Skip to product information
1 of 3

BookFunnel

WIEDERGEBURT: Legend of the Reincarnated Warrior: Volume 13 (Light Novel)

WIEDERGEBURT: Legend of the Reincarnated Warrior: Volume 13 (Light Novel)

Regular price $4.99 USD
Regular price Sale price $4.99 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
  • Buy the E-Book
  • Recieve email with downloadable link
  • Download epub to your preferred device (tablet, kindle, phone, etc.) and enjoy

THE BATTLE IS WON

Eryk travels with Herleif Astralia into the Demon Beast Mountain Range—their destination the Morkdypt Ravine. The areas they must traverse to get there are teeming with A-Rank Demon Beasts, creatures no human Spiritualist would dare challenge.

With death around every tree, Eryk and Herleif will have no choice but to rely on their strength and wits to survive, and what they find when they finally reach their destination may be even more than they can handle.

GENRES

  • Action
  • Adventure
  • Drama
  • Fantasy
  • Harem
  • Martial Arts
  • Mature
  • Romance
  • Seinen
  • Supernatural

TROPES TO EXPECT

  • Reincarnation
  • Second Chance
  • Time Travel to the Past
  • Past Life Memories
  • Time Loop / Regression
  • Cultivation
  • Power Progression
  • Ruthless Protagonist (when necessary)
  • Strong to Stronger
  • Overpowered Protagonist
  • Cheat-like Powers
  • Hard-Working Protagonist
  • Tragic Past
  • Magic
  • Martial Arts
  • Alchemy
  • Sect/Guild Building
  • Nobles
  • Political Intrigue
  • War
  • Large-Scale Battles
  • Kingdom Building
  • Ancient Secrets
  • Secret Organizations
  • Harem Seeking Protagonist
  • Harem with Real Romantic Development
  • Loyal Subordinates
  • Loyal Love Interests
  • Monster Girl Heroine
  • Beastkin
  • Childhood Friends
  • Arranged Marriage
  • Jealousy
  • Love Interests Grow Stronger
  • Slow-Burn Romance
  • Strong Female Leads
  • Tournaments
  • Fights Against Stronger Opponents
  • Arrogant Young Masters
  • Face-Slapping
  • Scheming Antagonists
  • Assassination Attempts
  • Epic Battles
  • Revenge
  • Demon Beasts
  • Demon Lords
  • Betrayal
  • Bloodline Powers
  • Body Tempering
  • Forbidden Techniques
  • Mystical Realms
  • Cunning Protagonist
  • Protective Protagonist
  • Determined Protagonist
  • Charismatic Protagonist
  • Strategic Minded Protagonist
  • Cares About His Subordinates
  • Does Not Hide His Strength

CHAPTER PREVIEW

She was dying. I knew it would happen eventually. It was inevitable. For the past several months, I had watched her grow weaker, watched the episodes where she collapsed grow more frequent and last longer. There was simply no other explanation for what was happening.

Her body was finally giving out.

I wasn’t sure how many years I had spent with this woman now, learning from her, listening to her, being saved by her, but I knew it must have been several. She taught me everything she could. I learned alchemy, how to get in touch with my Spiritual Power, and how to become more intimate with my element. Thanks to her, I had a far clearer understanding of my strengths and weaknesses than I ever had before.

It was all thanks to her.

I suppose that was what made this situation all the more unbearable for me.

Why are you crying?” she asked. I thought I sensed a wry note in her dry voice, but it was so weak that I couldn’t tell.

Because… you’ve given me… so much, and I… I can’t… do… a single thing for you…”

She was lying on the bed, her hood draped over her face, casting what little I could see in shadows. I sat on the old chair she often sat on when eating, though recently she had been spending more and more time in bed. In fact, it had been about a month since she left the bed. Back when she had first been forced to remain in bed, she had been able to at least sit up, but now she couldn’t even do that much.

