The 'Atomic Empire' novel is this wild, sprawling sci-fi epic that hooked me from the first chapter. It's set in a distant future where humanity has colonized the stars but is teetering on the brink of collapse due to a massive intergalactic war. The story follows a ragtag crew of rebels, scientists, and ex-soldiers who uncover a terrifying secret: the ruling empire has been secretly developing a planet-destroying superweapon powered by twisted quantum physics. The protagonist, a disgraced admiral named Veyra, has to navigate political betrayals, rogue AI, and her own PTSD to stop the weapon's deployment. What really stuck with me was how the author blended hard sci-fi concepts like time dilation and neutron star mechanics with deeply human themes—loss, redemption, and the cost of survival.
One standout element was the 'Fracture Drive' technology, which allows ships to teleport but at a horrific psychological toll on their crews. The novel doesn’t shy away from showing the gruesome side effects, like characters’ memories unraveling or their bodies flickering in and out of existence. There’s a particularly haunting scene where Veyra finds an entire battalion of soldiers frozen mid-scream, their atoms scrambled during a failed jump. The climax had me on edge for days—a desperate assault on a star fortress, with allies turning traitor and the superweapon counting down. It’s the kind of book that leaves your brain buzzing with 'what if' scenarios long after you finish.
Imagine 'Dune' meets 'The Expanse,' but with way more existential dread—that’s 'Atomic Empire' for me. At its core, it’s a story about power: who gets to wield universe-altering technology and how it corrupts absolutely. The empire’s ruler, Chancellor Kael, starts as a charismatic reformer but slowly morphs into a megalomaniac obsessed with purging 'weakness' from humanity. The plot twists are brutal (one character’s heroic sacrifice gets undone by a time loop, which wrecked me), and the world-building is insane—like the 'Ash Cities,' where people live in hollowed-out asteroid prisons. What I loved most was how the author made quantum physics feel personal; the weapon doesn’t just destroy planets, it erases them from history, making survivors question if their memories are even real.
2025-12-07 16:55:35
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The Wife He Forgot: Ashes to Empire
Amelia Hart
7.8
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Six years ago, Isla Winters was nobody, a shy, invisible wife unloved by the billionaire who married her out of obligation. Jaxon Romano destroyed her with his cruelty, threw her away while she carried his twins, and never looked back.
Now, Dr. Isla Vale is everyone, a tech CEO and a genius. When she walks into Jaxon's failing company as his last hope for salvation, he doesn't recognize the broken girl he once called wife.
But Isla recognizes him. And she's not here to save him.
She's here to destroy him.
What Jaxon doesn't know: the brilliant woman dismantling his empire is the ghost of his biggest mistake. What Isla doesn't know: revenge and love are two sides of the same burning coin. And some fires consume everything in their path, including the people who lit the match.
In a battle of wills where the stakes are a billion-dollar empire, two hidden children, and a second chance neither of them deserves, only one question matters:
Can you forgive the unforgivable? Or does some betrayal cut too deep to heal?
I licked her earlobe and whispered, "You're a good girl, Amelia. Let me corrupt you."
She began moaning and said, "Please, please," over and over under her breath.
I wanted her so badly, but I wanted to enjoy this moment even more. "I'm going to make you come, baby. I'm going to make you come so hard that you lose control of your body. When I'm done with you, you'll be a villain, too," I whispered in her ear.
Adrian Chase was the King of DC and the most feared lawyer in the country. Laws bent for him, as simple as that.
Amelia Hartley's quest for justice made her the target of one of the largest and most corrupt pharmaceutical companies.
Their paths collide, and a dangerous attraction draws them into a web of desire and deception. They both seek justice, but Adrian is willing to break hell for it. Will Amelia burn it with him, or will she become one more pawn in Adrian's quest for revenge?
Empire of Deception is created by Amelie Bergen,
an eGlobal Creative Publishing signed author.
Nia Whitaker built her reputation solving disasters for the powerful.
As one of the most sought-after corporate crisis strategists in the country, she’s hired to clean up scandals that could destroy billion-dollar empires. But when a catastrophic data leak threatens SatoTech’s largest acquisition, Nia is pulled into a crisis unlike anything she’s handled before.
Because the company’s heir isn’t just another client.
Kenji Sato is brilliant, ruthless, and always three moves ahead. A tech empire rests on his shoulders, and he protects it with calculated precision. The deeper Nia digs into the breach threatening his company, the more she begins to suspect the impossible.
The crisis may have been engineered.
By Kenji himself.
But corporate warfare is only the beginning.
Rival companies move in the shadows. Government investigators begin asking dangerous questions. And someone inside Kenji’s world is willing to burn everything—including Nia—to seize control of the empire.
Caught between enemies, betrayal, and a man whose obsession with her grows more dangerous by the day, Nia realizes she’s no longer just managing a crisis.
She’s inside the war.
And the man she’s supposed to expose may be the only one powerful enough to protect her.
In a game where power is everything, and loyalty can cost you your life, one truth becomes impossible to ignore:
Kenji Sato doesn’t just want Nia Whitaker to fix his empire.
He wants her.
And in his world, the things he wants… he claims.
Come to imagine what would happen to four powerful billionaire brothers that have everything money could buy, but they couldn't find true happiness?
The Cross brothers are the owners of one of the biggest business empires in New York City. Wealth, power, luxury, and success follow them wherever they go.
Sebastian, Dominic, Adrian, and Caleb seem to have perfect lives in public. But behind the expensive suits and billion-dollar deals, each brother is battling with his own heartbreaks and secrets.
