Been poking through the updates and fan forums, and my takeaway is a mixed bag of certainty and delay. There is confirmation that work on the next volume of 'The Great Escape To Happiness' is underway — not a finished manuscript, but active development. The author’s recent newsletter mentioned plot threads they wanted to revisit and expand, which reads like an intention to make the sequel meaningful rather than formulaic. However, they specifically warned readers about an open-ended timeline, citing other commitments and a desire to revise until it feels right.
From experience following similar projects, that kind of honesty usually means good things in the long run, even if it stretches patience. The publishing house has indicated support, but logistics like editing, cover art, and international rights often add months. There’s also chatter about optional extras: a short story collection, bonus illustrations, or perhaps a teaser chapter released online to tide fans over. I’m trying to temper my impatience with the idea that well-crafted sequels sometimes need the breathing room to become stories worth revisiting, and I’m quietly excited to see how the themes deepen in the next installment.
I'm genuinely excited — the short version I keep telling friends is: yes, there's a sequel planned, but don't expect it on bookstore shelves next month. The creator has acknowledged a follow-up and the publisher has given the project the go-ahead, so it’s more than just fan hope. Right now it's in the writing and revision stage, which means plot points are being reshaped and pacing is being tested; that’s a good sign to me because it means care is happening behind the scenes.
As a reader who loves when authors take time to get the arc right, I’m content to wait. In the meantime, I’ve been revisiting 'The Great Escape To Happiness' for clues and imagining how secondary characters could step forward. If a teaser or a short bridge story drops, I'll be first in line. For now, I’m riding the anticipation and picturing the sequel becoming one of those rare follow-ups that improves on the original, which would make me really happy.
Can't stop grinning when I think about 'The Great Escape To Happiness' and the chatter around a follow-up. From everything I've tracked, there is indeed a sequel being planned — the author dropped a confirmation on their official channels last year and the publisher followed up with a brief statement that a second installment is greenlit. It's still early days: the team is writing and reshaping drafts, and the release window is intentionally vague because they want to avoid rushing the story. That actually gives me hope; the last volume felt meticulously crafted, and I'm glad they're not slapping together something half-baked.
What excites me most are the hints about where the narrative will go. The creator teased that the sequel will deepen the worldbuilding and focus on quieter, character-driven arcs rather than simply escalating action. There are rumors of a novella or side-story interlude that might bridge the gap, plus talks about an illustrated edition down the line. Translation and licensing chatter suggests international readers might wait a bit longer than the domestic release, which is typical but still a bummer for impatient fans.
All told, I’m cautiously optimistic. Knowing the team is taking time to polish things and maybe even experiment with shorter companion stories makes me feel like the sequel could become something special rather than just a cash-in. I’m already making a mental list of wishful returns for favorite characters and how they might grow, and that anticipation is a warm sort of ache I’m happily holding onto.
Not exactly a yes, but not a no either — that's the situation with 'The Great Escape To Happiness' as far as I've seen. There wasn't a straight-up sequel announcement from the official channels the last time I checked, but the creator dropped a few coy hints in interviews and at book festivals about wanting to continue the story someday. Fan communities have been compiling those hints into timelines and wishlist plots, which makes everything feel simultaneously hopeful and interminably vague. Publishers often wait for the right market moment, or the author's schedule, so it could be a few years of speculation before anything concrete appears. For now I'm following a few fan-run trackers and bookmark threads that collect credible snippets, and every new interview makes me hold my breath a little — that's peak fan life, really.
Quick take: there isn't a firm sequel release that I've been able to pin down for 'The Great Escape To Happiness.' What keeps things interesting are the breadcrumbs — an interview here, a social post there — that suggest the creator hasn't abandoned the world entirely. Sometimes those breadcrumbs lead to a sequel, other times to short stories or collaborative projects that expand a corner of the universe instead.
As a fan, I'm more excited by the possibility of smart, character-driven continuations than by anything rushed out to capitalize on popularity. So I watch for publisher updates and creator statements, but in the meantime I re-read favorite passages and enjoy fan discussions. If a sequel does get officially announced, I'll be cheering loud enough to embarrass myself, and until then I'm content to speculate and savor what already exists.
