Banishment

ABO Personality Quiz
Take a quick quiz to find out whether you‘re Alpha, Beta, or Omega.
Start Test

Related Books

Rejected and Banished; The kids are his.

Rejected and Banished; The kids are his.

"You mean nothing to me anymore." “And this pack,” he continued, my heartbeat accelerating. “is no longer a place for you, not with what you have done; so from this moment onward…” He paused, his eyes holding mine for a second. "You are banished, effective immediately.” The words slammed into me so hard, a loud bang went off in my head... This can't be happening. “No… Malik, please.” His eyes didn’t soften. If anything, they grew colder. "Goodbye forever, Selina." He spat, casting me one last glance, and I realized it was a look of finality, without another word, he turned and walked away. *** A week ago, Alpha Malik had discovered that I was his mate after years of fruitless search, nothing had ever felt so right in my life. But then, doom came knocking on my door the moment things started heading towards an interesting direction. A dreadful crime was executed with my name pinned on it.
9.4 322 Chapters
Exiled From the Pack

Exiled From the Pack

On the eve of his Alpha succession ceremony, my fiancé Hunter prepared lavish gifts for all the distinguished guests and had Freya distribute them. Freya obliged with a smile. Then, when she reached me, her gaze swept over me with nothing but contempt. “Move aside. This isn’t for you.” She tossed an exile notice at my face. “You’re just a she-wolf who likes to seduce. Think you deserve an Alpha’s gift? Dream on. You’re not welcome here. Get out of our pack!” At that moment, the guests opened the gift boxes Freya handed out. Inside, alongside a rare blue moonstone, were photos of me in intimate moments with other Alpha males from different packs. In an instant, I became the pack’s traitorous, unfaithful woman. My face darkened as I stared at Hunter. “You’re really going to exile me from the pack?”
0 10 Chapters
His Banished Mate

His Banished Mate

She was his mate, and instead of loving her, he banished her when she killed the love of his life...
0 1 Chapters
THE BANISHED LUNA

THE BANISHED LUNA

**The Banished Luna – Blurb** The Moon Goddess made him hers. He made her his greatest mistake. When Aria Winters discovers her fated mate is Alpha Damien Blackthorn, the man who’s spent years looking down on her, she dares to hope the bond might change everything. Instead, he rejects her — publicly, brutally, and without mercy. Banished beyond the borders, Aria is left to die… until a rival Alpha saves her. In his territory, she begins to heal, unlocking a power she never knew she possessed — a power the Moon Goddess may have destined to change the fate of every pack. Now, two Alphas want her. One to claim what he threw away. The other to keep what he’s willing to burn the world for. And Aria? She’s done being anyone’s victim. **The Banished Luna** is a dark, mature (+16) werewolf romance filled with betrayal, passion, and the rise of a Luna who refuses to be forgotten. ---
0 38 Chapters
The Witch He Abandoned

The Witch He Abandoned

The Thornes built their aromatherapy business generations ago, but their ancestors made a fatal mistake and brought down a divine curse. For ninety-nine generations, every Thorne heir drew their punishment on their eighteenth birthday. Julian Thorne was the last. He drew the worst punishment: death from hemorrhage in ten months. The only way to break it was to marry a witch from the Old Bloodline and complete the life transference ritual. The witch inscribes a sigil on a parchment and infuses the child's blood essence on it, and the curse transfers to the parchment. I was that witch. My family owed the Thornes a blood debt going back three generations, so I married Julian, gave him a child, and performed the ritual to save his life. I was terrified of missing the ritual window, so I didn't even use anesthesia as the baby was cut out of my womb. However, Julian drove ninety-nine soul spikes into my body while I was still bleeding from the delivery, then set me on fire. "Miriam is the real heir. You're nothing but a fraud who wanted to marry up. "You drove her into the wilderness to protect your position. She went into labor alone and died with the baby. Even dying, she thought of me. She finished the ritual and saved my life. "You deceived my father. I'm destroying your soul. You'll pay for what you did to them." He ignored my screaming while he drained our newborn's blood essence. I watched helplessly as my child's life faded. Then I was nailed to a cross and burned until there was nothing left. When I opened my eyes, I was back on my wedding day.
0 9 Chapters
Fleeing her Rejected Mate

