
Samar loves the thrill of sneaking out with Bassel, a sexy cop who makes her heart race. Yet what she doesn’t know is that Bassel is corrupt, he’s a monster in disguise.
She escapes Bassel’s controlling grip with the help of Ziyad, a man with a troubled past. Ziyad is a criminal, someone who should never be trusted.
The corrupt police officer or the criminal?
Who should she avoid and who should she run away from?

When eighteen-year-old Dalia’s reputation becomes tainted, and her behavior becomes the cause of her mother’s death, she flees from her abusive father who is determined to kill her to cleanse the family’s honor.
Dalia’s dream of entering university appears unattainable. Within her impoverished neighborhood, women are destined primarily for marriage and bearing children. Higher education is not part of the patriarchal plan.
Still, she reaches out to those in need and demonstrates the power of words and books. Defying all obstacles, she works to earn her PhD and becomes known as a social-media influencer in her country. But these achievements fail to satisfy her, and she senses that only one thing will complete her: facing her father again and confronting death face to face.

You will never be able to revive me; corpses don’t get resurrected from the dead.
On Kenda’s first day of marriage to Ali, she’s bombarded with the following bombshells:
Her husband is a widower who doesn’t love her, and she must take care of a three-month-old baby that’s not hers.
On Ali’s first day of his marriage with Kenda, he doesn’t mention the murder of his father. Plus, he never talks about the secrets he once shared with his dead wife, Niveen before she committed suicide.
Kenda wants to be accepted and loved in her new family because she was always unwelcome in her old one.
Yet, all that Ali wants is for Kenda to be out of the picture.