Yeah, the plot's main thrust is identity and capability. Can she actually handle this double life? It starts with a disastrous wedding she has to salvage, which mirrors her entire situation—everything is falling apart publicly, but she has to fix it with no room for error. The throughline is her moving from faking confidence to genuinely earning it, in both the event world and the shadowy one. The corporate rivals and enemy agents are just different types of obstacles testing the same resolve.
The main plot follows Liu Yue as she takes over her family's event planning firm and uncovers its secret role in intelligence gathering. She must navigate the cutthroat social elite to maintain her cover while completing covert missions disguised as corporate events. The core tension is her balancing these dual lives, never sure who she can trust in either world. It's a fast-paced mix of professional drama and spy thriller.
It's basically a workplace drama wearing a spy novel's clothes. The main plot is the protagonist's struggle to save a business she never wanted while accidentally becoming entangled in its hidden purpose. I think people focus too much on the 'spy' part; the heart of it is her relationship with the quirky staff and her fight to prove herself in a glamorous, ruthless industry. The espionage elements serve more as external pressure to raise the stakes of her professional choices. For instance, a subplot about sourcing a rare ingredient for a gala becomes critical because the supplier is an intelligence asset. The plot mechanics can be clunky, but the character's determination to simply 'handle it'—whether it's a spoiled client or a compromised mission—is genuinely engaging.
I picked up 'I Can Handle It' expecting another lighthearted, feel-good slice-of-life story, but was pleasantly blindsided. The core plot revolves around a young woman inheriting a high-end event planning company from a distant relative, only to discover it's a front for a sprawling intelligence network. The narrative is less about planning weddings and more about using elaborate social events as cover for geopolitical maneuvering. She has to master the chaotic, high-stakes world of event coordination while simultaneously learning to decode dead drops in floral arrangements and identify enemy assets posing as caterers.
What hooked me wasn't just the spy thriller angle, but how deeply the author intertwined the two worlds. The stress of a collapsing wedding cake becomes a perfect metaphor for a mission going sideways. The protagonist's growth isn't about becoming a cold operative; it's about leveraging her innate talent for handling logistical nightmares and reading people—skills crucial to both event planning and espionage. The plot escalates when a major international summit she's coordinating becomes the stage for a critical intelligence hand-off, forcing her to manage both the public spectacle and the shadow war playing out beneath it. I burned through the last hundred pages in one sitting.
Honestly, the main plot is a bit of a genre-bender that doesn't always work. It's about this woman, Liu Yue, who gets thrown into running a failing event business. The twist is the company has these... clandestine side operations? The book tries to juggle boardroom drama with spy stuff, and sometimes the gears grind. I kept reading mostly for the supporting cast—her tech-whiz cousin and the sarcastic head chef have more consistent chemistry than the main arc. The central plot of her using event planning to solve a corporate espionage case feels stretched thin in the middle. It picks up near the end, but you have to wade through a lot of filler about client meetings and menu tastings first.
2026-07-12 05:37:17
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“I’ll agree to this—but only if you stay out of my business.”
“You have a deal,” the man chuckled, raising his hands in mock surrender, his husky voice dripping with amusement.
“But,” he added, stepping closer, his breath brushing against her ear, “you’ll have to agree to my conditions, too.”
“I said I’d agree, didn’t I?” Sherry replied coolly. Her expression didn’t waver as she grabbed his collar and pulled him down to her eye level.
“Mr. Smith,” she whispered, matching his tone with a quiet fierceness.
Hah… This woman is going to drive me insane, Levian thought, already realizing this would be far from easy.
~~~
On her wedding day, Sherry is poisoned by her best friend. Her fiancé? At the hospital, he was celebrating the birth of his child with someone else.
But fate rewinds the clock.
Waking up a day before her death, Sherry has one goal: uncover the truth and take back control. However, as the secrets unravel, she realizes the betrayal runs deeper than she imagined. That's when the rumored Levian Smith makes her an offer:
“Marry me, and I’ll stake my very soul for you.”
Now, she must choose—revenge or redemption?
Danica Winters is a beautiful young woman struggling to make ends meet; she discovers that her sister owes money to a dangerous mobster. She will do whatever it takes to save her. Danica becomes the surrogate for Dax Ryan, an alluring billionaire, and though their deal is strictly business, the lines between them begin to blur. Danica will realize that becoming the surrogate for a billionaire can lead to dangerous complications…and new love. “But that wasn’t everything that had occurred.A realization hit me when I looked over. Dax lay beside me in my bed and was sleeping soundly.This was very cozy and kind of romantic for us. We weren’t a couple but his closeness affected my every nerve. I appreciated what he had done regardless. He just kept surprising me with showing other parts of himself that other people didn’t see. I was curious if I’d eventually see every side he had."Carrying the Billionaire’s Baby is created by Katrina Guerin, an EGlobal Creative Publishing signed author.