2025-10-26 19:15:25
2
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Second chance at happiness
Love4Fiction
9.7
12.2K
Choices and chances… one decision or one of many that make us live a life of happiness and content…. one that makes us muddled and ordinary… or one that leaves us with regret and unwillingness…. Mira was just an ordinary girl who was loved and pampered. The two most important people in her life were Alina and Jason; Alina, her best friend and Jason, her sweetheart. Mira's peaceful life took a turn for the worse when her stepmother forced her to marry a simpleton whom she had never met. She hated her stepmother. She did everything she could to make life unbearable for the two people responsible for her misery- her stepmother and her husband.She succeeded in getting rid of both; one passed away and the other gave her a divorce. She finally got the life she wanted, a life where she married her sweetheart. But why was nothing as she imagined? Why was her husband who loved and waited for her to get a divorce never around? Why was her father about to be executed for treachery? With her last breath, she got her answers- Everything she knew was a lie; Jason whom she loved with all her heart hated her because of a lie; Alina, whom she trusted and cared for more than anyone else, was the cause of her misery. Her stepmother and her ex-husband whom she hated, loved her to death…. Literally! It was too late by the time she got the answers for her questions, or was it? Mira was one of those fortunate people, who got a second chance. What choice will she make? Will history repeat? Will she make amends to the ones she wronged? or…. Will she correct the misunderstanding with her sweetheart for her happily ever after?
Is This Heaven's Blessing or a Divine Punishment?
A chance to turn back time and meet him again!
"She" had already endured heartbreak over this man once, and that was more than enough. But to lose her life in a tragic, unexpected accident only to face another heartbreak?
This was Heaven's mercy, allowing her soul to travel back in time to meet Mr. Peng, The Single Daddy, and his little son once more but as their nanny (and housemaid).
Being a nanny? She could manage that. But being his heart's caretaker? Absolutely not!
Especially when he casually says, "Can you be Ayus Mama?"
How could she respond, especially when another woman stepped in, pleading,
"Please, I beg you, give my husband back to me!"
Was this a second chance... or Heaven's cruel punishment?!
In a tale of love, betrayal, and second chances, a woman escapes a loveless relationship only to find herself unexpectedly drawn to a mysterious billionaire
As their connection deepens and her life takes a turn for the better, her past threatens to destroy everything she's built.
Will she be able to overcome the obstacles and embrace the happiness she deserves?
I discover a helicopter in the estate three years after I'm transmigrated.
My wife, Diana Snow, decides to drop the act after noticing my crippled legs.
"Three years ago, you couldn't accept being my lover after I married Andrew," she says. "So, we trapped you here, tricking you into thinking that you had transmigrated. It seems that you've learned how to behave yourself after working as one of the household staff for three years."
I have a hard time believing her words.
The housekeeper of the estate tears her mask off and reveals her true identity—my sister, Beverly Graham.
"Andrew's son is all grown up, so you can finally go home now, Connor," she says. "Your plan was absolutely flawless, Elise!"
I slowly turn my head.
The estate's doctor is smiling at me.
"You were right the first time. I'm actually your childhood sweetheart, Elise Jefferson. I came up with this plan because I was worried that you would harass Andrew."
I believe that I have been transmigrated for the past three years. I am beaten, trafficked, and tormented by countless people before Diana buys me and forces me to slave away in her estate.
My legs are crippled, and I'm blind in one eye.
In the beginning, I cry all day and all night about wanting to go home. Eventually, I become numb to my terrible life.
It turns out that I didn't actually transmigrate.
I suffer a complete mental breakdown.
Seconds before I take my own life, strange words suddenly appear in my vision.
"Congratulations to the male lead of this AI-written tragedy. Remaining time before you turn into a real person: Two days.
"48:00:00.
"47:59:59."
