Quick and practical: I recommend reading 'Viciously Yours' in publication order, plain and simple. Start with the main book, then read any sequels or companion novellas the author released afterward — reading them later preserves surprises and builds emotional payoff. If prequels exist, I keep them for after the first full read-through so they serve as depth rather than spoilers. For rereads, I sometimes sandwich a novella between volumes two and three (if there is one) because it shifts the tone and makes the second half feel fresher. Also, check for author notes or extras in special editions — those are perfect little treats at the end. For me, this flow consistently ends in the most satisfying way.
I can’t help but get excited about mapping this out—there’s something so satisfying about a clean reading path. If you’re diving into 'Viciously Yours' for the first time, I usually recommend the publication-order approach because it preserves the pacing and reveals the author intended.
Start with the main novel, 'Viciously Yours' (the core volume). After that, read any officially released prequel novellas or short prologues the author published between volumes—these were often written as extras and can enrich your understanding without spoiling later twists. Next, move on to side-story collections or companion volumes focused on supporting characters; those expand the world and are best enjoyed once you already care about the main cast. Finish with the direct sequel(s) and then any epilogues, alternate-universe shorts, or anthology contributions. If there’s an omnibus edition, it often rearranges extras into a single place—use that if you prefer one-file reading.
Publication order keeps surprises intact and gives you the experience most fans had reading the series live. If you like, follow that with a re-read in chronological-internal-timeline order to catch foreshadowing and character beats you missed the first time. Personally, reading this way made small author notes and later short stories feel like rewarding Easter eggs, and I loved that slow reveal of character histories.
I love how 'Viciously Yours' hooks you from the first page, so here’s the reading order that kept me glued and made the twists land best for me.
Start with the main book itself — 'Viciously Yours' — read it straight through as published. That preserves the author's reveals, pacing, and character beats, which are the whole point. After that, tackle any official novellas or short stories the author released that branch off the central plot; I like reading these in publication order because they often expand on scenes or give aftercare to relationships without spoiling the original arc.
Finally, if there are prequel chapters or behind-the-scenes extras (author notes, deleted scenes, or short spin-offs), save those for last. They’re fun to revisit after you know the characters; otherwise, they can undercut suspense. For re-reads, I interleave a novella between the middle and the final act if it deepens a side character — it gives a fresh emotional beat. Overall, reading publication order first, then crumbs of cannon extras, has become my go-to, and it made the whole experience way more satisfying for me.
What I tell friends who are impatient for every backstory is to pick the flavor of reading you want: mystery-first or lore-first. For a mystery-first ride, go publication order—so you read 'Viciously Yours' (book one) and then whatever the author released next, be it a prequel novella or a sequel. This way, plot twists land hard and you get that punch of discovery.
If you crave context and emotional continuity above surprises, start with any prequel or origin novella that happens earlier in the timeline, then read the main novel and follow with companion shorts and sequels. Either route, I’d slot side-character collections after the main arc—they make a lot more sense and feel more satisfying once you know the protagonists. Also, don’t skip author’s notes and the epilogue chapters; they often clear up small mysteries or add tone that changes how you see a character. For translations, stick to official editions when possible; fan translations are great but sometimes reorder or omit extras.
I went publication-first and then re-reread chronologically, and both runs taught me different things—read whichever mood you’re in, and enjoy the ride.
I get excited just thinking about recommending a path through 'Viciously Yours' — here's my compact, no-fuss guide that I use when I'm coaching friends through the series. Read the main novel first ('Viciously Yours') without detours; the author crafted reveals and tension that work best in the published sequence. After the main book, move to any officially released short stories or sequels, in the order the author released them: these often answer questions or give epilogues that feel earned. If you find prequels or side character shorts, read them after you finish the primary arc so they act as delightful expansions rather than spoilers. For editions that include notes or author commentary, I usually skim those between readings because they add color but sometimes reveal the creative intent. Finally, if you’re into fan translations or serialized chapter releases, try to stick to the version closest to the original release to preserve the intended rhythm — I always finish with a reread of my favorite scenes because it’s just that good.
2025-10-31 22:48:28
31
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Make Me Yours (A Steamy Collection)
Amanda Myles
10
63.8K
“You’ve been thinking about me, haven’t you?” he whispered, a knowing smile on his lips.
They knew they shouldn’t want this.
They knew it was risky.
But the connection between them was undeniable.
Make Me Yours is a collection that explores deep desire, forbidden attraction, and the thrill of giving in to passion.
Each story takes you on an emotional journey filled with tension, romance, and irresistible chemistry.
Make Me Yours is a seductive and romantic forbidden fantasy that will keep you turning the pages.
Sit back, relax, and enjoy the ride.
This is the second book of the 'His' series. The first book is "His Plump Mate".
Aiden is the first born son of Austin and Rebel Willis. He is 32 years old and still hasn't found his mate. Meanwhile, his twin, sister and one of his younger brother's all found their mates. After ten years of searching, Aiden gave up and threw all his energy into improving the pack.
Reid wants to cheer his brother up and takes him to the coastline. When they get there, Aiden meets his fated mate, Thalia.
Thalia is a trained hitman for survival. Thalia's life is a mess. She is princess of the Moreno Crime Family and her father Diego, a no rank wolf is the head of the family in the human world. He is forcing his daughter to enter into a marriage alliance to a man she detests.
