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Clovis 2022-04-06 09:01:07
thank you for understanding me
I cried twice, once when the male protagonist was angry to death in order to help the female protagonist to talk to the bad boss, and once when the little girl set fire to a bookstore that no longer belonged to the female protagonist. The age difference does not hinder the meeting of interesting...
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Gerry 2022-04-19 09:03:15
The reason why I left a claw in the plot is because the scenery is so beautiful.
Hardborg is a town built on an island between the ocean and a river. In Christine Gipping's memories, the town seems to be afraid of the cold and wet sea breeze, and always guards itself. Even in 1959 (Christine was still in elementary school), it seemed that the only communication in the town with...

Gary Piquer
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Rebeka 2022-04-03 09:01:12
The man who loved the book burned the title page of the book, and the girl who didn't love the book took the book out of the fire. The lonely manor conveys the scent of ink that is thirsty for knowledge, and the damp old house is filled with souls who will not be lonely. The manor is surrounded by gossip, and the old house is greedy. She wore a garnet-colored dress and received strange stares at parties. She repaired the bookstore and, like Lolita, suffered from the town's ill-intentioned slander. Although she lost, she left that day with her head held high like a warrior.
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Francisca 2022-04-10 09:01:08
Ray Bradbury Love...one star for this Lolita 451 ending
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Edmund Brundish: Old age is not the same thing as historical interest. Otherwise you and I would be far more interesting than we are.
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General Gamart: You seem to think I'm an outrageous person. Is that it?
Edmund Brundish: I can't answer that question "yes" or "no". I suspect that by "outrageous" you mean "unexpectedly offensive". And the truth is that you have been fairly offensive, but also - repulsive, Mrs. Gamart. That is, you have behaved exactly as I expected.