Love is a painful thing. It causes others to act ridiculous, to take things that they shouldn't, and to trust unconditionally. But what if the love you thought you had truly wasn't what you thought it was and the whole time you were being tricked? Do you stick around or do you break free of that love and move on with your life? And what do you do if you meet your first love again and begin to realize that everything you thought was wrong with your relationship was all a mistunderstanding? What if your first love wants to continue with your love story, but you're too afraid to put yourself in the position to be hurt again? Do you take that step and let yourself drown in the sweetness that you missed so much or do you keep your heart hidden? That is the very choice that Gabrielle has to make when her first love comes crashing back into her life at her high school reunion after a nasty breakup. Of course, she doesn't want to believe that maybe, just maybe, she was wrong and made the wrong choice, but that first love won't allow her to leave that easily. Instead, he chases her relentlessly until she is unable to resist anymore. However, their love isn't simple and there are many obstacles standing in their way. Will they be able to overcome them together or will their resurrected love fall apart at the seams? Read The Heirs Second Chance At Forever to find out!
Everyone says that Eric Winslowe, the Alpha of Kalmoor Pack, loves me to the bone. He learns sign language for me because I can't hear, and he prepares to throw me a grand wedding after I thoroughly fall for him.
However, after I regain my hearing, I catch him flirting and being intimate with Camilla Johnson, his maid. They're just in the room next to mine.
During a banquet, he even takes advantage of my lack of hearing to brag. "She's just a pet that I have to alleviate the boredom. Alison is the only one I love. Still, I know she'll leave me if she finds out about this.
"Thank God Alison can't hear. I won't let her find out about this even after we're married. Watch your mouths, everyone. Don't blame me for getting nasty if any of you bring this up to Alison."
I sneer to myself. I want to tell him that he doesn't need to fear others exposing his cheating—I already know.
He also doesn't need to look forward to our wedding because all that awaits him on that day is a corpse that looks just like me.
I recently dove into 'This Is Happiness' and fell head over heels for its lyrical prose and quiet, profound storytelling. The book wraps up with such a satisfying sense of closure that I found myself both content and curiously longing for more—but as far as I know, there’s no official sequel. Niall Williams crafted something beautifully self-contained here, a story that feels complete in its exploration of memory, change, and the bittersweet passage of time. That said, the ending leaves just enough poetic ambiguity to let readers imagine where the characters might go next, which is part of its charm.
Williams’ writing style is so immersive that I’ve been hunting down his other works, like 'History of the Rain,' to fill the void. While they aren’t direct sequels, they carry similar themes of Irish rural life and introspection. If you loved the atmospheric vibes of 'This Is Happiness,' his other novels might scratch that itch. Rumor has it he’s working on new projects, but nothing’s been confirmed about a follow-up to this particular gem. Until then, I’ve been revisiting the book’s highlights—the electrifying arrival of the rain, those tender moments between Noe and Christy—and finding new layers each time. Sometimes, a story doesn’t need a sequel to linger in your heart forever.
That title made me pause and dig through my mental film library, because there isn't a well-known movie exactly called 'The Great Escape To Happiness' in international filmographies. I like to trace these things: sometimes English titles get mashed together in translations, or a documentary subtitle gets shortened and turned into a new-sounding name. The two closest, legit films that might be getting mixed up are 'The Great Escape' (the classic 1963 POW film) and the documentary 'The Great Happiness Space: Tale of an Osaka Love Thief'.
If you meant the WWII classic 'The Great Escape', that was directed by John Sturges and adapted from the book 'The Great Escape' by Paul Brickhill. If your curiosity points toward the documentary about Osaka host clubs, that's 'The Great Happiness Space: Tale of an Osaka Love Thief', which was directed by Jake Clennell in 2006. Beyond those, the exact phrasing 'The Great Escape To Happiness' doesn't map cleanly to a single, widely released film I can find in my head.
I get why this is confusing — titles get reworked a lot when translated, and databases sometimes list alternate English titles. Personally, I think digging up the original-language title or a cast name usually clears things up fast; either way, John Sturges and Jake Clennell are the two directors most likely being pointed to by similar titles, and both films are worth watching for very different reasons.