![]() ![]() ![]() Ludmilla says that the reader should go to the publishing house alone she won't join him because she thinks seeing how books are created will somehow ruin them for her. Ludmilla again asserts what kind of book she would like to read, saying this time, "The novel I would most like to read.should have as its driving force only the desire to narrate, to pile stories upon stories, without trying to impose a philosophy of life on you" (92). ![]() The reader suggests that they go to the publishing house to clarify the misprinting issues and perhaps get full versions of all the stories they've begun reading. Ludmilla and the reader go to a cafe together to talk about their situation. Lotaria tells him that they don't have the rest of the story because it has been split between multiple study groups. In contrast to the students, the reader would like to continue reading the story. Lotaria's classmates begin to discuss the story Without fear of wind or vertigo through various academic lenses such as sexuality and economics. ![]() The story returns to the classroom where Lotaria's university seminar is taking place. ![]()
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