Fleeing her Rejected Mate

“You’re nothing without me, Emery.” “You’re just a stupid orphan, with a silly life and you’ll always be caught in the crossfire. Wolfless. Unwanted. You're a body to satisfy me when I need it.” ~~~~~~~~~~ Emery has always known herself as the reject. Despite being the Alpha King’s mate she has to watch him marry someone else because unlike her, she has a wolf. His bride is the daughter of a famous Alpha and a prosperous pack. Unlike her, she won’t bring disgrace to him by being his Luna. The reality of the truth Emery would have ignored stares her right in the face and as she’s to be shipped into exile, Nikolai’s new bride sends for her life. Left with no other option Emery flees into the woods and passes out at the feet of a mysterious stranger. As time goes on she realizes she’s just been thrust into the midst of something more dangerous than she could ever imagine. And with an even more dangerous secret of her own too. She’s pregnant with Nikolai’s child, so fleeing her now rejected mate isn’t all she has to do. Will Emery break like she’s always been told she will? And will Nikolai, relentless in his want for Emery, finally see that the woman he wants will not be at his side as a slave, but as his equal, no matter the consequence?
10 70 Chapters

Why does The Exiled Dragon get exiled?

3 Answers2026-03-08 14:59:25
The exiled dragon's story in 'The Exiled Dragon' is one of those epic tragedies that lingers in your mind long after you finish the book. At first glance, it seems like a straightforward tale of betrayal—the dragon is cast out by its kin for breaking some ancient law. But dig deeper, and you realize it's way more nuanced. The dragon wasn't just exiled for a single act; it was a slow build-up of defiance, questioning the rigid hierarchy of dragon society. It dared to suggest that lesser creatures—humans, elves—weren't just prey or pests. That kind of thinking? Heresy to the elder wyrms.

What really got me was how the exile wasn't just physical. The dragon's name was erased from histories, its deeds attributed to others. The author does this brilliant thing where the exile becomes a metaphor for any marginalized voice—too loud, too different, too dangerous to the status quo. By the end, you wonder if the exile was the worst thing that could've happened… or the start of something revolutionary. The dragon builds a new life, finds allies among the 'lesser' races, and honestly? Their society was better off without those stuffy old wyrms.

Why does exile play a key role in 'The Necessity of Exile'?

3 Answers2026-03-07 03:18:48
One of the most striking things about 'The Necessity of Exile' is how it turns something traditionally seen as a punishment into a transformative force. The protagonist doesn’t just leave their homeland—they shed their old identity, almost like a snake shedding its skin. The exile isn’t just physical; it’s psychological, spiritual. The book digs into how losing everything familiar forces you to rebuild, and in that rebuilding, you discover parts of yourself that were buried under routine and expectation.

What really gets me is the way exile isn’t framed as a temporary state but as a necessary rupture. It’s not about returning home triumphant; it’s about realizing 'home' doesn’t exist in the same way anymore. The landscapes change, but so does the protagonist’s way of seeing. There’s this raw honesty in how the narrative refuses to romanticize exile—it’s messy, lonely, but also weirdly liberating. By the end, you’re left wondering if exile was the cost of freedom or the gift that made freedom possible.

How does Exile end?

1 Answers2025-12-01 23:37:10
The ending of 'Exile' is one of those bittersweet moments that lingers in your mind long after you've turned the last page. Without spoiling too much, the protagonist's journey reaches a climax where they confront the very forces that drove them into exile in the first place. It's a raw, emotional showdown—not just with external enemies but with their own inner demons. The resolution isn't neatly tied with a bow; instead, it feels earned, messy, and deeply human. There's a sense of catharsis, but also an acknowledgment that some wounds never fully heal. The final scenes leave you with a quiet hope, though, as the character finds a way to reconcile their past with the possibility of a future.

