testsuphomeAdmin

    Stories 123
    Chapters 6,871
    Words 19.7 M
    Comments 0
    Reading 68 days, 13 hours68 d, 13 h
    • Boulangerie Cover
      by testsuphomeAdmin Werner returns to a French house with blue-trimmed windows, haunted by fantasies of meeting the resident—a former broadcaster—and bonding over shared intellectual pursuits. However, he knows the reality is grim: the old man would likely fear arrest or execution for possessing a radio antenna. Torn between duty and curiosity, Werner rehearses a French greeting, hoping to appear nonthreatening. As he lingers in the fog, the door opens, but instead of the expected scientist, a blind girl emerges, her…
    • Edge of the World Cover
      by testsuphomeAdmin The chapter opens with Werner and Volkheimer traveling in an Opel truck, where Volkheimer reads a letter from Werner's sister, Jutta. The letter contains mundane updates from home, including a note of congratulations from a mining official and Frau Elena's smoking habits. Meanwhile, Werner is haunted by a hallucination of a red-haired child floating above the road, a spectral presence that follows him relentlessly. This ghostly figure, with its unblinking bullet hole, symbolizes the trauma and guilt Werner…
    • Grotto Cover
      by testsuphomeAdmin The chapter opens with a dramatic scene where a German antiair battery shoots down an American plane off the coast of Paramé. The captured pilot becomes a topic of conversation in the town, with Madame Ruelle admiring his appearance while Etienne views the event as a tragedy. Marie-Laure, the blind protagonist, remains hopeful as she senses the Americans advancing and the Germans weakening. Her daily routine includes reading *Twenty Thousand Leagues* to Etienne, a ritual that mirrors their own uncertain…
    • The Beams Cover
      by testsuphomeAdmin The chapter "The Beams" depicts a tense moment during an artillery bombardment, with Werner and Volkheimer sheltering in a cellar. Shells explode overhead, shaking the foundations as Werner imagines the meticulous calculations of the American artillerymen—cold, precise, and detached, much like divine intervention. The scene underscores the dehumanizing nature of war, where destruction is reduced to numbers and coordinates. Amid the chaos, Volkheimer shares a story about his great-grandfather, a sawyer…
    • Big Claude Cover
      by testsuphomeAdmin The chapter opens with von Rumpel, a determined and calculating figure, visiting Levitte the perfumer, who is portrayed as self-important and physically unappealing. Von Rumpel struggles to maintain his composure amid the overpowering scents of the shop, while inwardly reflecting on his recent facade of inspecting art collections along the Breton coast. His true purpose for being there remains concealed, hinting at a deeper mission. The perfumer’s obsequious demeanor and fleeting attention to von…
    • Numbers Cover
      by testsuphomeAdmin The chapter opens with a vivid depiction of wartime chaos as Allied bombs destroy the rail station and German forces disable harbor installations. Etienne, the protagonist, hears rumors of nearby American advances and impending liberation, creating a tense atmosphere. He visits Madame Ruelle’s bakery, where she urgently tasks him with gathering coordinates for German flak batteries to aid the resistance. The urgency of the mission is underscored by the imminent threat of German forces interning all…
    • The Girl Cover
      by testsuphomeAdmin Werner is haunted by the image of a mysterious girl with a cane, whose fearless demeanor and ethereal presence linger in his mind. She becomes a living contrast to the ghost of a Viennese girl that torments him at night. He wonders about her identity—whether she is the daughter or granddaughter of the French broadcaster—and questions why she is being put in danger. Meanwhile, Werner and his unit, led by Volkheimer, patrol villages near the Rance River, with Werner growing increasingly paranoid about…
    • Little House Cover
      by testsuphomeAdmin The chapter "Little House" depicts Marie-Laure's confined existence under her uncle Etienne's protection during wartime. Haunted by nightmares of a menacing German officer, she feels relief at being barred from going outside, though their food supplies dwindle to nearly nothing. Etienne braves the outside world to fetch bread, returning each time visibly shaken. Marie-Laure grapples with persistent interrogations about her father's mysterious activities, recalling how authorities questioned her about his…
    • Sea of Flames Cover
      by testsuphomeAdmin Marie-Laure grapples with the weight of the legendary "Sea of Flames" diamond, a gem rumored to grant eternal life to its keeper while bringing misfortune to those they love. As she handles the multifaceted stone, she questions whether it caused her father’s arrest, the disappearance of Harold Bazin, and Madame Manec’s death. Memories of Dr. Geffard’s warnings about its cursed history haunt her, yet she struggles to reconcile the stone’s mythical power with rationality. Torn between discarding it…
    • Agoraphobia Cover
      by testsuphomeAdmin The chapter "Agoraphobia" from *All the Light We Cannot See* focuses on Etienne's growing anxiety as he waits for Marie-Laure to return from her usual trip to the bakery and the sea. Normally, her outing takes 21 minutes, but this time, she exceeds the expected duration, triggering Etienne's fear and paranoia. He imagines worst-case scenarios—her getting lost, injured, or discovered for her clandestine activities involving bread and a transmitter. His mind spirals into panic, envisioning the bakery in…
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