Is that how you see this?” she asked, and this time I wasn’t mistaken when I sensed the smile in her voice. “Because if so, you and I see things very differently.” There was a prolonged pause as the woman sighed. “After the Demon Beast Invasion—no, even before that, when I was searching for a way to cure my Spiritual Poisoning, I had nothing to live for. I was alive, but I wasn’t living. For several decades now, I have just been existing, like a wraith, a ghost. That changed when you returned to Nevaria and I discovered you, unconscious in the remains of our former home. Knowing that I wasn’t alone filled me with so much joy, and being able to spend time with you has given my life meaning. I now believe that the reason I didn’t die back then was so I could meet and help you now. Never forget, you gave me a reason to remain alive after all the years I had struggled just to survive another day without a purpose. So thank you.”

You shouldn’t thank me, I thought with sorrow. I didn’t say anything because I knew she would get upset if she knew what I was thinking, but I couldn’t stop these self-recriminating thoughts. I did not want this woman to die.

But I was powerless to stop it.

I could no more keep a person from dying than I could stop the sun from setting.

Death came to all eventually.

I gritted my teeth against the onslaught of emotions welling up inside of me, but tears continued to fall from my eyes, spilling over my cheeks and dripping onto my clothes.

Ever since Kari and Kayli had been killed, I’d been without emotions. No, it would be more accurate to say the only emotion I had left was hatred. That was what I believed for the longest time, but I’d begun to realize after meeting this woman that my previous thoughts weren’t true at all. My emotions had simply been buried so deep that I could no longer feel them… until now.

I didn’t think it would ever be possible to feel pain like this again.

Even so… why can’t I? Why can’t I ever save the people who matter to me?” My own helplessness at the situation came crashing down upon me. “I couldn’t save my wife and daughter. I let them get killed by that blasted man! I was too weak to protect them. And now you’re lying here, dying from the same disease you cured me from, but I can’t do the same for you. How is that fair?”

I hated this. I hated all of this.

I used to think I was strong, but my own weaknesses kept getting thrown in my face over and over again. It was like the world itself was trying to tell me that no matter how strong I became, or how much power I gained, none of it would amount to anything. This feeling welled up inside of me and took hold of my heart with its icy fist.

I don’t think ‘fairness’ has anything to do with life,” the woman said with a strained chuckle as I was feeling sorry for myself. Her breathing was growing labored. “Life is not about fairness. It is about chance. Some people are dealt a bad hand at birth. Some people are blessed from the moment they are born. Some people are able to turn their misfortune into fortune through opportunities they received by chance, while others will never be able to raise themselves up no matter how much they fight against fate.”

She paused here to catch her breath. I could hear the raspy gasps from beneath her hood. Her breathing grew ever more labored like her lungs were collapsing on themselves.

I was dealt a bad hand. Life was never fair to me. Chance determined that my life would never be what I wished it to be, and thus, I would always have to struggle just so I could survive. But life is also what we make of it. I struggled for years, wondering what I even had to live for before you came along. You were my chance. My life has not been fair, but because of that, I had the chance to meet you, and I feel incredibly blessed for it.”

I didn’t want to hear this, but I forced myself to listen. She was on death’s door, but here she was, telling me that I had given her a purpose, that I had done something good. I didn’t want to believe it. After everything that had happened, after failing to protect the people who mattered to me, I simply couldn’t believe that I had ever done anything good in my life.

But I listened to this woman, who was strong, who had survived countless hardships that I could not fathom, and who was telling me that she was grateful to have met me. If nothing else, I would choose to believe what she was saying.

Th-thank you,” I said through a choked sob. “I also… feel blessed to have met you. You saved me, not just physically, but emotionally too. I was on the verge of becoming a monster, and you stopped me.”

The hood shifted. I think the woman had turned her head toward me, but I couldn’t tell.

If you’re really grateful, then I have a few requests. Will you listen to them?”

Of course.”

My first request is to never take off my hood. The face underneath this hood is one that I have grown to despise. It is not the face I was born with, so I’d prefer you never see it.” I nodded to show that I would do as requested. “Second, I want you to bury me in Nevaria—specifically, I would appreciate it if you buried me beneath the mountain where the Imperial Royal Palace sat.” I nodded again. “My final request is that you get rid of the Demon Beasts infesting Nevaria. It doesn’t have to be now, and it doesn’t have to be all at once, but I would like it if you could eradicate them. I do not want them infesting our old home.” I nodded one final time. “Thank you. You are a very kind man.”