Everything begins to change when four different women enter their lives.
Seraphina Hart, A fearless journalist,
Vivian Hartwell, a devoted single mother,
Sophia Hayes, a kind-hearted dreamer,
and Aurora Carter, a strong independent woman.
They changed everything those brothers believe about love.
Their relationships grow stronger as they start having deep feelings for their partners.
The Cross brothers discover that protecting their hearts is much harder than building an empire. But when a dangerous enemy threatens to destroy everything the Cross family has worked for, they must choose between their business empire and the women they love.
Will the Cross brothers save their empire without losing the women who changed their lives forever, or will their greatest success become their greatest downfall?
Read now to find out who will win the battle between love and power.
He built empires by never loving anyone.
She survived him by becoming something unstoppable.
Adrian Blackwell did not believe in mercy—only leverage. As the youngest billionaire to dominate three continents, he ruled boardrooms with ice in his veins and blood on his hands. Falling in love with his wife was his only mistake. And when betrayal came, he chose the lie that preserved his empire over the woman who gave him everything.
When Adrian cast Elara out of his life, he never knew the truth.
She was pregnant.
And she refused to beg.
Disappearing with nothing but her name and a secret that could shatter him, Elara rebuilt herself from ruin. Years later, she returns not as the discarded wife—but as a powerbroker in her own right. Wealth sharpened by vengeance. Grace forged in fire. A woman who learned that survival is the most dangerous form of ambition.
Now their worlds collide again—at the summit of global power.
Adrian wants her back.
Elara wants justice.
But the past has claws, the truth has a price, and the child between them is no longer a secret that can stay buried. As enemies circle and empires tremble, love becomes a battlefield where forgiveness may cost everything and revenge may cost even more.
Because in a world ruled by billionaires,
love is the most expensive risk of all.
Ava Lancaster gave up her identity as a billionaire heiress to marry for love, choosing anonymity over inheritance and devotion over power. But her husband, Liam Hayes, repays her sacrifice with betrayal—repeated affairs, emotional neglect, and the quiet erosion of her worth. When Ava finally walks away, she does so with nothing but her name, refusing alimony and erasing herself from the life she helped build.
What Liam never knows is that Ava secretly returns to the empire she once abandoned, reclaiming her family legacy and rising as the unseen CEO of a global conglomerate. Years later, when Liam’s failing company seeks a partnership to survive, fate brings them face-to-face again—this time with Ava holding all the power and Liam unaware that the woman he discarded now controls his future.
As business turns into a battlefield, Ava orchestrates her revenge not with cruelty, but with dominance, strategy, and restraint. Torn between the ghosts of her past and the possibility of new love with a steadfast rival CEO, Ava must confront the cost of power, the weight of forgiveness, and the question of whether love can exist without surrender.
Empire of Her Own is a long-burn, emotionally rich modern romance about betrayal, reinvention, and a woman choosing herself—fully, unapologetically, and on her own terms.
The novel 'Atomic Family' is this gripping, layered story about a family living in the shadow of the Cold War, where nuclear paranoia seeps into their everyday lives. The dad works at a secretive government facility, and the mom is trying to hold everything together while grappling with her own fears. Their teenage daughter starts questioning the world around her, especially after a mysterious neighbor moves in. The tension builds so well—you get this creeping sense of dread, like the family’s stability could collapse any second.
What really hooked me was how personal it felt despite the huge historical backdrop. The author doesn’t just dump politics on you; it’s all filtered through these intimate moments—arguments at the dinner table, whispered suspicions, and the daughter sneaking out to meet activists. The ending left me staring at the ceiling for a good hour, thinking about how fear shapes families. Definitely one of those books that sticks to your ribs.
Call it a spy novel wearing a romance's smile: that's the first thing I tell people when I try to wrap up 'Atomic Love' for friends. The plot centers on a woman whose life was inseparably linked to nuclear secrets and a lover who may or may not be a traitor. She has moved on from the immediate danger but not from the emotional fallout; years later, the arrival of an old flame (or an old accusation) drags her back into questions about loyalty, memory, and what it costs to protect a nation.
What I love about this book is how it blends atmospheric Cold War tension with intimate, messy human choices. You get the slow-burning suspense of espionage—handwritten notes, coded warnings, the smell of laboratories—and the quieter, crueler stakes of betrayal and longing. The narrator's voice is often wry and tender, which balances the darker moments when secrets start to crack open.
Beyond plot, 'Atomic Love' is really about the shadow that science and power cast over private life. It asks whether love can survive when the things you love—ideas, countries, people—require concealment. I finished it thinking about sacrifice and forgiveness, and how hard it is to know which is braver. It lingered with me for days, in the best way.
The world of 'Atomic Empire' is packed with fascinating characters, but the core trio really steals the show. First, there's Kairos, the rebellious tech genius with a mechanical arm he built himself—his dry humor and knack for hacking make him impossible not to root for. Then there's Lyria, a former elite soldier turned defector; her combat skills are legendary, but it’s her quiet struggle with morality that gives her depth. Rounding out the group is Zane, the charismatic but morally gray smuggler who always has a trick up his sleeve. Their dynamic is electric, bouncing between snarky banter and genuine loyalty.
Beyond them, the antagonist, Chancellor Vexis, is terrifyingly pragmatic, her cold logic making her a villain you almost sympathize with—until she orders another execution. The supporting cast, like the cheerful engineer Milo or the enigmatic AI unit 'Echo,' add layers to the story. What I love is how none of them feel like tropes; their flaws and quirks make them stick in your mind long after you’ve put the comic down.