5 Jawaban2025-09-03 04:21:06
Okay, if you’re looking through Goodreads for people who recommend books like 'Beautiful Disaster', I dive into those threads all the time and here’s what I notice most readers point to.
A ton of fans on Goodreads who loved 'Beautiful Disaster' tend to suggest 'Thoughtless' by S.C. Stephens, 'Easy' by Tammara Webber, 'Slammed' and 'Ugly Love' by Colleen Hoover, and 'Fallen Too Far' by Abbi Glines. They usually tag them under 'new adult', 'bad boy romance', or 'angsty romance' and talk about the same pull-push chemistry, messy characters, and college/young-adult settings. You'll also see recommendations for 'Archer's Voice' by Mia Sheridan and 'Real' by Katy Evans if you like broody male leads.
What I personally do on Goodreads is follow people whose reviews match my taste—check their 'favorite' shelves, note who gives detailed spoiler-free impressions, and then follow them. Also don't miss 'Walking Disaster', which flips perspectives on the same story; it's a common rec in those comment threads and often helps decide whether you want more Travis or a different angle on the plot.
5 Jawaban2025-08-05 19:29:41
gritty, and emotionally charged vibe like 'Beautiful Disaster' for years. If you're looking for something with the same raw passion and chaotic love, 'Bully' by Penelope Douglas is a must-read. It has that enemies-to-lovers dynamic with a lot of emotional turbulence and growth. Another great pick is 'Paper Princess' by Erin Watt, which combines drama, wealth, and a fiery romance that keeps you hooked.
For those who enjoy the bad-boy-meets-good-girl trope, 'Corrupt' by Penelope Douglas delivers with its dark, edgy romance and complex characters. 'Credence' by Penelope Douglas also fits the bill with its unconventional love story and intense emotional depth. If you want something with a bit more suspense, 'The Risk' by Elle Kennedy blends romance and hockey rivalry perfectly. These books all capture that addictive, rollercoaster feeling 'Beautiful Disaster' is known for.
5 Jawaban2025-09-03 08:24:35
If the chaotic, all-consuming pull of 'Beautiful Disaster' hooked you, I’ve got a little stack of books that scratch that same itch—hard. The first one I’d shove into your hands is 'Bully' by Penelope Douglas: it’s raw, tense, and leans into that dangerous, angsty enemies-to-lovers vibe where the line between hate and attraction is smudged until it’s barely there. Be warned—it can be messy and emotionally intense, so brace yourself.
Another great pick is 'Punk 57' also by Penelope Douglas. It’s not textbook college romance, but it carries that combustible chemistry and slow-burn animosity-turned-affection. For something with sharper banter and workplace/office friction, 'The Hating Game' by Sally Thorne is a lighter, witty ride that still delivers the delicious hate-to-love arc. If you want more of that bad-boy, small-town-meets-big-feelings energy, try 'Fallen Too Far' by Abbi Glines. I’d also recommend 'Easy' by Tammara Webber for a college setting with protectiveness and complications.
If you’re picky about consent and tone, read content warnings first—some of these lean darker than 'Beautiful Disaster'. Personally, I love pairing these with a moody playlist and a notepad to collect lines that make my heart ache.
5 Jawaban2025-09-03 07:16:01
Oh man, if you liked 'Beautiful Disaster' but want something that keeps the heat and the angst without glorifying manipulative behavior, I’ve got a little stack of favorites you can sink into.
First up, try 'The Hating Game' — it’s snappy, full of enemies-to-lovers banter, and both leads actually communicate and respect boundaries as things heat up. Then there’s 'The Kiss Quotient', which balances steamy chemistry with real consent and emotional growth; the protagonist’s needs are honored and the love interest learns to be a better partner. 'The Flatshare' is gentler: quirky, warm, and focused on kindness and emotional slow-burn intimacy instead of drama. For something with more emotional stakes but healthier handling, 'It Ends with Us' is raw and difficult but ultimately about agency and breaking cycles.
If you want a rom-com with modern feels, try 'Red, White & Royal Blue' or 'The Unhoneymooners' — both keep the tension fun and don’t revel in emotional harm. My rule of thumb: look for books where characters apologize, change, and respect consent — that’s the fastest way to avoid toxicity. Happy reading — I’ll always trade recs.
5 Jawaban2025-09-03 13:11:01
Oh man, if you liked 'Beautiful Disaster', you probably loved that mix of messy emotions, hard-to-read-yet-irresistible leads, and the kind of relationship that makes you yell at the book one minute and stay up all night the next. For me, a few that hit the same tone are 'Thoughtless' by S.C. Stephens (intense triangle, music-world vibes), 'Bully' by Penelope Douglas (raw, vindictive-to-romantic energy), and 'Easy' by Tammara Webber (college setting, emotional stakes). I also lean toward 'Hopeless' and 'It Ends with Us' by Colleen Hoover for the emotional gut-punches and moral complications; they're heavier but share that tear-it-apart-and-reevaluate feeling.
Beyond those, I’d toss in 'The Deal' by Elle Kennedy if you want a somewhat cleaner, still-fluffy-but-angsty college romance, and 'Archer’s Voice' by Mia Sheridan for the broody, redemption-tinged lead. If you want something darker and more boundary-pushing, 'Punk 57' and 'Wait for You' offer different spins on the flawed-hero trope. Fair warning: a lot of these books toy with toxic dynamics — part of the pull is the drama, so pick with your current mood in mind.