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Stories
123
Chapters
6,871
Words
19.7 M
Comments
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Reading
68 d, 13 h
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The chapter opens with siblings Jutta and Werner discovering a length of copper wire in a creek near their home. Jutta insists Werner swear an oath before they take it, hinting at the clandestine nature of their project. They rig the wire to their radio, transforming it into an antenna that pulls in distant broadcasts. Their first capture is a foreign language transmission, sparking their curiosity about faraway places like Hungary, which Werner estimates is a thousand kilometers away. This moment marks…
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392.9 K • Ongoing
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The chapter follows six-year-old Marie-Laure LeBlanc, a visually impaired girl in Paris, as she joins a children's tour of the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, led by a hunchbacked guide. The group explores various exhibits, including a dinosaur fossil, a taxidermied giraffe, and herbarium sheets, before arriving at the Gallery of Mineralogy. Here, they encounter agate, amethysts, and a meteorite, but the tour culminates at a mysterious iron door. The guide tantalizes the children with hints of a…
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392.9 K • Ongoing
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The chapter "Take Us Home" explores the relationship between Marie-Laure and her father, focusing on his efforts to help her navigate the world despite her blindness. He creates intricate wooden puzzle boxes for her birthdays, which she solves with remarkable skill, uncovering hidden trinkets like bracelets or chocolate. These puzzles symbolize his dedication to fostering her independence and problem-solving abilities. However, his detailed model of their neighborhood initially confuses Marie-Laure, as it…
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392.9 K • Ongoing
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The chapter "Bigger Faster Brighter" depicts Werner's life in a state-mandated youth program, where boys are indoctrinated into a culture of discipline, competition, and nationalistic fervor. Daily routines consist of rigorous physical training, academic drills, and chores, leaving Werner exhausted and irritable. Despite the oppressive environment, he finds solace in his passion for mechanics and radio repair, often staying up late to study or tinker with machines. His ingenuity shines as he invents…
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392.9 K • Ongoing
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The chapter opens on Werner's fourteenth birthday in May 1940, set against the backdrop of a Germany increasingly dominated by Nazi ideology. Despite the grim times, Frau Elena prepares a pudding, and Jutta gifts him a piece of quartz wrapped in newspaper. The children, including the Gerlitz twins and a sleepy five-year-old Rolf, engage in playful soldier impersonations, while a baby girl sits contentedly in Jutta's lap. Outside, the flame atop the waste stack flickers ominously, hinting at the industrial…
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392.9 K • Ongoing
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The chapter opens in November 1939 at the Jardin des Plantes in Paris, where Marie-Laure, a blind girl, is engrossed in reading *Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea*. Her peaceful moment is shattered when a group of boys taunt her with cruel remarks about blind girls being targeted during wartime. Their menacing words and laughter leave Marie-Laure frightened and disoriented, struggling to retrieve her dropped cane. The encounter underscores her vulnerability and the growing tension in the city as war…
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392.9 K • Ongoing
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Werner and Jutta, siblings living in a coal town, repeatedly tune into a mysterious Frenchman’s radio broadcasts, which air around bedtime. The programs cover a range of scientific topics, from sea creatures to the North Pole, with Jutta favoring one on magnets and Werner drawn to a segment about light. The Frenchman’s explanation of the electromagnetic spectrum captivates Werner, who marvels at the idea that most light is invisible. These broadcasts become a nightly ritual, offering the children a…
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392.9 K • Ongoing
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The chapter "Rumors" captures the growing unease in Paris as whispers of the approaching German forces permeate the Jardin des Plantes and the museum where Marie-Laure and her father live. The rumors, ranging from absurd to ominous, circulate among the locals—claims of invincible German soldiers, fog pills, and poisoned chocolate. Marie-Laure, a blind girl, listens intently to these stories, while her father dismisses them, insisting that the political tensions will not escalate into war. Despite the…
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392.9 K • Ongoing
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The chapter "Fade" explores Marie-Laure's internal conflict between rational thought and superstition as she reflects on the legend of the Sea of Flames. Initially, she questions whether the cursed diamond truly exists or if it’s merely a myth, echoing her father’s scientific worldview that dismisses curses as mere coincidence. Her father’s return to normalcy—joking with colleagues and resuming errands—reinforces this perspective, as no supernatural calamities befall them. Marie-Laure’s…
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392.9 K • Ongoing
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The chapter opens with a tense visit from a vice minister and his wife to Children’s House, an orphanage where Werner and his sister Jutta reside. The children, eager to impress, serve a meal on their best plates while the visitors inspect the premises with detached scrutiny. Werner, preoccupied with his treasured book *The Principles of Mechanics*, sits apart, lost in thought about the wonders of electricity and magnetism. The scene underscores the contrast between the children’s hopeful anticipation…
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392.9 K • Ongoing
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