This book stuck with me from the moment I put it down — and the publication history is a little bit of a layered thing. 'Ninety-Nine Lies, One Perfect Revenge' was first released online in 2019, where it ran as a serialized story on a popular web platform. That initial 2019 release is what most fans refer to when they say the book "came out," because that’s when readers got their first taste of the plot and characters chapter by chapter.
A couple of years later, after it built up a following, an official print/compiled edition was issued for a wider audience. The physical (and often revised) edition appeared around 2021, which is when bookstores and formal catalogs started listing it as a standalone novel. Between the web serialization and the print release you can sometimes find small editorial changes, a new cover, and occasionally bonus chapters or a short epilogue added to the collected volume.
If you’re tracking down a specific edition, check whether you want the serialized chapters from 2019 or the polished 2021 print release — they both feel slightly different. Personally, I liked seeing how scenes tightened up in the book edition; it’s fun to compare the two and see what the author refined.
Quick summary from my perspective: 'Ninety-Nine Lies, One Perfect Revenge' first appeared as a serialized online story in 2019, and it was later compiled and released as an official print/ebook edition around 2021. The two moments are both meaningful — 2019 marks when readers first discovered the narrative and started talking about it chapter by chapter, while the later print release gives you the finished, polished version that most libraries and bookstores list. Between those years you’ll also find various translations and small editorial tweaks, so if you care about which exact text you’re reading, double-check the edition details. For me, seeing the progression from raw serialization to a tidy book edition is half the fun of following titles like this; it’s like watching a rough gem get faceted into something that catches the light differently.
Here’s the timeline I tracked down and the way I’d explain it to a friend: 'Ninety-Nine Lies, One Perfect Revenge' began life online in 2019 as a serialized release, which is how most readers first encountered it. The serialized run is where the story gathered momentum and fan discussion, and for many readers that original upload date is the important marker.
Later on, after gaining traction, the story was compiled and officially published in print (and as formal ebook editions) around 2021. That print release usually carries a publisher imprint, an ISBN, and sometimes extra editorial polishing. There are also translated editions and fan translations that cropped up in the window between 2019 and 2021, so depending on language and region you might see slightly different publication dates listed.
So, if someone asks when it was "published," clarify whether they mean the original online serialization (2019) or the official compiled/print release (circa 2021). For collectors, the 2021 edition is the one to hunt for — it typically looks nicer on a shelf and includes the finalized text. I still like keeping a screenshot of a favorite serialized chapter; it’s nostalgic.
2025-10-22 11:16:43
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It was not an ordinary day for Tara Davis. It was her first time to go to the heart of the city alone after being asked by her cousin to do the interview for her, a favor she could not say no. She did the interview without knowing the questions inside the brown envelope. When she reached the top floor of the Williamson Hotel, she found him busy looking for some files on his table and asked if it was okay to conduct the interview with him. Blake Williamson, amused that there was one person, who did not recognize him, decided to accept the interview and pretended to be Sam, his personal secretary.
The interview became more interesting for him when they found out that it contained dirty questions related to . He became more interested in her because, despite the questions, she did the interview professionally. She was the first woman he met who seemed not interested in him, unlike other women who were always ready to undress in front of him. For him, Tara is an extraordinary woman who enchanted him. She was like a transformed live-action character from fairy tale stories who still believes in true love and simple life can still make you happy.
Blake believed he was the perfect man for her until he found out that she was looking for an honest man with great conviction in life, and definitely not a millionaire, the exact opposite of him. He lied the first time they met, and the truth was that he was not just rich, but a renowned youngest billionaire in the country.
It started with one scandalous kiss caught on camera.
She expected damage control not to be declared the girlfriend of the billionaire who ruined her life.
He’s cold, calculating, and her ex’s powerful cousin.
They agree to fake it for four months for money, for revenge, for survival.
She became the fake girlfriend of the billionaire who ruined her life
He’s ruthless. She’s vengeful. Four months. One deal. No feelings.
But soon, the lies cut deep… and neither of them can tell if the obsession is still pretend.
Amira Santis, a sharp-tongued investigative journalist, ruins billionaire Montez De Vitalio’s company with one exposé. In return, he blacklists her. Her career is over. But after an odd encounter when photos of Montez sharing a kiss with her in a hotel gets out, he has no option but to announce her as his lover to the public.
Now with them both in a compromising situation, Amira takes his offer to pretend to be his girlfriend in the eyes of the public for a period of four months in exchange that he pays her and gets back at her cheating ex, who also happened to be his cousin but Amira is not the same girl he once destroyed. She has secrets of her own. And Montez? He didn’t plan on falling for the one woman who swore to ruin him.
Their lies ignite an obsession neither can control, and soon, love and war become indistinguishable.
A perfect crime should stay hidden.
But what if the evidence comes back with a smile brighter than the sun and an eyes colder Frost.
He planed her destruction as a bet. She was graped, her nudes posted all around. Her father company went under and her mother committed suicide while laying curses on her. She was dragged down until she jumped and died.
But now, the people who ruined her are all very happy, how can she rest in peace?
