Honestly, the plot summary sounds grander than the reading experience. The core is simple: a man fights to prevent cosmic oblivion. But the execution is a slow, dense crawl through philosophical debates and dream-logic landscapes. If you're expecting fast-paced action, look elsewhere.
The middle section, where Aris is trapped in the 'Memory Lattice,' nearly lost me. It's a hundred pages of him reliving fragmented, non-chronological scenes from his ancestors' lives. I know it's supposed to be deep, but it felt self-indulgent. The plot only picks up steam again in the last quarter when the Unraveler's cult actually becomes a tangible threat. The ideas are interesting, but the pacing makes it a slog.
I'm trying to remember the details, because it's been a few years and 'Oblivion Souls' is one of those books where the plot is... a lot. The main thing follows this character, Aris, who gets drawn into a metaphysical conflict after inheriting a weird amulet from his estranged grandfather. It's not just a physical journey; he's essentially navigating layers of reality called the 'Echo Realms' to stop a being called the Unraveler from dissolving the boundary between memory and existence.
What stuck with me wasn't the big epic stakes, honestly, but the side plot with the librarian character, Silas. He's trying to preserve forgotten histories in these realms, and his chapters almost felt like a separate, quieter novella about loss. The main plot can get convoluted with its own terminology, but Silas's sections grounded the whole thing for me.
Main plot? It's about memories becoming real places you can walk through, and a guy who has to fix a crack in that system before everything gets erased. The cool part is how the magic works—forgetting something literally makes it crumble away in these pocket dimensions. The villain wants to force everyone to forget everything, a clean slate. It's a neat metaphor for grief, I guess.
2026-07-18 22:11:46
6
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Reborn as the villain's obsession [MM romance]
Bluebutterflywrites
10
5.5K
Adrian died with fury in his heart, hating the tragic ending of his favorite novel.
The villain deserved better.
But the story was never written for happy endings.
Betrayed by everyone he trusted, feared by the entire world, and ultimately destroyed by the plot itself—Cassian Nyx, the infamous Demon Lord, was never meant to be saved.
Until Adrian woke up inside the story.
He didn't reincarnate as a harmless bystander. He woke up as Prince Elian Ashford—the tyrannical prince destined to destroy Cassian.
Worse, a cold, ruthless World System instantly locks onto his soul, forcing him to keep the original tragedy on its "correct" path.
[MISSION: MAINTAIN STORY STABILITY]
Failure Penalty: Immediate Death.
Trapped between a lethal penalty and his own morals, Adrian chooses a dangerous path: pretend to follow the plot while secretly rewriting the villain's destiny.
But there’s only one problem.
The more Adrian tries to save the villain, the more the dangerous, obsessive Demon Lord begins to love him.
Cassian Nyx is a monster feared by the entire kingdom. He trusts no one. Until Adrian. For the first time in centuries, the scarred Demon Lord begins to hope for a future where someone finally stays.
Now, the original hero has arrived, and the System is forcing the final execution. Every choice Adrian makes pushes the world further into chaotic plot deviation.
Adrian must make his final choice. Will he obey the System to save his own life? Or will he destroy the entire story itself just to save his villain?
Genre: BL Fantasy Romance / Transmigration
Tropes: Obsessive Demon Lord ML × Reincarnated Prince MC, Saving the Obsessive Demon Lord / Destroying the Plot for You, System Missions, Enemies to Lovers, Slow Burn, Angst with Comfort, Soul Bond.
The Obsidian Covenant #1: The Rejected Mate's Ruin
Evve
0
4.6K
In a world where the moon shattered and the strong devoured the weak, Neoma Solstice is nothing. A scentless Null. A ghost. A mistake.
Until the day she saves a dying Lycan warrior with a touch, and her secret is revealed: she's Void-Born, the rarest mutation in existence. The same power that makes her invisible makes her invaluable—a living weapon that can cure the incurable Feral Rot plaguing the Lycan Ascendancy.
