Zawa + The Belly of the Beast' is one of those hidden gems that doesn’t get nearly enough attention, and its protagonist, Zawa, is such a compelling lead. She’s this fierce yet deeply introspective warrior navigating a world teeming with political intrigue and monstrous threats. What really stands out about her is how she balances raw physical strength with emotional vulnerability—something you don’t always see in action-heavy stories. Her journey isn’t just about slaying beasts; it’s about confronting the darkness within herself, which makes her arc feel intensely personal.
The way Zawa’s character unfolds throughout the story is masterful. Early on, she comes across as this unstoppable force, but as the layers peel back, you realize how much trauma and doubt she carries. The 'Belly of the Beast' isn’t just a literal place in the narrative; it’s a metaphor for her internal struggles. I love how the creators didn’t shy away from letting her make mistakes or show weakness. It’s refreshing to see a protagonist who isn’t just a flawless hero but someone genuinely grappling with their role in a broken world. By the end, her growth feels earned, not forced—a rarity in many action-driven plots.
2026-02-25 18:01:29
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Bride Of The Beast
Crown Summers
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“Bride by day. Prey by night.”
To secure peace between humans and werewolves, Raven Dierna is forced into an impossible role: posing as a bride for Eilís Caravia, the feral wolf prince of Caravia.
If his true gender is discovered, Raven won’t just be exposed, he’ll be executed.
But surviving the marriage proves far more dangerous than the lie itself.
Eilís is no ordinary prince. Haunted by a violent dark half and bound by duty to a fragile kingdom, he is as lethal as he is irresistible. As court intrigues deepen and war looms, Raven finds himself trapped between political schemes, deadly secrets, and a forbidden attraction that could destroy them both.
Because in Caravia, loving the wolf prince may be deadlier than deceiving the court, and some secrets were never meant to survive the night.
The Scions rule the world now.
Born of celestial light, they turned on their creators and claimed the earth for themselves. But their victory came at a cost—every daughter of their kind has withered into dust, and extinction looms.
So they hunt human women to survive.
Anwen has always been fragile.
Sickly. Ordinary.
She was meant to be hidden away in a sanctuary, safe from the monsters who would claim her.
Instead, she’s taken by three of the most feared shifters alive.
A Dragon, cold and untouchable.
A Lycan, lethal and always too close.
A Minotaur, silent and watching—like she’s a puzzle he intends to solve.
They expect her to die like the others.
Another delicate human who won’t survive the bond.
But Anwen doesn’t break.
She burns.
And the longer she remains in their fortress, the more their control begins to unravel. Their magic bends toward her. Their instincts sharpen. Their possessiveness turns feral.
Others want her.
Their High King demands her.
But these three won’t give her up.
Because the fragile human they stole?
She might be the most dangerous creature in their world.
And they’re done pretending she isn’t theirs.
For thousands of years, the tale of the Lycan beast who lurked the forbidden forest had been told. Every five hundred years, six females were allegedly sacrificed from the wolf village to the beast and it was rumoured that their bodies were left to rot at the entrance of the forest for all to see. Many times, this tale was retold to scare the young wolves from venturing into the forest and keep them in check, because no one wanted to be a scapegoat in the hands of the unforgiving and murderous beast.
Nola Reynolds has always been a headstrong fiery pure blood who has always believed there was no Lycan beast and all the tales about him were just made up myths and fairy tales, aimed at scaring the younger ones. Little does she know that one night was all it was going to take to change her life forever. Things take an unsettling turn for Nola when she, alongside five other girls, are chosen on the night of the full moon. She is faced with the most shocking revelation of her life standing before her, in flesh and blood— The Lycan Beast.
Is it her fate to run away and free herself from the hands of the predator, or does she have to give in to her sweet, twisted story of beauty and the beast?
I met evil when I was a teenager. It never left me after that, hovered over me like a dark cloud, followed me everywhere.
When I least expected, he barged into my life like he owned it.
Kidnapped and vulnerable, I am trapped on a stranded island with no way out. There's nowhere I can hide.
I am afraid. I fear his gentleness more than his cruelity. I don't know if I can survive this but I do know that one of us will be ruined by the time this ends.
Every princess dreams about meeting a prince charming. I don't get the prince, I get the King who wants to rule over everything.
He's a Beast but I am no Belle.
The Beauty changed the beast. The Beast fell in love with her. A beautiful fairytale it was.
The Beast doesn't love me, I can't tame him.
This isn't a love story. It's a story of obsession.
18+. Not your traditional Mafia Romance. Proceed with Caution.
Zuba is beautiful princess of a vampire kingdom of Borney Islands. Her parents king Macedon and queen Mirabel are set to mate her to one of the nobles of the kingdom according to traditions of the land.
There are many nobles in Borney. But Oscar and Dario see themselves as front runners. They engage in fierce confrontations and fight each other for the love of the princess.
But she loves neither of them. In fact the princess doesn’t want to be mated to any of the vampire nobles of her kingdom. She sees them as greedy and boring; not fit to be her life mate.
However, King Macedon and queen Mirabel don’t see things that way. They force their daughter to pick on any of the nobles. Just like every other vampire, they demand that the princess fulfil that obligation because the good fortunes of the kingdom rely on it.
But as preparations are going on, something happens which throws the kingdom in disarray. Jason Clay, a mysterious werewolf attends the ceremony out of curiosity. When the princess sets her eyes on him, he immediately falls in love with him.
When Jason disappears from the ceremony,
The nobles of a vampire kingdom are fighting for the love of the crown princess. But she doesn’t pick on any of them as her life mate. She sees them as greedy and boring. None of them is fit to be her life mate.
She instead sets her eyes on a mysterious werewolf. This is contrary to the traditions of the land which forbid any relationship with werewolves. Now all the vampires of the kingdom come together to fight the illicit love affair.
But she runs away with her werewolf. Will their love survive
The Beast locked me up in his fake castle.
As the daughter of one of the most dangerous Bratva bosses in the underworld, I uncovered a secret so deadly, I fled Russia and escaped to America.
But my high school enemy, the Beast, kidnapped me and trapped me on his island with no way to escape. And without my medication, I had no control over the heat that consumed me as an Omega. His rough hands made me crave things I never wanted before. I was powerless to resist him.
The Beast. My Mate.
With my life on the line, I tried to resist my dark, dangerous captor, yet I found myself drawn to him.
The truth was supposed to set me free, but in the Bratva world, the only freedom was death.
Author's Note: Beast is a stand-alone novel. It is a steamy dark Russian mafia enemies-to-lovers standalone novel with some trigger warnings! There's no cheating or cliffhangers, and always a guaranteed HEA
Belly of the Beast' has this gritty, almost cinematic feel to its characters, like they stepped right out of a noir comic. The protagonist, Kaida, is a former assassin with a tragic past—think Black Widow but with more existential dread. She's paired with Rowan, this sarcastic hacker who provides much-needed levity amidst all the bloodshed. Then there's General Vex, the villain who's less mustache-twirling and more 'I genuinely believe I'm saving the world.' The dynamic between Kaida and Rowan reminds me of 'Cowboy Bebop's' Spike and Jet, all banter and reluctant trust.
What really stuck with me was how the side characters aren't just props. Take Dr. Elara, the scientist with questionable ethics—she's not purely evil, just horrifically pragmatic. And the comic's art style amplifies their personalities; Kaida's always framed in shadows, while Vex gets these cold, symmetrical panels. It's rare to see a story where even the antagonist's motives make you pause.