People believe in rebirth or reincarnation but she doesn't. She clawed her way to the top.
How will the perpetrator feel when they realise that they fallen too deep into her trap to stand again?
She has nothing to lose but they have everything to lose. Money killed her and family, ruined her to the last.
Now manipulation,greed and a perfectly measured innocence can ruin her enemies for good.
She doesn't care of she has to lose her life for it.
It was the day of my wedding. Wendy Halton huddled up to me and whispered, "I slept with Joe." She pointed at the big screen, a smile curling her lips.
"Summer dumped you so she could have Joe. I swore I'd make her drink from the well of betrayal. So, I slept with the man she loves."
My eyes went wide with disbelief. It was then that I realized the screen wasn't showing our wedding photos. Instead, they were showing something far raunchier, filthier. It was Wendy, and she was going at it with Joe Noelson.
Three years ago, I caught my then-fiancée, Summer Shaw, cheating with Joe, who happened to be the underprivileged student that I sponsored. That single moment snuffed out all hope I had for the world, but Wendy barged in like a beam of angelic light.
Now, she had gouged open my chest with the same weapon Wendy destroyed me with. Tears fell before I could stop them.
A frown creased Wendy's forehead. "Stop crying. I got revenge for you. You should be happy."
Even after a full decade of marriage, my husband Rudolf and I were as deeply in love as the day we wed—an enviable couple in the eyes of all.
On the day of our anniversary, I saw him lifting a little boy into his arms right outside the entrance of our neighborhood.
"Daddy! Can you take me to the amusement park this time?"
The boy's words were enough to stop me dead in my tracks. I instinctively hid around a corner.
"Of course! I'll even take you on a trip." Rudolf smiled warmly and kissed the boy on the forehead.
In that instant, something seemed to have been set off in my head, as if years of trust had been shattered at that one moment.
Daddy?
Upon closer examination, I realized that the boy's features were remarkably similar to Rudolf's. No one could deny they were blood-related.
"Your dad's busy with work, sweetheart. Don't cling to him too much," said a beautiful woman standing next to the boy.
The cruel moment before me made it clear. The man who swore he would love me forever had been cheating all along.
Temperance coming from a rich to poor family after her mom died. She is abused in every way possible.
It’s hard for her to trust people but when Alec comes into her life she can’t help her undying attraction towards him.
Alec is a heart throb that has every girl eyeing him. His dangerous aura makes it seem like his heart is untouchable. As soon as he meets Temperance he realizes that he can’t seem to want to live without her.
His only goal now? To save her. Her only goal? To get out in any way possible, even if it means death.
Wow — 'Ninety-Nine Lies, One Perfect Revenge' hits like a slow-burn thriller that keeps tightening until your chest aches. I dove into it hungry for twists and got a feast: the core follows a protagonist—let's call her Mara—whose life is quietly held together by tiny deceptions. As the title suggests, the story catalogs those deceptions: family myths, professional betrayals, a romantic history built on half-truths. Each lie is its own domino, and once Mara starts nudging one over, the rest tumble in ways that expose how deeply her identity was constructed by other people's narratives.
The structure is part of the fun. It flips between present-day scheming and flashbacks that slowly reveal who told which lie and why. There's a meticulous, almost clinical planning of revenge that reads equal parts detective procedural and character study. You get surveillance scenes, whispered confrontations, a few morally gray allies, and a sequence late in the book that feels satisfyingly theatrical — think rooftop confessions and evidence laid bare. But what stuck with me most wasn't just the plot mechanics; it was the ethical weight. The protagonist wrestles with whether “one perfect revenge” is worth becoming the kind of person she loathes.
Stylistically the prose leans sharp and economical, with recurring motifs—mirrors, cracked glass, and old photographs—that underscore themes of truth and memory. If you like stories that make you revise your assumptions page by page and leave you wondering who deserved what, this will stick with you. I closed it feeling both vindicated and oddly melancholic, which is exactly the bittersweet kick I hoped for.
That title hooks you instantly, doesn’t it? I dug through my mental bookshelf and a few online haunts, and I can’t confidently name a widely published author tied to 'Ninety-Nine Lies, One Perfect Revenge' from memory. It feels like a title that could belong to an indie thriller, a translated novel with a different original name, or even a longform fanfiction that migrated to self-publishing platforms. Those three possibilities are all common culprits when a gripping title feels familiar but resists a clear author credit.
If you want to chase it down, I’d start with a couple of practical moves: search for the exact phrase in Google with quotes, check Goodreads and LibraryThing for alternate editions, and look up ISBNs on WorldCat or Google Books. Sellers like Amazon and Bookshop often list small-press or self-pub works that mainstream bibliographies miss. Also try searching variants like '99 Lies, 1 Perfect Revenge' or translations—titles often morph during localization.
Personally, I love the detective hunt of tracking down elusive books. It’s satisfying when a mystery title finally yields an author name and publication details, and it often leads to discovering a whole new favorite writer. Hope you find the original creator fast; this one definitely sounds like my next midnight read.