The woman raised a hand that was shaking like crazy, fingers and arm trembling and twitching. Her body was already at its limit. She shouldn’t have even been able to move. The fact that she could lift this hand was a testament to her strength of will.

How could I do anything but reach out to grab it?

Her hand was brittle and weak. It felt like the slightest grip would cause it to break, but I held on anyway, enclosing my fingers around hers with both hands.

I think the only regret I have is that I did not meet you when I was younger,” the woman said. “Perhaps if I had, things would have been different.”

I didn’t say anything, but I didn’t think her life would have been different even if she had met me when we were younger. It wasn’t like I had been able to cure Spiritual Poisoning back then. What’s more, I had been with Kari. While I felt like I could honestly admit that I loved this woman, I still loved Kari more. If a choice came down to choosing between one or the other… well, I felt awful for thinking it, but I would have chosen Kari.

Silence reigned after her last words. Her breathing had become so labored that she could no longer speak, and I didn’t say anything—more like I couldn’t say anything. All I could do was hold her hand as her breathing grew slower and slower, until eventually, it stopped altogether. I waited for a few seconds, then placed her hand on the bed. Reaching out, I put my hand over her chest (I didn’t want to accidentally remove her hood by placing my fingers against her neck) and felt for her heartbeat.

There was none.

The woman who had saved my life and kept me from turning into a monster was dead.

And with her death, the tears I had been desperately doing my best to contain flowed ever more freely down my face.

***

I stood inside Feinrea’s office, carefully watching the woman as she read from a sheet of parchment with furrowed brows. The woman with orange-tinted red hair nibbled on her lower lip. Creases appeared on her face, specifically around her eyes.

No one could mistake the expression on her face for anything other than worry.

It had been quite a while since I found myself in this office. I hadn’t delivered any new alchemy pills to Feinrea in a long time, as I had been incredibly busy running the Nevarian Braves. The only time we spoke was through correspondence regarding matters like the delivery of Alchemy Pills to the sect for us to sell as a third party to our members at reduced prices.

Feinrea’s office had not really changed in the time that I had been away, with nothing in the way of decorations. A few columns did line the wall, but that was about it. The only things this room had were bookshelves, Feinrea’s desk, and the small garden where she grew flora that was used in her alchemy. The desk normally had an advanced alchemy set sitting on top of it, but that had been stowed away at present, and instead, a stack of papers sat on the surface.

The fact that her alchemy set had been stowed was a testament to the seriousness of their situation.

The woman sitting behind the desk looked the same as always. Her hair had been tied into a slightly messy bun near the top of her head. Several strands stuck out and a few bangs framed her face. She was still wearing her alchemist robes, which had been heavily modified and showed off a good dose of cleavage. Brown eyes continued reading the contents of the page before she set the parchment down and looked at me.

“This is quite the concoction you’ve invented,” she said at last. “Mixing Red Fire Grass with Giant Toad Oil and the crushed powder of a B-Rank monster core from a Demon Beast with a fire affinity is going to create quite the volatile mix.” She glanced down at the parchment again. “These other ingredients are… enhancers, if I’m not mistaken, yes?”

The heady scent of plants filled the room. The last time I had been here, Feinrea had converted one side of this room into a small alchemy garden. A glance to my left revealed that the garden was coming along quite nicely. There were several plants that I recognized growing in the soft soil, including a patch of purple grass and a godama vine.

“That’s right.” I nodded. “The Red Fire Grass, Giant Toad Oil, and monster core powder made from a B-Rank monster core with a fire affinity, when mixed together, create very intense flames that can harm any Demon Beast B-Rank and below. The army we’re going up against has A-Rank Demon Beasts among them. This mixture won’t be effective against those, but even if all we can do is get rid of the B-Rank Demon Beasts, it will be a huge help in the coming battle.”

