At first glance, 'Rumbling Stumbling Bumbling Fumbling' seems like a standard mid-length novel, but the experience is anything but. Those 320 pages are a masterclass in controlled chaos. The author crams in everything from haikus about office supplies to a 10-page digression on the philosophy of mismatched socks. It’s the kind of book where you’ll pause to reread passages aloud to unsuspecting roommates. The length feels just right—long enough to build a weirdly cohesive world, short enough to avoid overstaying its welcome. My dog-eared copy’s proof of how often I revisit it.
320 pages of pure, unhinged delight. This novel’s length perfectly matches its tone—compact but bursting at the seams. The chapters vary wildly (one’s just a grocery list that morphs into existential crisis), so page count hardly matters. It’s the literary equivalent of a fever dream you don’t want to wake up from. I keep it on my shelf next to 'Hitchhiker’s Guide' as a reminder that brilliance doesn’t need 500 pages to shine.
320 pages? More like 320 rollercoaster moments! This novel’s length is deceptive—it reads faster than a manga volume because the prose is so kinetic. The font’s bigger than your average literary fiction, too, which helps. I lent my copy to a friend who usually hates reading, and they finished it in two days, laughing the whole way. The episodic structure means you can dip in and out, but good luck stopping once the sentient toaster shows up.
I stumbled upon 'Rumbling Stumbling Bumbling Fumbling' while browsing for quirky indie novels, and its length surprised me! The paperback edition runs about 320 pages—not too hefty, but dense with chaotic energy. The chapters bounce between absurdist vignettes and longer narrative arcs, so it feels both substantial and breezy. I devoured it in a weekend, but the offbeat humor sticks with you longer. Perfect for fans of Douglas Adams-style tangents with a dash of modern surrealism.
What’s wild is how the author packs so much into those pages: talking raccoons, sentient fidget spinners, and a subplot about a sentient microwave. The pacing’s erratic by design, like the title suggests, but that’s part of its charm. If you’re into experimental fiction that doesn’t take itself seriously, this one’s a gem.
2025-12-16 13:24:56
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Raw and Ruined: Short Erotic Sins
Step into a world where desire doesn’t ask permission and shame is just foreplay.
Several merciless, sweat-slick stories that don’t seduce—they take.
No slow burns.
No sweet nothings.
Just skin slapping skin, nails carving lines down backs, mouths full, thighs trembling, and the kind of orgasms that make your vision white out and your voice break.
These stories are greedy.
They bruise.
They stain sheets and memories.
They leave teeth marks and handprints and the delicious ache of being used exactly the way you secretly always wanted.
These are not love stories.
These are lust stories.
Short. Sharp. Unapologetic.
And they will leave you throbbing, aching, and reaching for someone—or something—to ruin you next.
Raw and Ruined: Short Erotic Sins
Because sometimes the dirtiest thing you can do… is let yourself be devoured.
She came home for the holidays… and walked right straight into hell.
Her toxic ex humiliated her in front of everyone and her family pushed her back into his arms like it was a game.
Then Xavier stepped in....her ex’s quiet, dangerous uncle. A dominant biker who demands complete obedience.
He offered her a deal: Sixty days as his.
Sixty days of raw possession.
Sixty days of filthy “Yes, Daddy” nights.
Sixty days to burn her old life to the ground and in return her wedding with his nephew will be dragged and her sweetest revenge on him will be exacted.
But when the lines between revenge and real feelings merge, Nora discovers one truth. Once the Biker Daddy claims you, he never lets go.
Forbidden, Filthy and Slutty.
How many days would you last??
Michael Nate Clark has always been identified as the stutter boy. His previous three years of high school was a disaster where he was constantly bullied and made fun of for his stutter.Now Nate is about to have a fresh start as he got admission into a highly reputed boarding school in Texas with scholarship. He has some hope that people in this new school would leave him alone and he can finally have a prosperous school life. But he is proved wrong as he happens to stare at Ethan Vance, a guy from his Calculus class, who looks alike his late brother Alex. Ethan turns out to be a bully and starts bullying Nate along with the rest of the jocks. But does Ethan really like to bully Nate or is he doing it to keep his place in the popular crowd ? What happens when Ethan and Nate has to share a dorm room. When will the bullying stop ? Will it ever? Or will Nate learn some shocking truths regarding his birth?Follow Ethan and Nate as they explore feelings they never thought they would get to experience and maybe even more than that.
