![]() I’ve done my best to add proper warnings but please make sure to read the authors tags first! I’m also willing to trigger check a fic for you if the warnings are fuzzy. ![]() There MIGHT be stories that deal with mentions of suicide, self-harm, depression, dub-con, non-con, drug use, abuse and such. There should be a bar with yellow marks appearing on the side that you can tap for instant relocation.) ( This also works on the mobile version of Chrome: Open the drop down menu, click “Find in page” and type in the desired word. Faster and more accurate than scrolling anyway. Either way, it’ll get you were you want to go eventually. Or you might have to click the down arrow in the box a couple of time. To quickly get to the fandom you’re interested in: Hit or and type in the fandom name in the little box that appears in one of the corners, and it’ll jump you to the right place. Now with proper summaries and clickable links! ![]() ![]() To prevent this from ever happening again, I decided to make a quick and dirty list of the fics I’ve enjoyed over the last year.”ĮDIT: As of April 2015, this has been updated into a proper rec list. “Um, so yeah, I’ve always saved the fics I enjoyed in my bookmarks, but after a catastrophic computer failure last year, I lost them all. ![]()
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![]() ![]() The mercenary pirate hunters are ready and waiting. The ship returns across the Atlantic to Caribbean. The rich and powerful finally decide enough is enough when John Gwin’s ship lands on the African coast and frees dozens of slaves being held for transport and sale in the American colonies. In a more personal aspect of the tale, it is revealed that one of the crew is a woman disguised as a man. ![]() The crew carries on, raiding merchant ships belonging to various corporate entities and rousing the fear and anger of the governments that those corporations conspire with. John Gwin is elected leader of the crew and they sail forth after freeing the human cargo under the name the Night Rambler. The abuse of the crew by the Captain James Skinner forecasts the captain’s death and the takeover of the ship by its crew. The rest of the story involves a fugitive slave who fins himself an indentured sailor named John Gwin on a slave ship owned by the Royal African Company. The story here begins with the hanging of a pirate, who his fellows note remained defiant until the end. ![]() ![]() ![]() Eager to discover more fictional worlds, he visits his local Harrow Road Library, located in the town, Wembley, where he lives. ![]() The book surprises him, granting him clarity on his life and new perspective on his grief. When Mukesh finds his wife's old library book, The Time Traveler's Wife, in her belongings, he decides to turn to reading. He longs for a way to connect with his family and to find his way back to happiness. ![]() When they are visiting, Mukesh feels incapable of communicating with them. Their busy schedules keep them from spending time with Mukesh. Although he has three daughters, Rohini, Vritti, and Deepali, and a young granddaughter, Priya, they are not often around. Her absence leaves him feeling alone and ungrounded. He relied upon Naina for comfort, order, and regularity. ![]() Two years after his wife Naina's death, Mukesh is still struggling to regain his balance. The following summary relies upon the present tense and a linear mode of explanation. The novel employs an unconventional narrative structure, which takes its inspiration from one of the primary characters Mukesh's late wife Naina's reading list. Sara Nisha Adams's novel The Reading List is written from the third person point of view and in both the present and past tenses. The following version of this book was used to create the guide: Adams, Sara Nisha. ![]() |