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TurboK

Author: turbok
LGBT+
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What is TurboK

Read TurboK novel written by the author turbok on WebNovel, This serial novel genre is LGBT+ stories, ✓ Newest updated ✓ All rights reserved

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You Are My Moonlight

Ai adalah seorang idola K-pop yang paling populer. Seluruh orang begitu mengidolakannya. Kehidupannya selalu penuh dengan gemerlap sorot lampu dan dentuman musik serta teriakan dari penggemarnya. Hingga suatu waktu Ai mendapat email yang misterius dari fansnya. Surat itu yang Ai percayai dikirim oleh seseorang yang dulu pernah hadir di masa lalunya karena nama si pengirim surat sama persis dengan nama seseorang yang pernah Ai kenal dari masa lalunya. Seseorang itu juga mengetahui segala rahasia Ai. Seseorang itu bernama Pandu. Pandu adalah teman Ai sejak remaja. Pandu dan Ai telah banyak melewatkan konflik dan bahaya bersama. Pandu juga yang telah berhasil mengeluarkan Ai dari jurang dunia mafia dan menyelamatkan nyawa Ai. Namun karena suatu masalah mereka akhirnya tak pernah saling menghubungi kembali. Ai tak pernah bisa mengingat kembali apa yang menyebabkan mereka berdua bisa terpisah begitu jauh. mungkin karena waktu yang sudah berlalu begitu lama yang membuat ingatan Ai tentang sahabatnya itu kian memudar, begitu pikir Ai. Tapi benarkah begitu? Ai merasa senang karena bisa menemukan kembali sahabat lamanya itu. Akan tetapi saat hendak ditemui, Pandu si pengirim surat itu menghilang. Ai Akhirnya mencari sosok Pandu tersebut. Ai bahkan rela meninggalkan gemerlap dunia K-pop nya demi mencari sahabat lamanya tersebut. Namun bukannya menemukan Pandu Ai malah terjerumus pada misteri kasus dan dunia gangster. Akankah Ai berhasil menemukan Pandu? akankah mereka bisa kembali bersama?

Ri_Hyun · Teen
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8 Chs

The Oresteia (Modernized)

All three of the great Greek Tragedians have written plays about the bloody chain of murder and revenge within the royal family of Argos. Yet theirs is in fact not a story of tragedy, but rather one of redemption. As they move from darkness to light, from rage to self-governance, from primitive ritual to civilized institution, their spirit of struggle and regeneration becomes an everlasting song of celebration to be heard throughout the ages. Forming a discourse set against the emergence of Athenian democracy out of a period of chaos and destruction, the Orestian plays are compelling stories of the tensions between our obligations to our families and the laws that bind us together as a society. In the beginning, we witness how a king’s decision to sacrifice his daughter and turn the tide of war inflicts lasting damage on his family, culminating in a terrible act of retribution. In the aftermath of regicide, we behold how a son must set out to avenge his father’s death by committing a most egregious sin. In the end, the sinner is tormented by supernatural powers that can never be appeased, but ultimately finds redemption and ends the curse on his house once and for all. Woven through all of this is the story of a friendship so close that it elevates itself to brotherhood - Where the blood of the covenant is shown to be indeed thicker than the water of the womb. In this very brief twelve-chapter modern rendition of the Orestian plays, I have chosen to place my focus mainly on the lives of the characters Orestes and his best friend Pylades. The chapters, each around 2000-2500 words, are split up evenly between them in first-person narrative. I hope that you will come to enjoy reading this heartwarming story, but more importantly, that you see how the conflicts portrayed in the story, whether human or institutional, are still much very relevant to our societies today. Note on Sources: The details of this story is very loosely based on The Oresteia by Aeschylus, who was one of the three great Greek Tragedians (though this story is not a tragedy). And I mean very loosely. Other sources that I referenced for detail and inspiration are Mythology by Edith Hamilton, Electra by Sophocles, and Iphigenia in Tauris by Euripides. You may also find that I have quoted some of these works, and others (such as Shelley's Ozymondaeus), without citations (average of 1-2 such quotes per chapter). I did this because I do not have the ability to describe certain scenes nearly as well as some of those writers. If you read a particularly beautiful piece of prose here, chances are it's probably stolen lol.

HAXX0RZ · History
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