Jonathan Abernathy's 'You Are Kind' hit me like a quiet storm—I wasn’t expecting much when I picked it up, but the way he weaves vulnerability into everyday moments left me staring at the ceiling at 2 AM. It’s not a flashy read; the magic is in the small observations—how a character’s hands shake while brewing tea, or the way sunlight slants through a window during an awkward conversation. Abernathy has this uncanny ability to make mundane details feel revelatory. I dog-eared so many pages just to revisit lines that made my chest ache.
What surprised me most was how the book balances melancholy with warmth. There’s no grand plot twist or epic climax, just people figuring out how to be slightly less broken together. If you’re into introspective stories that linger like the smell of rain on pavement, this’ll wreck you in the best way. I finished it weeks ago and still catch myself thinking about the scene where two characters silently fold laundry together—it shouldn’t be profound, but Abernathy makes it feel like a prayer.
Abernathy’s writing in 'You Are Kind' feels like someone gently pressing a bruise—you wince, but there’s relief in the acknowledgment. I devoured it in one sitting because the prose flows like a conversation with an old friend who knows exactly where you’re fragile. The dialogue cracks with unspoken histories, and even the side characters have arcs that sneak up on you. Perfect for readers who love emotional precision over action—it’s the literary equivalent of those indie films where the camera lingers on a character’s face just a beat too long.
2026-03-22 03:09:27
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My Dearest Beautiful Cousin
Tori A. de
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She called him at two in the morning, wine-drunk and heartbroken, and told him everything.
That her boyfriend of five years had been lying to her face. That she had built his business with her bare hands and he had been quietly cutting her out of it. That she was done being practical about love and intended to date every beautiful man she could find and she meant it.
She did not mean to tell him he was on the list.
Enoch Wade has been in love with his cousin since he saw her at her 19th birthday party. He has spent six years sending birthday gifts and keeping his distance and being exactly what she needed him to be, safe, reliable and family.
The drunk call ends that strategy entirely.
By morning she has an employment letter, a plane ticket, and three days to start over in London.
What neither of them knows is that the tag that held them apart was never true.
Some lines were meant to be crossed.
some lines were never lines at all.
My Dearest Beautiful Cousin — a forbidden romance
All Norah wanted was to finish nursing school and keep her head down. She didn’t expect Ivan Thomas—the boy with the broken past and the fire in his eyes. He was her first protector, her first heartbreak… and the man she never forgot.
Years later, their paths cross again. He’s powerful now, and still impossibly drawn to her. But love between them comes with scars, second chances, and a fight for forever.
In a world ravaged by global nuclear fallout, I struggled to survive alongside my fragile, sweet-faced best friend, dodging one radiation storm after another.
The route to the Central Safety Zone was blocked—we had no choice but to use two detonators to blast open the tunnel. Otherwise, we would be caught in the storm, our bodies rotting away until we either dissolved into blood sludge or turned into zombies.
…
In my previous life, I had risked everything to secure those detonators, only for my best friend to hand them over to a complete stranger without hesitation. "They have elderly people and children on their side too," she said earnestly. "One detonator can save many lives. Iris, you can't be selfish."
I was so furious my blood pressure nearly exploded, but with no other option, I went straight into a horde of zombies to steal backup detonators. I lost an arm in the process, drenched in blood and barely standing. Yet, she complained that I was covered in gore and had frightened the children.
After finally regrouping with the main convoy, I rushed to deliver the formula for anti-radiation medicine to the research institute so that more people could be saved. But she accused me of stealing supplies and trying to flee, which led to my expulsion from the base, and death, my body rotting away under the radiation.
When I opened my eyes again, there was still one hour left before the radiation storm hit. I looked down at the two detonators in my hand, then at my pitiful, tear-brimmed best friend—and I smiled.
Since she loved being a good person so much, this time, I would let her be one to her heart's content.
Zoe Jensen's parents kick her out because she doesn't want to share them with Alice Reed. She ends up homeless on the streets. She ultimately dies of starvation.
When she's reborn, she finds herself standing before Alice. The latter is crying and begging her.
Zoe is delighted by this. Alice can have her parents if she wants them—Zoe doesn't want to lose her life because of them again!
In those eight terrifying seconds when the plane dropped into darkness, my first thought was how devastated Lucas would be if I never made it to the airport.
However, after surviving and landing safely, what greeted me instead…was a photo he shared with his childhood sweetheart, the two of them smiling on a hike.
The caption read:
[Here's to still being wild with you at sixty.]
If it had been before, I probably would have blown up his phone, demanding an explanation and picking a fight.
However, then, after brushing so close to death, I just felt… tired..
So I typed out a message: [Let's get a divorce.]
As the youngest daughter of the powerful mafia family, the Blythes, I was spoiled the moment I was born.
I had three older brothers who adored me.
When I turned eighteen, our father was killed in a turf fight. The shock sent our mother into a rapid decline, and she passed away less than a week later.
To avenge our father, my three brothers waged war against our enemies for three days.
Though they emerged victorious, all three were critically wounded.
My eldest brother, Damon Blythe, suffered a ruptured liver and was on the brink of death. Matt Blythe, my second brother, had severe kidney damage. Chris Blythe had lost too much blood and went into heart failure.
I spent a fortune hiring the world’s top surgeons. They transplanted half of my liver to Damon, a kidney to Matt, and even gave my heart to Chris, replacing mine with a mechanical one.
Thanks to the doctors’ skill, all three survived and went on to take over the Blythes’ empire.
Five years later, they became infatuated with Sophia Foster, a poor but strong-willed intern.
They even forced me to give up my last kidney to her.
It was only after I had died on the operating table that they regretted what they had done.
Oh wow, 'Such Kindness' totally caught me off guard in the best way! At first, I picked it up because the cover had this quiet, melancholic vibe that matched my mood that day. But within pages, it surprised me with its raw honesty about human fragility and the quiet heroism in everyday resilience. The protagonist’s journey from despair to small acts of redemption felt so relatable—like watching someone rebuild their life brick by brick, not with grand gestures but through tiny, aching choices.
What really stuck with me was how the author avoids cheap sentimentality. Even in moments that could’ve veered into cliché (like the neighbor’s subplot), the writing stays grounded in awkward, messy humanity. If you’ve ever felt worn down by life but still found yourself scraping together kindness for others? This book mirrors that paradox beautifully. It’s not a 'feel-good' read, but it lingers like good poetry—subtle and bruising.