Feinrea cupped a hand to her chin and studied the parchment some more. She furrowed her brow ever so slightly and released a series of hmmming noises.

“We certainly have the ingredients necessary to create this, but it will take a while to make this in the quantities you’re asking for.”

“How long do you estimate it will take?”

“I’d say… about six days.”

“Six days should be fine.” I sighed in relief. “The army won’t arrive for another twenty at least, due to its size. We should have plenty of time to set these traps if you can get this to me in six days.”

“In that case, I’ll have my alchemists get started on making this right away.”

“Thank you.”

“By the way… here is the latest report regarding your earnings from the Alchemist Association.” Feinrea grabbed a sheet of parchment from the desk and held it out to me. “I’ve been sending these to you through our correspondences, but since you’re here, I figured I’d deliver this one in person.”

“Thank you.”

The dried parchment crinkled under my hand as I took it from her, studying the contents in detail, which stated that my total earnings for this month were 654,560 valis and my total earnings for the year were 4,568,920 valis. That was a lot of money. Most of that money had been converted into jewels and was locked away inside a vault owned by the Eieran Family, where it was just kind of sitting there.

To be honest, I wasn’t even sure what I would do with all this money.

I spoke with Feinrea for several moments longer, but then I left the Alchemist Association and headed back to the Nevarian Braves headquarters. There was a lot of work that I needed to get done.

Fay was outside in the back sparring with several Spiritualists when I returned. It looked like she was beating up on two younger recruits in a two-on-one battle. I watched her gracefully dodge several punches and kicks before delivering a series of punishing blows with her fist. The two Spiritualists grunted as they were hit, one in the chest and the other in the face, and went down. I watched her for a moment longer, then went up to our living quarters.

I didn’t want to bother her since it looked like she was busy.

Kari wasn’t present inside our living quarters when I arrived, but Lin and Siv were there. They were sitting on one of the two couches with a large, leather-bound book on the coffee table before them. An uncorked bottle of ink sat off to the side. Siv held onto a quill, though her manner of holding it was awkward, showing that she still wasn’t used to using it. The sound of the quill scratching against parchment echoed around the room.

“I’m home,” I called out.

“Darling, welcome back,” Lin greeted me when I entered.

“Thank you.” I closed the door behind me as Siv stopped writing and looked up. Her eyes brightened as I wandered over to them and checked her work to see how she was progressing. “It looks like you’ve managed to learn more than half the letters of our alphabet. You’re progressing pretty quickly.”

It hadn’t even been a day since Siv started living with us. I’d asked Lin this morning if she could help Siv learn our language. I think Lin was more receptive to helping because we had sex the night before. She had promised to teach Siv everything she knew, which was a far cry from how reluctant she had been to speak with this girl the previous day.

I think she felt threatened about having another non-human living with us.

“Siv is… I am doing my best. Learn… learning language… of humans,” Siv said, using more complete sentences than she had when we traversed through the forest. This was also probably a result of Lin’s tutelage. It looked like she was a very good teacher.

“I’m glad you’re doing so well. Keep up the good work,” I said before leaning over the couch and placing a kiss on Lin’s cheek. “And Lin, please keep teaching her. I’d do it myself, but I’m not a very good teacher.”

“You can count on this princess! She will teach Siv how to read and write in less than a week,” Lin said with enthusiasm.

“I know I can.”

Leaving the two girls to their studying, I went behind my desk and grabbed a blank sheet of parchment. There was a large stack of paperwork already waiting for me, but I had something else I needed to do first, which was writing down the details for a sect-assigned B-Rank quest. I opened a desk drawer and took out an unopened bottle of ink. After uncorking the lid, I dipped the tip of my quill inside and began writing out the details of the quest, which were as follows:

 

Quest Rank: B

Quest Details: To dig several trenches in the area highlighted on the map. Trenches must be a minimum of ten meters deep and five meters wide.

Quest Payment: 3,000 valis per one day of labor. Payment will be made based on the number of days worked.

