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鸦羽会:血色婚纱
Moore
When forensic doctor Lin Xia witnesses her fiancé Lu Chen revealing his true appearance as a vampire in the fitting room, the gears of fate begin to turn in the opposite direction. She discovered that she could recall the scene of death by touching the corpse, and all clues pointed to the mysterious organization that collapsed a hundred years ago.
When forensic doctor Lin Xia witnesses her fiancé Lu Chen revealing his true appearance as a vampire in the fitting room, the gears of fate begin to turn in the opposite direction. She discovered that she could recall the scene of death by touching the corpse, and all clues pointed to the mysterious organization that collapsed a hundred years ago.

You Will Eventually Fly Far Away
Young Adult你终将飞向远方
Moore
She allowed me to meet her, gave me a name, and made me understand what love is, but I knew that she did not belong to me.
She allowed me to meet her, gave me a name, and made me understand what love is, but I knew that she did not belong to me.

Legacy of Barbarism
Literature蛮性的遗留
Moore
"The Legacy of Barbarism" is a popular ethics book by American anthropologist J. H. Moore. He "first studied the legacy of wildness in domestic animals, and then in humans", allowing us to see that our human behavior is not regulated by God, but is often quite similar to our four-legged cousins. This is the "legacy of barbarism". The evolution from wild animals to domestic animals, from savages to civilized people, is a long process of overcoming savagery. Moore said: "Civilization is a train. It drags with it a lot of things that belong to ancient times - not just residual instincts, but also residual customs, beliefs, concepts and systems." In order to create a more advanced civilization, human beings need to develop conscience and overcome all the remaining drag of the old. This is the most important revelation this book gives us.
"The Legacy of Barbarism" is a popular ethics book by American anthropologist J. H. Moore. He "first studied the legacy of wildness in domestic animals, and then in humans", allowing us to see that our human behavior is not regulated by God, but is often quite similar to our four-legged cousins. This is the "legacy of barbarism". The evolution from wild animals to domestic animals, from savages to civilized people, is a long process of overcoming savagery. Moore said: "Civilization is a train. It drags with it a lot of things that belong to ancient times - not just residual instincts, but also residual customs, beliefs, concepts and systems." In order to create a more advanced civilization, human beings need to develop conscience and overcome all the remaining drag of the old. This is the most important revelation this book gives us.