ThriftBooks’ digital section occasionally lists secondhand e-copies cheap. The novel’s a wild ride—think 'Gone Girl' meets 'The Talented Mr. Ripley.' I devoured it in two nights, then immediately loaned my copy to my sister. Pro tip: Follow the author on Twitter; she posts about sales.
As a broke college student, I get the urge to find free reads, but 'Who Is Maud Dixon?' is worth paying for. Scribd’s subscription includes it, and their free trial could buy you time. The book’s commentary on literary fraud feels meta when you’re scrolling dodgy uploads on sketchy forums—trust me, I’ve been there. The audiobook version’s also great for commutes; the narrator nails the protagonist’s sarcasm.
Man, I just finished 'Who Is Maud Dixon?' last month and was totally hooked! If you're looking to read it online, your best bets are Kindle or Kobo for legal digital copies—sometimes libraries even have e-book loans. I borrowed mine through Libby after waiting forever, but it was worth it. The twists in that book are insane! Avoid shady sites offering free PDFs; the author deserves support. Plus, you miss out on legit platforms’ features like highlighting.
For a thriller that plays with identity and authorship, this one’s a gem. The protagonist’s messy ambition and the Morocco setting stuck with me for weeks. If you dig Patricia Highsmith vibes but want something fresh, it’s perfect. Check BookBub for deals—I’ve seen it discounted a few times.
Funny enough, I stumbled on this title while browsing r/books—someone compared it to 'the silent patient,' which I loved. For online access, google play books has it, and sometimes physical libraries partner with Hoopla for digital loans. What blew my mind was how the story critiques publishing itself. The middle drags a bit, but the last act? Chef’s kiss. My book club argued for hours about that ending.
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Hilda Oakley, the charity case Mom and Dad take in, steals my family right out from under me.
She slips drugs into me, driving me into a bipolar disorder. She turns me into someone who snaps and screams at Mom and Dad without meaning to.
She paints me as someone rotten inside, as the bully at school, and as someone who'd shove her down the stairs at home.
And because of that, my whole family turns on me. Mom calls me a bad seed. Dad says I'm no daughter of his. Then, they adopt Hilda and throw me out in the dead of winter.
My bipolar flares. Naked, I sprint onto the rooftop and jump to my death.
When I'm reborn, I realize I can make the thoughts in other people's heads audible. So, at the dinner table, I let Hilda's thoughts spill right before Mom and Dad.
'I kept that witch Valerie drugged for three years. She finally broke! They still don't suspect that Alex isn't really her brother. He's Susan's son. Once we poison Valerie's parents, the Coopers' fortune will belong to us.'
Maddie is a very powerful witch and Raven is an equally strong magician and that is certainly not desirable in the eyes of a very arrogant opponent. All sorts of things are pulled out of the magic closet to ensure that their powers are undermined.
Can Maddie handle all this magic that suddenly comes her way? Quite a lot is required of her. She sometimes wishes she didn't have those magical powers.
Plus, Raven has some more magical secrets that he hasn't shared with her yet. Will there eventually be balance in the magic and in their lives?
Or do they part ways there?
To keep her safe from her mafia father’s enemies, Madelaine is hidden away in a secluded cabin in the woods with the one man she should never want—her father’s best friend. Forced proximity quickly turns into a dangerous game of boundaries neither of them can respect.
After all, Madelaine will be returning to London at the end of the summer… right?
So maybe they can just fuck the heat off and pretend it means nothing.
But this dangerous game soon turns into something far worse, a burning, toxic obsession that threatens to destroy everything.
Content/Trigger warning!!:
Extremely explicit and dark lustful content. My male lead is weird and unhinged hehe
They say that marriage is a happy ending to everyone's life. However, not all fairy tales end happily ever after. Charlotte Hayes, a top model in Los Angeles, married actor Jake Hayes for two years. He was as delightful as sweets in public, but he was abusive at home.
"Have an affair with me," she told Damien Yves Étienne, a billionaire, after discovering his hidden identity as a mafia boss. "Don't you want me to keep quiet about your secret? Have an affair with me in exchange for silence."
Sentimental tempers flare. A woman fleeing an abusive marriage and meeting the billionaire boss of her husband. Charlotte grows to love, and her husband discovers the valuable lesson that abusers do not win. With that, milady's affair begins.
Maddie is an ordinary girl who is almost eighteen years old. She does have a grandmother who is a high priesters in Wicca, but is that so unusual? At breakneck speed Maddie finds herself in the world of Magic, were she also has a difficult task . Can her budding love for Raven handle this? Can she survive in that strange Magical world that co-exists with ours ?
The knights of Saint Christopher arrived, and they brought nightmares to the little convent of the good sisters- an angel who was the opposite of his kind, a forbidden love affair, a predator of innocents, a monster for a father, and a death. Mathilda, who had nothing but hatred for this world, would slay the evils to protect her people, or was she the evil they needed saving from?
Oh, the eternal hunt for free reads! 'Mr Dixon' is one of those titles that pops up now and then in discussions, but tracking it down legally can be tricky. I’ve scoured a few platforms like Project Gutenberg and Open Library for older public domain works, but modern stuff like this usually isn’t available unless the author/publisher offers it. Some indie writers drop free chapters on their blogs or Wattpad, though.
If you’re into similar vibes, maybe try 'The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy'—it’s often free on archive sites. Or dive into webnovels like 'Worm' for that serialized feel. Piracy’s a no-go, but libraries sometimes have digital loans! Honestly, half the fun is the hunt itself—I’ve discovered so many hidden gems just by digging.
I completely understand the urge to find 'Maud Martha' for free—it’s such a poignant, underrated gem by Gwendolyn Brooks. I stumbled upon it a while back while digging into lesser-known literary classics. Your best bet is checking platforms like Project Gutenberg or Open Library, which sometimes host older works legally. Archive.org is another treasure trove; they’ve got scans of original editions you can borrow digitally. Just type the title into their search bar and see if it pops up.
If those don’t pan out, I’d recommend hitting up your local library’s online portal. Many libraries partner with services like Hoopla or OverDrive, where you can borrow ebooks without leaving your couch. It’s not exactly 'free,' but if you already have a library card, it feels like it! Sometimes universities also share access to their digital collections—worth a peek if you have alumni privileges or know someone who does. The hunt can be part of the fun, honestly.