Quest Completion Date: This quest will end on the seventeenth day of this month

Requestor: Eryk Veiger

 

 

Three thousand valis was more than most quests paid—even most B-Rank quests. That I was offering to pay this for every day someone worked should be enough to entice everyone in my sect to join me.

Of course, I could have ordered them, but I felt like this was more appropriate… and I needed to spend all that valis sitting in my vault anyway.

After writing down the quest details, I signed and stamped it with my seal of approval, then stood up and made my way back toward the door.

“Where are you going now, Darling?” asked Lin as she and Siv looked at me.

“I just need to speak with Felman and ask him to make several hundred copies of this quest,” I said. “I’ll be right back so just keep doing what you’re doing.”

“Okay.”

I left my living quarters and traveled back down to the lobby where sect members could take quests. The lobby was pretty crowded at present. All the benches were taken up by Spiritualists who looked like they were waiting for something or someone, perhaps members of their party. There were also people sitting or standing around tables and other people standing in front of the quest board or the desk. The two receptionists were quite busy logging down quests that had been accepted and delivering payments for completed quests.

“Dagny, do you know where Felman is?” I asked the receptionist after she delivered a payment to one of the Spiritualists who had just finished a quest.

“Oh, Master Eryk!” Dagny said in surprise before registering my words. “I think he’s in the storage room, checking on our supplies.”

“Thank you.”

I entered the door behind the receptionist's desk and traveled down a hallway before reaching the storage room. Just as they had said, Felman was there. He had a parchment in his hands and looked like he was studying the list and then checking the supplies to make sure everything was accounted for. I believe we just recently had a new shipment of food and alchemy pills delivered, which would explain his actions.

“Felman,” I said in greeting.

“Master Eryk.” Felman stopped working and straightened his back as he turned to me. “What can I do for you?”

The storage room was pretty large and contained numerous boxes, crates, and bags filled with a variety of different items such as alchemy pills, preserved foods like dried pasta, and equipment such as whetstones. The air was a bit stale because the room wasn’t well-ventilated. Fortunately, nothing inside of this room smelled.

“I need you to make several hundred copies of this quest and inform everyone in the sect about it.” I handed him the sheet of parchment containing the quest details. “This is a sect-assigned quest with a time limit and should be given the highest priority. I also want you to send out letters to all of our sect-mates informing them that in two days, I will have an announcement to make, and they should be present to hear it.”

Felman read over the quest details, raising an eyebrow over something before he looked back at me.

“It says here you’re paying three thousand valis for a single day of labor, and that the more days they work, the more they get paid. That’s a bit much for just digging trenches, isn’t it?”

I shook my head. “Maybe it would be under normal circumstances, but something has come up recently that makes this task incredibly important. This needs to get done. The higher the pay, the more likely our Spiritualists are to accept it. Money is not an issue.”

With several million valis to my name, even if I were to pay every Spiritualist in our guild for ten days’ worth of labor, it would still not even be a drop in the bucket.

“Well, all right.” Felman accepted my words easily enough. “I’ll get started on making copies of this quest now. I’ll write out the letters after I finish.”

“Thank you,” I said before heading back to my office.

That paperwork wasn’t going to do itself.

***

During the two days that passed, I managed to get the majority of my paperwork done, though more was always coming in. Paperwork was a never-ending battle. Fortunately, during this time, Empress Hilda had placed Nevaria in a state of emergency, so no new quests were being delivered to me at present. With no new quests, my own paperwork slowed down.

Lin continued teaching Siv how to read, write, and speak the human language. Of course, it hadn’t been that long since she began learning, so Siv still spoke in a halting voice and often corrected herself for every little mistake she made, but she was improving at a remarkable pace. Kari and Fay also helped Siv a lot. Kari had begun teaching Siv etiquette, while Fay merely spent time with her. I think she believed the Dragon girl deserved a break from all of the studying.

I did what I could to help out, but I was also busy working. The only time I could even spend with the girls was during dinner, when we took a bath, and at night.

Siv had been watching me a lot. I’d catch her staring at me whenever I was present, but she would look away when she realized I had noticed her. I thought maybe she wanted me to pay more attention to her. It made me feel bad that I had been so busy.