What really struck me about 'Exile's ending is how it subverts the typical 'hero returns triumphant' trope. Instead, the story embraces ambiguity. The protagonist doesn't necessarily 'win' in a conventional sense—they survive, they grow, but the cost is palpable. The supporting characters also get their moments, each dealing with the fallout in ways that feel true to their arcs. If you've ever felt like life doesn't offer clean resolutions, this ending will resonate hard. It's the kind of conclusion that makes you want to immediately flip back to the first chapter and trace how every choice led to this point. I still catch myself thinking about it weeks later.

What happens at the ending of 'The Necessity of Exile'?

3 Answers2026-03-07 18:09:36
Reading 'The Necessity of Exile' felt like unraveling a tapestry of longing and self-discovery. The ending isn’t just a resolution—it’s a quiet earthquake. After years of wandering, the protagonist finally returns to their homeland, only to realize exile wasn’t about geography but about the spaces between people. The final scene shows them planting a tree in their childhood village, symbolizing roots that grow differently after displacement. What hit me hardest was the diary entry left open on their desk: 'I carried home in my shadow, but shadows need light to exist.' It’s bittersweet—less about closure, more about embracing fractured identities.

What lingers afterward is how the author plays with silence. The last chapter has minimal dialogue, just descriptions of the protagonist observing everyday life—children playing, market haggling—as if relearning belonging. The book doesn’t tie up neatly; it frays at the edges intentionally. I found myself staring at the wall for ten minutes after finishing, thinking about my own family’s migrations. That’s the magic of it—the story ends, but the questions ripple outward.

What does banished mean in fantasy novels?

3 Answers2026-05-05 05:25:45
Banished in fantasy novels isn't just about kicking someone out of a kingdom—it's a whole vibe, you know? Like, it's this dramatic, often ceremonial act where a character gets stripped of their status, home, or even their name. Think 'The Hobbit' where Thorin's family gets exiled from Erebor, or 'Game of Thrones' where Jon Snow gets sent to the Night's Watch (which is basically fancy exile). It's not just physical removal; it's a social death. The banished character usually has to grapple with identity loss, survival in harsh lands, or the burning desire for revenge. Sometimes, it's a setup for their redemption arc or a villain origin story. The best part? It forces them to discover hidden strengths or, y'know, go completely off the rails.

What fascinates me is how different cultures in fantasy handle it. Elves might do it with poetic curses, dwarves with a public striking of the exile's name from stone records, and dark lords? Oh, they love tossing folks into magical voids. The trope also plays with themes of belonging—banished characters often find new families among outcasts or monsters. It's a classic 'from ashes, rise' narrative, but sometimes, the exile just... festers. Like Maegor the Cruel in 'Fire & Blood,' whose banishment made him ten times worse. The emotional weight is what makes it stick—you feel their loneliness, their rage, or their quiet resolve to return.

Why did he banish the girl in the story?

4 Answers2026-05-09 00:22:04
The banishment in the story struck me as a complex mix of fear and duty—like the character was torn between personal affection and some larger responsibility. I couldn't shake the feeling that the girl posed a threat he didn’t fully understand, maybe something tied to prophecy or ancient rules in their world. It reminded me of 'The Witcher' series, where Geralt sometimes makes brutal choices to uphold his code, even if it hurts those he cares about.

What really lingered, though, was the aftermath. The way her absence echoed in smaller scenes—empty chairs, half-finished conversations—made the act feel less like a plot device and more like a haunting character flaw. It’s those quiet consequences that often hit harder than the dramatic exile itself.

What happened to the girl he banished?