Captured and collared, Neoma is forced to serve as "Tether" to Unit Vanguard: four elite soldiers on the brink of madness. Barzil, the ruthless Commander who sees her as a mission. Wolfy, the cold Tactician who sees her as a puzzle. Viggo, the feral Berserker who sees her as salvation. Guller, the fallen Priest who sees her as redemption.
They own her contract. They control her life. They swear she's just a tool.
But tools don't make their masters kneel.
As Neoma's power grows, so does the threat she poses to the regime that enslaved her. When the prophesied Blood Moon rises, she'll have to choose: remain the Ascendancy's battery, or become the Void that devours them whole.
Some bonds are forged in blood. Some in magic. Theirs was forged in desperation—and it might be the only thing strong enough to save a dying world.
The Obsidian Covenant is a dark dystopian reverse harem romance featuring a morally gray FMC, four obsessive MLs, found family dynamics, enemies-to-lovers, rejected mate redemption, and a slow-burn that explodes into high heat. Perfect for fans of The Cruel Prince meets Den of Vipers in a post-apocalyptic wasteland.
No choosing. No apologies. No mercy.
Join Xandra and Liam on an exciting journey as they embark on a challenging investigation into the mysterious disappearance of seven young girls in North Carolina. As they delve deeper into the case, they uncover a complex network of lies and corruption within the local community. With each new discovery, their understanding of the situation becomes clearer, and they begin to realize that their destinies are intertwined in ways they could never have anticipated. Witness the captivating story of self-discovery and passion that unfolds throughout the Hidden Souls Trilogy.
Part One: Resurrection of Sin
Part Two: Descendants of Arcos
Part Three: Fury of Five
In the shattered remains of Lupis Imperium, Prince Kael Stormfang and Selene Dawnveil, an Omega bound by a forbidden Soul-Oath, must navigate betrayal, war, and a crumbling empire. After an explosive uprising orchestrated by his trusted mentor, Cyrus Viper Thornwell, Kael is forced to confront not just the forces threatening his throne, but the lies that have been woven into the very fabric of his past.
Bound together by a powerful and dangerous connection, Kael and Selene are the empire’s last hope. Yet, their bond is not just a source of strength, but of torment, as the secrets of their past threaten to tear them apart. Betrayed by those they once trusted, the two must work together to uncover the conspiracy that has shattered their world and led them to the brink of collapse.
As war rages and forces of darkness grow ever more powerful, Kael and Selene must confront the truth about their loyalty, their love, and their shared fate. Together, they will rebuild the empire—but can they survive the cost of doing so?
Soulbound: Chosen by Darkness
In a city that devours the vulnerable, Tharien has learned one rule: distance is the only way to protect what he loves. Dangerous by nature and hunted by forces that fear the power of connection, he walks away from the one person who anchors him—Nori—believing his absence will keep her safe.
But their bond is not something that can be outrun.
A rare and forbidden soulbond ties them together, threading their hearts, their pain, and their survival into one. When Tharien disappears, the bond fractures, leaving Nori hollowed by longing and hunted by shadows that feed on separation. The farther he goes, the darker the world becomes—because something ancient has awakened in the space between them.
As secret watchers circle and those who sever bonds hunt in the name of “mercy,” Tharien is forced to confront the lie he’s lived by. His distance is not protection. It is a wound. And the darkness that stalks their world grows stronger with every step he takes away from her.
To save Nori, Tharien must return to the one place he swore he’d never stand again—at her side.
Because in a world that calls separation mercy, choosing each other is rebellion.
And loving her may be the only thing that keeps the darkness from devouring them both.
Avery was your every day normal girl. Until one day everything stopped. She wasn't paying attention when she stepped off the curb, thinking the coast was clear. When she woke up, she wasn't in the mortal plane, "The Void" her mentor told her. She was now a reaper, helper of souls who are to cross from mortal realm to the spiritual word. But what happens when Avery's humanity interferes with her new role and she loses a soul? Will the balance between life and death shatter? Will she be able to fix her mistakes? And will she be able to remember who she was?