"Don't move," he trailed his kisses to my neck after saying it, his hands were grasping my hands, entwining his fingers with mine, putting them above my head. His woodsy scent of cologne invades my senses and I was aroused by the simple fact that his weight was slightly crushing me.
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When a famous author keeps on receiving emails from his stalker, his agent says to let it go. She says it's good for his popularity.
But when the stalker gets too close, will he run and call the police for help?
Is it a thriller?
Is it a comedy?
Is it steamy romance?
or... is it just a disaster waiting to happen?
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Add the book to your library, read and find out as another townie gets his spotlight and hopefully his happy ever after 😘
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Warning! R-Rated for 18+ due to strong, explicit language and sexual content*
Five years after moving abroad, I return to the country for the first time at the invitation of a business partner. My partner sends a reliable assistant to meet me at the company entrance.
I never expect to see my ex, Roy Henderson, who disappeared without a trace five years ago.
Back then, a car accident lands me in the hospital. I need his signature, but he is nowhere to be found. Later, I find out he has gone to celebrate his lover's birthday.
Everyone assumes I will forgive him like I always do. After all, I have forgiven him countless times before.
As soon as I get out of the hospital, I leave the country and disappear from his life completely.
Roy frowns as I walk into the company. "You actually tracked me down?"
He lets out a sigh. "Forget it. Since you've found me anyway, Ava just had a baby and is still in postpartum recovery. Go take care of her."
We love reading novels, fall in love with the characters, sometimes envy the main girl for getting the perfect male lead... but what happens when you get inside your own novel and get to meet your perfect main lead and bonus...get treated like the female lead?! As the clock struck 12, Arielle Taylor is pulled inside her own novel. This cinderella is over the moon as her Prince Charming showers her with his attention but what would happen when she finds herself falling for her fairy godmother instead?
Please read my interview with Goodnovel at: https://tinyurl.com/y5zb3tug
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I was actually surprised when I first heard someone ask about the 'Trash Humpers' novel—because, well, it doesn’t exist! Harmony Korine’s 'Trash Humpers' is a cult film, a bizarre, VHS-style art project that feels like a fever dream. It’s all about chaotic, surreal visuals rather than a traditional narrative. Now, if someone were to novelize it, I imagine it’d be a slim, experimental volume, maybe 100 pages max, filled with fragmented prose and Polaroid-style vignettes to match the film’s vibe.
That said, the idea of a 'Trash Humpers' novel is weirdly fun to ponder. It’d probably be like if William S. Burroughs and a mischievous gremlin co-authored a book—short, unsettling, and impossible to forget. I’d totally read it, though I’d need a strong cup of tea afterward.
I was browsing through some indie comic forums last week when I stumbled upon this bizarrely titled work 'Rumbling Stumbling Bumbling Fumbling.' At first I thought it was some obscure manga spin-off, but turns out it's actually an experimental graphic novel by underground artist Milo Chang. Their style reminds me of early Daniel Clowes meets Junji Ito's stranger short stories—all distorted perspectives and social awkwardness turned surreal.
Chang's work doesn't get mainstream attention, but in alt-comix circles, they're known for capturing that specific millennial anxiety through grotesque yet hilarious body horror. The way they draw characters tripping over their own feet literally and metaphorically... it stays with you. I tracked down their zine collection after reading this, and wow does their handwriting look like it's crawling off the page.
I recently got my hands on 'Behind the Laughter of the Surviving Princess,' and wow, the length surprised me! It’s a hefty read—around 350 pages in the print edition, but the e-book version feels even longer because of the dense, poetic prose. The story isn’t just about page count, though. It’s packed with flashbacks, diary entries, and even script-like dialogue sections that make the narrative feel sprawling. I spent weeks savoring it, and even then, I found myself flipping back to reread certain passages. The author really takes their time building the protagonist’s emotional world, which adds layers to what could’ve been a straightforward historical drama.
If you’re into immersive, character-driven stories, this one’s a gem. The pacing is deliberate, almost like a slow burn, but every chapter peels back another layer of the princess’s psyche. By the end, I wasn’t just counting pages—I was wishing there were more.