Aiden is furious and Thalia is trying to protect her sister from having the same fate as her. Thalia flees with her sister to her uncle's pack. Will Aiden be able to help Thalia and will Thalia be able to trust Aiden after she has suffered years of trauma?
"And the sweet little angel couldn't keep her eyes off the devil."Sophia Watson is a normal teenager, who has a good relationship with her parents. She just moved to a new town and on the first day of school she runs into Axel Jarvis, an unlikable character, with whom she gets off on the wrong foot straight from the beginning.Axel also doesn't like Sophie. He lives a simple life in which there are many girls, but no commitments. He likes it that way, especially because he has a secret he can't have anyone knowing about. Things work great, until suddenly they can't stay away from each other.brokenheartedgirl69: i literally got tingles in my bellyRecklessDemon: ily 4 starting this bookreilly_styles: OMG this is so amazing and I love it so much please please please write more
Vincent Reynolds is not gay.
He's not hiding from his true self and he's not confused. And no, he's not bi curious either. Instead, he believed he's asexual. Girls don't entice him but guess what? He'd never tried guys.
When he crossed paths with the notorious Dimitri Santini with a body built to kill, the latter automatically added him to his list.
Why?
He's an advocate of the law.
And what does Dimitri hate more than his father? The law and anyone supporting it.
Dimitri's only goal was to ruin him for life but what he didn't expect was that single taste tipping everything over to the edge.
_ _ _
“I want to see your reaction when you take my like the good boy that you are… Signore Mio. And you know what? I'm not stopping until you paint me with your .”
Power. Obsession. Pleasure. Pain.
Behind every Alpha lies a dangerous hunger—and these men don’t ask for permission. They take what they want.
Sinful Alphas is a scorching collection of interconnected dark romance stories featuring dangerously possessive Alphas, forbidden desires, obsessive love, and heroines who find themselves caught between temptation and destruction. From ruthless pack kings and morally gray billionaires to primal mates, secret arrangements, revenge seductions, and enemies who crave each other far too much, every story explores the intoxicating line between dominance and surrender.
These aren’t sweet love stories.
These are tales of obsession so consuming it burns. Passion so addictive it destroys. Desire so sinful it feels dangerous to crave.
Inside this collection, you’ll find:
* Possessive Alpha males
* Enemies-to-lovers tension
* Forced proximity
* Forbidden attraction
* Mates, secrets, betrayal, and obsession
* Explicit spice, emotional chaos, and addictive twists
Some loves save you.
Others ruin you beautifully.
Enter at your own risk.
"I-I swear I didn't mean to enter this house. I got l-lost. I am s-sorry sir." She politely said taking a step back only for her to froze in the spot.
"Seal" He smirked when the main door of the mansion got sealed just by his one command. He could see how much she was trembling in fear.
She looked like little innocent lamb trapped by the giant wolf who was toying with her before attacking her to his fullest.
"Now my lady I am a gentleman I don't like to send my guests back without showing my hospitality. Especially uninvited guests." He said as his smirk widened.
"Just look at you. An epitome of perfection." He said pointing at her head to tow before creepily darkening his shiny orbs.
"And Perfection is made for only perfection. Which means you're made for a man like me."
This was enough to make her run to the door faster than hurricane.
A Story about a Narcasstic Mafia boss who considers himself a Greek God with insane power he holds. And a poor insecure naive girl who had been entangled in a relationship which couldn't even be called as one.
WARNING: MIGHT HAVE GRAMMATICAL ERRORS. IT'S A DARK ROMANCE STORY SO BEWARE.
I’ve got a little roadmap for 'His Untamed Savage Bride' that I usually give friends who want to binge it without getting lost. Start with the prologue or 'Chapter 0' if there is one — that often sets up crucial context for the world and the main pairing. Then read the main storyline in publication order (Chapter 1 onward) so you get the pacing the creator intended and the emotional beats land properly.
After you’ve churned through the core plot, go back for side stories, bonus chapters, and any numbered specials (they’re often labeled as 'extra', 'SP', or 'side'). Those typically expand on character backstories, small arcs that didn’t fit into the main volumes, or flirtations and quiet moments that fans love. If a web novel or light novel source exists for the series, I personally treat it as optional deep-diving — read it either after the main adaptation to avoid spoilers, or before if you want the fuller lore first. Official volume collections and author omakes/afterwords are also worth saving until later; they’re the cherry-on-top that make re-reads sweeter. I always feel like the side chapters are where the characters breathe, so I leave room to savor them.
If you want the cleanest experience, read 'These Violent Delights' first and then follow it with 'Our Violent Ends'.
I say this because the two books are tightly stitched: the first sets up the rivalry, the political atmosphere, and the emotional stakes, and the second tears them open and resolves most big threads. Reading them in publication order preserves the reveals and character growth—Juliette and Roma’s arcs land harder that way. After you finish the duology, I usually poke around for the author’s interviews or tweets; Chloe Gong drops little bits about deleted scenes or inspirations that add color without changing the plot. There aren’t any mandatory third books to continue the same story, so once you’ve closed 'Our Violent Ends' you can either sit with the ending, hunt fan discussions to unpack motifs and symbolism, or re-read to catch foreshadowing. For me, revisiting the first book after the finale is always satisfying because I spot lines that glow differently the second time around.