I stumbled upon 'Soul Snatcher' during a rainy afternoon at a used bookstore, and its premise hooked me instantly. The story follows a reclusive necromancer named Valen, who discovers he’s the last of a bloodline capable of 'soul stitching'—a forbidden magic that can resurrect the dead by trapping souls in artificial bodies. But when a shadowy cult starts abducting children to harvest their souls for immortality, Valen is forced into a brutal moral dilemma: use his power to stop them or uphold his family’s oath never to interfere with the natural cycle of life and death. The novel’s strength lies in its gray morality—Valen isn’t a hero, just a guy with a terrible gift trying to outrun his past. The climax where he confronts the cult’s leader, only to realize she’s his estranged sister, still gives me chills.
What I love most is how the author blends gothic horror with cyberpunk elements—souls are traded like cryptocurrency in back-alley markets, and there’s this eerie scene where Valen walks through a neon-lit slum full of hollow-eyed 'stitched' people. It’s not just about good vs. evil; it asks whether saving lives justifies becoming a monster yourself. The ending leaves Valen permanently scarred, his magic burnt out, but with a flicker of hope as he adopts one of the rescued kids. Left me thinking about it for weeks.
The first thing that struck me about 'Old Soul' was how it blends quiet melancholy with bursts of unexpected adventure. It follows Nora, a 30-something antique shop owner who starts experiencing vivid dreams—except they aren’t dreams at all, but memories from past lives. The way the author weaves historical vignettes into her modern-day struggles is genius. One chapter she’s bartering in 1920s Paris, the next she’s arguing with her landlord about rent. What really got me hooked was the mystery thread—why are these memories resurfacing now? The answer involves a dusty pocket watch from her shop and a soulmate who keeps dying in every lifetime. Heartbreaking, but in that satisfying way where you need tissues but can’t stop turning pages.
What I love most is how Nora’s present-day relationships deepen as she unpacks these past traumas. Her gruff grandmother turns out to have been her sister in the Civil War era; her aloof cat was apparently a very loyal Tibetan monk once. The ending left me staring at the ceiling for hours—no spoilers, but let’s just say the watch wasn’t just a timepiece. Makes you wonder what mundane object in your house might be hiding cosmic secrets.
The 'Blacksouls' novel is this dark, twisted fantasy that hooked me from the first chapter. It follows a cursed knight named Grell who’s bound to a mysterious entity called the 'Black Rabbit.' The world-building is insane—a gothic nightmare where fairytales bleed into reality, but everything’s warped. Grell’s journey is less about heroism and more about survival as he navigates a kingdom rotting from within, filled with grotesque creatures and morally gray characters. The line between ally and enemy blurs constantly, and the lore dives deep into themes of existential dread and cyclical tragedy.
What really got me was how the story plays with perception. The Black Rabbit isn’t just a guide; it’s a manipulator, and Grell’s memories are unreliable. There’s a scene where he confronts a version of himself from a past life, and it messed with my head for days. The novel doesn’t spoon-feed answers, either—you piece together the truth through environmental clues and cryptic dialogue. It’s like if 'Bloodborne' and 'Alice in Madness' had a literary lovechild. I still flip back to certain passages just to unravel new layers.
Alright, so the big twist in 'Oblivion Souls'? The whole premise is that the ancient, supposedly dead god Oblivion is actually the combined soul-energy of every person who's ever been sent to the sacrificial pits by the Theocracy. They're not feeding a dark god to keep it asleep; they're literally building it from the ground up with their own condemned. The protagonist, Kael, spends half the book trying to atone for his sister being chosen as a sacrifice, only to realize his quest to 'destroy' Oblivion is what's going to trigger its final awakening because his own latent power is the last piece of the puzzle.
What really got me was how it reframes the early chapters. All that guilt, the lectures from the priests about maintaining the balance? It was a state-run lie to keep the engine of their god-construction running. The twist isn't just a reveal about the villain; it makes Kael's entire emotional journey a manipulated farce, and the last thirty pages are just him wrestling with whether to let the thing be born or try to unmake himself, which would kill everyone connected to the soul-web. Brutal stuff.
It reminds me of a more nihilistic version of the soul-forging mechanics in something like 'The Licanius Trilogy,' but way less hopeful about the outcome.