Reborn from a desolate post-apocalyptic world into the marginalized middle daughter of Solstice City’s powerful Laurent family, Helene wishes for only one thing: peace.
But that simple wish is threatened when her younger sister refuses to marry her now-disabled fiancé—the very engagement she once stole from Helene—and Helene is pressured to take her place.
Determined to sever ties with the family she'd never quite fitted into, Helene agrees to the marriage.
On one condition.
The day she marries into the Blackthorne family is the day she ceases to be part of the Laurent family.
★ ★ ★
To Lucien Blackthorne, marriage is nothing more than a transaction.
It doesn’t matter who stands beside him at the altar.
Until he meets her.
A woman who looks at him without pity.
Who accepts him without hesitation.
Who walks into his life with quiet defiance, and begins dismantling the walls he built around himself.
What begins as a calculated exchange soon spirals into something neither of them anticipated.
And when emotions become the most dangerous variable of all…
Who will be the first to fall?
It is said that before anything good happens, everything falls out of place. Erica Wright was forced into a mental institution by her step sister.
She suffered endless abuse and torture before suffering a miserable death.
Reborn into a new life, she vouched to take revenge.
Erica's new life took a drastic turn, starting from her change in personality, going from weak to strong, taking revenge step by step.
To outsiders, she was a crazy woman but to a certain CEO she was weak, soft, timid and helpless.
One day, Erica’s scandal broke out: A certain CEO's wife had beaten up 5 men in the dead of night.
The CEO closed a document, raised his eyes and asked with a smile “Wife, does your hands hurt?”
Erica:“....”
Isabella’s world shatters when her longtime boyfriend, Damon Sanchez, publicly proposes to her best friend. Humiliated and heartbroken, she drowns her sorrows in a bar—only to wake up on the bed of Matteo Moretti, the city’s most powerful billionaire.
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But when her brother Alan's illness and Damon's vengeance leave her jobless, fate delivers Isabella straight into the jaws of her most dangerous mistake—Matteo Moretti, now her ruthless new boss.
Caught between Damon’s vindictive games and Moretti’s dangerous allure, Isabella must decide—is survival worth the cost of her heart?
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At my 20th birthday banquet, I am to sign and receive the ten-billion-dollar inheritance left to me by my mother.
My half-sister, Samantha Hatfield, and Howard Daley, her husband, who is also a secretary, eagerly urge me to sign the document.
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But this time, their scheme is going to fail—I have returned with memories of what happens from the past life.
Under their confident, expectant gazes, I pick up the pen. However, I do not pick it up to sign.
I raise my hand and slash the pen's tip across Howard's face.
As he lets out a terrified scream, I tear the agreement into pieces in front of all the guests and hurl the paper scraps at them.
I say coldly, "My mother left all this to me. What makes you two heartless parasites think you're worthy of laying even one finger on it?"
There’s a soft, sunlit feeling to the version of 'I Can Do It' I keep picturing—one of those picture books you read on the couch while someone small curls up against you. In this book the main character is a tiny, stubborn creature (sometimes a kitten, sometimes a little girl, depending on the edition) who decides they’re going to do everything themselves: put on shoes, tie a knot, climb the slide, make a sandwich. Each page is a tiny episode where a task starts off clumsy and funny, then slowly becomes doable through practice and a handful of helpful mistakes.
Illustrations play a huge role—the colors are bright, the expressions exaggerated, and there’s often a repeating line like ‘‘I can do it’’ that kids quickly learn to chime in with. The charm comes from the small setbacks: a lopsided sandwich, a shoe on the wrong foot, wobbly first steps. Adults in the book aren’t absent but they don’t swoop in to fix everything; instead they offer gentle guidance and encouragement. By the end, the protagonist hasn’t become perfect, but they’ve earned a quiet confidence and a few triumphant grins.
Beyond the main story, many editions add interactive bits—questions to ask the reader, flaps to lift, or simple how-to pages that reinforce learning. It’s precisely the kind of book I reach for when I want a short, wholesome reminder that practice and patience matter, and that the joy is in the trying as much as the doing.