth, so that his sister might not find him. But everything’s too late. Earth is now a warzone. So Daniel have to go, leaving earth behind and hoping that no other planet will suffer the same faith. Before leaving, Daniel met with Alexa and tells her everything. She also has some questions about her true being that is describe by her mother before it died due to the attack. Alexa without a heartbeat, leaves with Daniel. As they were on the ship, Daniel needs an army of himself to fight with his sister. Knowing how powerful Mirana has been after she killed their parents. Daniel now seeks out people from different planets and galaxies who are willing to fight beside him. Alexa, still searching for herself within the stars have been hoping to know who she really is but Daniel doesn’t care whether what she is.
As soon as Daniel have gathered his own army, he plan to attack Mirana. He finds a way to lure Mirana and fights her for the throne. Then he finds out something he didn't expect. Now he must decide whether to kill Mirana and acquire the throne? Or save Mirana to save Alexa?
This is the English version of my book The Billionaire’s Son. This is a Romance Story of a boy who fell in love with someone he just met because of a one night stand on an accidental way. Arnaldo is already engaged to Sandra because of his parent's wish and not under his will.
The story of The Billionaire’s Son revolves around the unique love between Arnaldo and Amelia, which began after a night they shared together. Due to the antics of their respective friends, Amelia found herself in a serious predicament. A web of lies spun by Sandra, aimed at both Arnaldo’s parents and Amelia, forced her to hide abroad for a long time with Arnaldo’s real child. How will Arnaldo discover the truth about Amelia and their child? How long can Sandra’s lies continue to deceive everyone?
Emillia Lucille has everything. Money, looks, fame, family. You name it, she has it. Her luxury is never ending, so is her career as a model in an international agency owned by her father.
Many envy her. Many tried to be her, but they failed. She is invincible. With her cold heart and charming look, she became the person every man and woman wanted and hated at the same time.
But everything changed when she received a photo from an anonymous sender. A photo she ought to keep until she dies. A photo that can harm not only her career but also herself. A photo that will reunite her with her lost self and its acquaintances.
Will she be able to reconnect to the past and fight the situation she was fated to face? Or will she be forever locked from it? And just like it, will she remain so far away?
Cassie Cruz is a twenty-two-year-old who has never met her parents and was raised by her grandfather. Cassie's grandfather passes away and she moves in with her best friend, McKenzie in South Carolina.
There, McKenzie gets Cassie a job working with her in Myrtle Beach, cleaning Mansions for the wealthy.
The two of them end up cleaning a mansion together, and in a twist, the owner, Devin Deacon accuses McKenzie of stealing a flash drive. After Devin realizes he only misplaced it, he steps outside by the pool and meets Cassie. Cassie falls into the pool, beginning to drown and Devin saves her. Once again Devin proceeds to save her as she's leaving from an intruder who tries stealing her purse, finally convincing Cassie to go on a date. That date turning into another that makes the two of them feel something strong for each other.
As days go by Cassie cleans another mansion owned by John Myles. John is obsessed with Cassie, even going as far as trying to force her to leave with him, but Devin once again comes to Cassie's rescue.
Cassie falls ill, sending her to the hospital where Devin stays with her, even taking care of her after she returns home.
They find out John poisoned Cassie, forcing Devin, Cassie, and McKenzie to go find John in The Cayman Islands, leaving Cassie in for an even bigger surprise.
Money is nothing when love is involved. Will Cassie and Devin become soulmates? Or will their million-dollar kiss only turn into a wild seduction between the two of them?
Tired of her marriage with her cheating husband, twenty-three years old Betty Von Rosey, relocates (as advised by her friend, Laura) to Gut’s Island, an island that is believed to be magical enough to relieve the pains of the broken hearted, by sparing them chances of falling in love the second time.
On the Island, she falls in love with a billionaire in the disguise of a chauffeur, birthing a new wave of romance between the two.
But things begin to chatter when her red room ex-husband, Braun, visits the Island, and she discovers the true image of her recent lover, Stan.
The ending of 'A Million Miles Away' by Lara Avery really tugs at your heartstrings. After spending the whole book rooting for Kelsey and Peter's long-distance relationship, the final chapters hit hard. Kelsey finally gets to visit Peter overseas, but their reunion isn't the fairy tale she imagined. The time apart changed them both, and they realize their lives are heading in different directions. What struck me was how realistically Lara Avery portrayed that bittersweet moment when two people who love each other recognize it's not enough to make it work. The last scene with Kelsey watching Peter walk away stays with you long after closing the book.
What makes this ending so powerful is how it mirrors real-life relationships. Instead of forcing a happily-ever-after, Avery lets her characters grow apart with dignity. There's this beautiful melancholy in how Kelsey reflects on what they shared while acknowledging they'll both be okay. It's not a tragedy—just life moving forward. I found myself thinking about my own past relationships differently after reading it. The ending makes the whole journey feel worth it, even without a traditional happy ending.
I couldn't put down 'A Million Miles Away' once I started—it's one of those books that grabs you by the heart and doesn't let go. The story follows Kelsey, a girl who loses her twin sister, Michelle, in a tragic accident. Grief-stricken, she stumbles upon Michelle's online relationship with a soldier named Peter and, in a moment of desperation, decides to impersonate her sister to keep the connection alive. What unfolds is this beautifully messy exploration of love, guilt, and identity. The more Kelsey delves into Peter's world, the more she questions whether she's honoring Michelle or just hiding from her own pain. The emotional stakes are sky-high, especially when Peter returns home and the lie becomes harder to maintain.
What really got me was how Lara Avery writes grief—it's not linear or tidy. Kelsey's journey isn't about 'getting over' her sister; it's about learning to carry that loss while figuring out who she is without Michelle. The romance with Peter adds this bittersweet layer because you want them to find happiness, but the shadow of deceit is always there. The ending wrecked me (in the best way)—no neat resolutions, just raw, real humanity. If you've ever loved someone so deeply that their absence feels like a physical weight, this book will resonate.