I write A best history story for read it see and read my story in injoy it .
History books are often seen as neutral repositories of facts — chronicles of dates, battles, and figures that shaped the world. But what if I told you they are much more than that? They are powerful tools that frame our understanding of the past, influence our identity, and sometimes even rewrite the future.
By Farzad6 months ago in History
Art is everywhere. From the colors on a canvas to the melodies of a song, from the intricate designs in architecture to the stories told through dance, art surrounds and shapes our existence. Yet, many people ask: Why does art matter? Why do humans feel such a deep need to create and experience art? What role does it play in our personal lives and in society as a whole?
By Farzad6 months ago in Art
For years, Mark Donovan worked in a gray cubicle, his life marked by routine, deadlines, and endless exhaustion. Books were just something he glanced at — until one rainy afternoon changed everything.
By Farzad6 months ago in BookClub
In the quiet town of Welling Creek, nestled deep in the pine-covered hills of Oregon, nights were once peaceful — until 2021, when a string of brutal murders began to unfold.
By Farzad6 months ago in Criminal
In every town, there’s a pair of best friends — the ones everyone knows. In Greenville, Ohio, that pair was Jason Carter and Eli Matthews.
In a small town in Arkansas, there lived a man named Harold Whitman. He was 78 years old, a retired school principal, widowed for nearly a decade, and known for his kindness, his deep voice, and his stubborn belief in handwritten letters.
By Farzad6 months ago in Families
Most kidnapping stories end in heartbreak. But this one ends in a miracle — and a girl’s unbelievable strength. In October 2018, 13-year-old Jayme Closs was taken from her home in rural Wisconsin by a stranger who had just murdered her parents. She was held captive for 88 days.
Imagine receiving a late-night text from someone you love. It reads: “They’re not going to let me go.” Then nothing.
A young couple. Their 6-year-old daughter. A dream of moving into the mountains for a quieter life. And then — total silence.
It’s one of the most chilling and heartbreaking mysteries in American crime history. On a cold February day in 1957, the body of a young boy — naked, bruised, and battered — was discovered inside a cardboard box in a quiet area of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Imagine your husband calls from work, says he’ll be home soon… then vanishes. No note. No goodbye. No body. Just gone. That’s exactly what happened in 1993 when Richard Hoagland, a married father of two from Indiana, disappeared — with no trace and no warning.
He was a married man, a church president, a compliance officer for his city. He lived in Kansas with his wife and kids. Mowed the lawn. Waved to neighbors.