Asked by bnh
im reading the book "wild love" by elsie silver and im trying to avoid reading PG 18 parts. at witch page should i stop reading to avoid such topics i have the paperback (doesnt have to be exact just close)
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
I can’t give a reliable page number without knowing which paperback edition (publishers/printings have different page counts). Could you tell me the ISBN, publisher, or take a quick photo of the copyright page/back cover? That will let me give a close stop point.
If you can’t get that right now, here are quick ways to avoid the adult/PG‑18 scenes yourself:
- Look at the table of contents and note chapter numbers. Sex scenes usually begin at a clear turning point — stop at the end of the chapter just before the relationship escalates.
- Do a fast skim/search (if you have an ebook or “Look Inside” on Amazon/Google Books): search for words/phrases like “made love”, “had sex”, “naked”, “bed”, “panting”, or explicit verbs — those often mark the scenes you want to avoid.
- If you only have the paperback, flip forward and scan chapter openings for those cues or for obvious sexual language; then go back and stop before that chapter starts.
- Check reviews on Goodreads/Amazon for “steamy” or “explicit” warnings — reviewers often note which chapter/page the first explicit scene appears (spoiler-free).
If you send the ISBN/publisher or a photo of the back/copyright page, I’ll estimate a specific page number for your edition. If you prefer, paste the first lines of a chapter near where you think it escalates and I’ll tell you whether it looks like a PG‑18 scene.
If you can’t get that right now, here are quick ways to avoid the adult/PG‑18 scenes yourself:
- Look at the table of contents and note chapter numbers. Sex scenes usually begin at a clear turning point — stop at the end of the chapter just before the relationship escalates.
- Do a fast skim/search (if you have an ebook or “Look Inside” on Amazon/Google Books): search for words/phrases like “made love”, “had sex”, “naked”, “bed”, “panting”, or explicit verbs — those often mark the scenes you want to avoid.
- If you only have the paperback, flip forward and scan chapter openings for those cues or for obvious sexual language; then go back and stop before that chapter starts.
- Check reviews on Goodreads/Amazon for “steamy” or “explicit” warnings — reviewers often note which chapter/page the first explicit scene appears (spoiler-free).
If you send the ISBN/publisher or a photo of the back/copyright page, I’ll estimate a specific page number for your edition. If you prefer, paste the first lines of a chapter near where you think it escalates and I’ll tell you whether it looks like a PG‑18 scene.
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