About this deal
Peter Kien, the protagonist in Auto-da-Fé by Elias Canetti. Kien's obsession with his personal library leads to the destruction of his marriage, his happiness, and ultimately the library itself. so does she with humanity. in my eyes, alice never truly expirienced the outside world, but took her understanding of her own world into it. by that i mean, she didnt truly live in it, only learned about it, so in that sense she might as well have never left her palace.
Bartlett, Allison Hoover (2009). The Man Who Loved Books Too Much: The True Story of a Thief, a Detective, and a World of Literary Obsession. New York: Riverhead Trade. A Book Thief.; A Providence Preacher's Strange Transactions In Rare Volumes". The New York Times. 1881-07-28 . Retrieved 2010-04-26.Leisel Meminger, the protagonist in The Book Thief, a nine-year-old who steals a grave diggers handbook beginning her obsession with books. [12]
There are more things to mention, like the visual analogies it does for each character and the way the story is unfolding, but I'm not smart enough to talk about these things without major spoilers on the story.Bungled Suicide: In the real world, the Judge was a student who was bullied by another classmate of his into hanging himself. It didn't work. The Art style is just *chefs kiss* It's unique; impeccable linework; expressive both when the art style goes maximalist as well as subdued and minimal and this mangaka KNOWs how to paint a character in a certain light.