Chapter 776: A Father and Son Confrontation
Not understanding the words was just one part of the problem. Having spent time on Earth and Gaia, reading wasnt exactly my first choice of entertainment. A movie or animation were by far better choices.
Meaning I couldnt be bothered to read a book written in a foreign language, and I wasnt about to use psychic magicks on Aivar to learn said language.
No problem, this book was made to cater to both Human and Elvish. Having said that, Aivar flipped open the first page, revealing two rows of starkly different words printed neatly above or below each other. Of the two, the bottom row was the familiar language of the Western Human Realms.
Dont you want to read it yourself?
Ive read it many times, and this particular book was meant as a gift, even though I did not actually have someone in mind to gift this book to before Nana visited. Honestly, it has already been fifty years since I had this book, during which I never found a single person I felt deserved this book.
Makes sense why would she carry around a book with Human on it, obviously it was meant to be given to a human. Still, 50 years just to give out a book is definitely something Elves being elves, I say!
In that case, Ill be sure to read through it carefully, thanks.
In an entertainment-starved, medieval-like world, a book created solely for telling a story was definitely a luxury, let alone when this book was a product of the Nature Elves!
Throughout the entire realm, such books were basically the monopoly of the long-lived Nature Elves. After all, only they had the time required to expand on such unnecessary endeavors -even their weapons were intricately decorated with carvings all of them!
Truly, they had too much time on their hands! But what would you expect from a race that could make their trees bear fruit just by feeding it mana? Completely different from Humans who had to walk that tightrope between life and death.
But returning back to this book, such gifts were a rarity, both for their ornate covers and just the sheer infrequency of elves actually gifting such books. On the black market, these could easily fetch hundreds of thousands of gold coins to the right buyer.
Just based on that fact, one could see how generous Aivar was. Or at the very least, she was willing to give away such a highly prized book to someone she had just met.
Remember to come find me if theres something you dont know~~
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