(...)"ON READING A FEW years ago several European newspapers offered prizes for a list of the best one hundred books for a first-class library. The answers poured in: the Bible and "Robinson Crusoe," Homer and Horace, Dante and Shakespeare, Holberg and Oehlenschlager, Goethe and Mickiewitz, Racine and Pascal, Arany and Petofi, Cervantes and Calderon, Bjornson and Ibsen, Tegner and Runeberg, — each list characteristic of the country and the individual taste of the correspondent. It is childish to suppose that a hundred books can be named as those which are the best for each and every one.The simplest experience of the world proves that a work of great excellence may deeply move one person, while it leaves another untouched; and that a book which has influenced one strongly in one's youth may lose such influence over one's later(...)"
Solve a murder, save her mother, and stop the apocalypse? No problem. She has a foul-mouthed troll on her side. For Austin homicide detective Leira Berens, happy is running down bad guys and solving crimes. And she’s damn good at it. Which is why when the Light Elf prince is murdered, the king breaks a centuries old treaty and crosses between worlds to seek her help. Wait a min...
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