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Books live. Books endure and prevail. "The strongest memory is ¨çweaker than the palest ink," says a Chinese proverb. Anatole Broyard tells us, "¨èA good book is never exhausting. It ¨égoes on whispering you from the wall." Not long ago, a woman telephoned an Atlanta library and asked, "Can you please tell me ¨êwhere is Scarlett O'Hara buried?" The librarian explained, "Scarlett O'Hara is a fictional character in Margaret Mitchell's Gone With the Wind." "Never mind that," said the caller. "I want to know where she's buried." For that reader, Scarlett O'Hara ¨ëhad been so alive that she was dead.
Even the men with the greatest minds die when the time ¨çcomes, but books never do. We read their writings and share their feelings and ideas. ¨èAs a poet pointed out, as soon as books ¨écome into being, ¨êthe words within them live.
A word is dead When it is said, Some say |
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