Perhaps because of how shy she was, Siv had yet to leave our living quarters. I didn’t want to push her, so I didn’t say anything, and it had only been three days since she arrived in Nevaria. She’d eventually have to get used to being outside and around people. For now, however, it was fine if she stayed inside like this.

After breakfast on my third day back in Nevaria, I found myself standing on a podium outside with Lin, Kari, Fay, Catalyna, Geirolf, Earland, Mykkel, Ingrid, and Bjark all lined up behind me. They were the current highest-ranking members of the Nevarian Braves. There were a few other B-Rank Spiritualists among the group, but these nine—Catalyna, Geirolf, Earland, Mykkel, Ingrid, and Bjark in particular—were also among the top-ranked in terms of the number of quests completed and their authority.

In front of me were all the Spiritualists who had joined the Nevarian Braves. They filled almost every nook and cranny of the training ground out back, a literal sea of faces and hair. Most of the people had blond or auburn hair. Those were the two most common hair colors on our continent. Their outfits varied far more greatly. The Nevarian Braves were made from a combination of nobles and mercenaries, and you could generally tell which was which based on how they dressed.

Today was the day I informed them about what was happening.

“Thank you all for coming,” I said in a voice that carried even to the very back. “I have a grave announcement to make, so be sure to listen well to what I’m about to say.”

Several people had been talking, speculating about what I had called everyone here for, no doubt, but they stopped the moment I began speaking.

I looked at the people up front. They jolted as I made eye contact with each of them. A shiver ran down their spines. Perhaps they sensed how serious I was. I wasn’t sure what face I was making, but I could imagine how scary it looked right now.

“I’m sure you’ve all noticed that no new quests are coming in. There is a reason for that. At present, a large army of Demon Beasts and intelligent humanoid creatures known as Sekbeists are heading toward Nevaria,” I announced. “Their intentions toward us are anything but benevolent. The Sekbeists are a violent race who murder and pillage everywhere they go, and they have somehow learned how to control Demon Beasts and have merged them into their army. We’ve estimated that they will arrive near our city within the next eighteen days.”

A nervous tension suddenly filled the air. People turned to each other and began talking, discussing what I had just said and wondering why they were only now hearing about it. My announcement was indeed not a pleasant one.

I waited for them to calm down before continuing.

“At this moment, Empress Hilda is creating a plan of action to deal with this threat. She has requested the help of the Nevarian Braves, and we will help her.” I paused again, but not for long. “Our current task is a sect-assigned quest made by me. We’ll be digging trenches along key traveling routes of the Demon Beast Mountain Range. This is a B-Rank quest and the pay will be three thousand valis per day worked.”

The nervous tension suddenly gave way to excitement. Three thousand valis was more money than most commoners made in a year. The average yearly living expenses for a commoner were less than a thousand valis. Even most quests accepted by our sect only paid, at most, four to five hundred valis, and those were the quests that involved several days of travel through the Demon Beast Mountain Range.

I was willing to pay so much for this quest because I wanted everyone to get on board with it, because the more people who worked on this, the faster it would get done and the better off we would be. If we could get this done within a few days, I could create another quest to have them fill these trenches with the special oil that I was having the Alchemist Association prepare.

“The quest will be handed out by my captains here.” I gestured to Kari, Lin, Fay, Bjark, Catalyna, Geirolf, Earland, Ingrid, and Mykkel. Each one of them was holding a stack of parchment. “If you wish to take part in this quest, go see them and ask for the quest details. That is all I have to say for now. Thank you for listening to me.”

I stepped down from the podium with my “captains,” who had basically been appointed due to their contributions to the sect and their overall abilities. The nine followed me as I walked.

Meanwhile, the Spiritualists who had joined us were directed to line up in front of a long table that had been set up beforehand for this moment. Anyone who wanted to take part in this quest could grab the parchment detailing the quest from one of the nine people, then take the parchment to Dagny or Eira in the lobby and have the quest logged in their name.

It looked like everyone had lined up. That was to be expected. They were going to make a lot of valis for very little work. It was basically easy money. As I stood there and watched, Felman came up to me.