4 Answers2026-05-09 14:28:37
Man, that storyline still gives me chills! The banished girl's fate was one of those slow-burn tragedies that sneak up on you. At first, it seemed like she just faded into obscurity—dropped by the protagonist like yesterday's news. But later episodes revealed she rebuilt her life in the shadows, mastering skills he'd never anticipate. The irony? Her exile became her strength. By the final arc, she wasn't some pitiful victim; she orchestrated the collapse of his entire regime from the underground.

What really got me was how the narrative mirrored real-world resilience. The show didn't spoon-feed her revenge—it showed the gritty process: starvation, betrayal, the quiet moments of doubt. When she finally confronted him, it wasn't with screaming theatrics, but a whispered truth that unraveled his legacy. Makes you wonder how many 'banished' people around us are quietly rewriting their stories.

How does being banished affect a pregnant character's story?

5 Answers2026-05-10 12:15:53
The emotional weight of banishment during pregnancy is something I've seen explored in so many stories, and it always hits differently. There's this raw vulnerability to expecting a child while being cast out—like in 'The Handmaid's Tale,' where June's pregnancy becomes both a shackle and a shield. The physical strain of survival intersects with the psychological terror of isolation, making every decision feel life-or-death.

What fascinates me is how these narratives often subvert the 'mother as passive victim' trope. Take 'Children of Blood and Bone'—Zélie’s exile forces her to grapple with legacy and rebellion while carrying literal hope inside her. The juxtaposition of creating life amid systemic destruction adds layers to her character that wouldn’t exist otherwise. It’s messy, visceral storytelling that sticks with you long after the last page.

Why was the exiled queen banished in the story?

4 Answers2026-06-04 18:02:47
The exiled queen's banishment in the story is such a fascinating twist! From what I gathered, she wasn't just some power-hungry ruler—her downfall was a slow burn. Political factions at court painted her as reckless, but honestly? She was ahead of her time. Her reforms threatened the old nobility, so they spun every drought and rebellion as her 'failures.' The final straw was a fabricated prophecy about her 'cursed bloodline,' which the priests—probably bribed—used to justify her exile. Tragic, really, because in flashbacks, you see her trying to modernize agriculture and education. The story frames it as less about justice and more about silencing change.

What gets me is how the narrative plays with perspective. Later chapters reveal letters she wrote, smuggled out by loyalists, showing she knew the coup was coming but refused to flee. There's this line where she says, 'Let them write me as the villain; history peels lies like onions.' Chills! It adds layers to the usual 'banished royalty' trope, making you question who really holds power in their world.

What is the plot of Banishers?

3 Answers2026-07-04 03:38:12
Banishers is this hauntingly beautiful action RPG that grabbed me by the heart from the first trailer. You play as two ghost hunters—Red and Antea—whose love story takes a tragic turn when Antea dies and becomes a specter. The twist? You’re not just fighting ghosts; you’re grappling with the moral weight of how to handle the dead. Do you 'banish' souls to free them, or 'ascend' them to harness their power? The game’s set in this eerie 17th-century colonial America, with folklore-inspired monsters and landscapes that feel alive (ironically). What got me hooked was the emotional dilemma—every decision feels like choosing between love and duty, especially when Antea’s fate hangs in the balance. The combat’s slick too, switching between Red’s physical attacks and Antea’s spectral abilities, but honestly, it’s the storytelling that lingers like a ghost long after you quit playing.

I’ve played my share of RPGs, but 'Banishers' stands out because it doesn’t just use death as a plot device—it makes you feel it. There’s this one side quest where a grieving father begs you to resurrect his daughter, and the game forces you to confront the consequences. It’s not black-and-white; the writing digs into grief, guilt, and how far we’d go for those we lose. Even the minor characters have depth, like the tavern keeper who hides his dead wife’s ghost in the cellar. The atmosphere? Thick enough to slice with a sword—candlelit cabins, whispering forests, and sudden gusts of wind that might be more than weather. If you’re into games that marry gameplay with gut-punch narratives, this one’s a must-play.

Related Searches

Popular Searches
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status