“It looks like your plan worked,” he said. “Everyone is excited to work on this quest. I suspect it might even be finished within five days instead of ten with this many people working on it. What will you do now?”

“I have to write another quest to enact the next stage of our plan for dealing with the Sekbeist threat to Nevaria,” I answered as I watched people receive the quest details. “After that, I plan to visit Empress Hilda and ask her what role she would like us to play in defending Nevaria against the incoming army.”

Felman nodded as if he had already been expecting my answer. “In that case, I think I’m going to help Dagny and Eira deal with logging in these quests. If you’ll excuse me.”

With a polite bow of his head, Felman headed inside the Nevarian Braves headquarters. I watched him for a moment before turning to look at the people as they accepted the quest and traveled inside to have it logged in our quest book. Everyone looked enthusiastic about this quest. They were all smiling despite the dangerous threat looming over our heads.

A sigh escaped my lips. I had hoped no one in Nevaria would ever have to deal with the threat of the Sekbeists, but it seemed this hope was going to be dashed within less than half a month.

TRANSFER EPUB TO KINDLE DEVICE

Step-by-Step Guide to Sideload EPUB Files Purchased from Shopify onto Kindle

Amazon now supports EPUB files on Kindle, but you need to send them through Send to Kindle or convert them. Follow these steps to get your EPUB books on your Kindle.

Method 1: Send to Kindle (Recommended)

Amazon now allows you to send EPUB files directly to your Kindle via email or the Send to Kindle app.

Step 1: Find Your Kindle Email Address

Go to AmazonManage Your Content & Devices (Link).

Click the Devices tab.

Select your Kindle device and note the "Send-to-Kindle Email" (e.g., yourname@kindle.com).

Step 2: Send EPUB to Kindle via Email

Open your email client (Gmail, Outlook, etc.).

Compose a new email to your Send-to-Kindle Email.

Attach the EPUB file you purchased.

Send the email. Amazon will convert it and deliver it to your Kindle.

Alternative: Use the "Send to Kindle" App

Download the Send to Kindle App (PC, Mac).

Drag and drop the EPUB file into the app.

Select your Kindle and send it.

Method 2: USB Transfer (For Advanced Users)

This method requires converting the EPUB to Kindle’s MOBI or AZW3 format.

Step 1: Convert EPUB to MOBI or AZW3

Download Calibre (Link).

Open Calibre and add your EPUB file.

Click Convert books → Choose MOBI or AZW3 as the output format.

Click OK to convert.

Step 2: Transfer to Kindle via USB

Connect your Kindle to your PC/Mac using a USB cable.

Open the Kindle folder in File Explorer (Windows) / Finder (Mac).

Drag and drop the converted file into the Documents folder.

Eject your Kindle, and your book will appear in your library.

Bonus: Use a Third-Party App

Apps like Send to Kindle for Android/iOS or Readwise Reader can also sync EPUBs to Kindle.

Now, enjoy your book on Kindle! 📖🔥

View full details

Customer Reviews

Based on 27 reviews
93%
(25)
7%
(2)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
I
Isaac Cody
Thrilling

false

K
Kindle Customer
Aight

Another decent book if you are into this type of genre. The whole light novel thing with fighting and a little bit of sexy stuff. But I will say this series is very well written. Definitely worth it if you are into this.

A
ARmeen63
well good story

I can’t wait to see what happens next in the book series support the author. Yeah, and have a nice day

B
Bryant U
Still the series to beat!

Just enjoy reading books from this series. The story is well thought out and very entertaining. The MC continues to capture your attention, as do the women in his life. Please do yourself a favor and start reading this series if you haven't yet!

J
Jonathan Gosselin
Lots of fighting, still highly enjoyable

After a novel of buildup, war comes to Nevaria in an action-filled novel. Some reviewers might dislike the sheer amount of fighting in this volume, but considering the number of volumes in this series that have focused mainly on character development and were light on action, I was fine with it. Especially since the author also included what might be my favorite sex scene so far in the series.