

seers invades the city, determined to claim it for their own Mac’s former protégé and best friend, Dani “Mega” O’Malley, is now her fierce enemy and even more urgent, Highland druid Christian MacKeltar has been captured by the Crimson Hag and is being driven deeper into Unseelie madness with each passing day. Seelie and Unseelie vie for power against nine ancient immortals who have governed Dublin for millennia a rival band of As the city heats up and the ice left by the Hoar Frost King melts, tempers flare, passions run red-hot, and dangerous lines get crossed. Now Dublin is a war zone with factions battling for control. When the wall that protected humans from the seductive, insatiable Fae was destroyed on Halloween, long-imprisoned immortals ravaged the planet. an ancient book of terrible evil-yet its hold on her has never been stronger. seer, she’s already fought and defeated the deadly

MacKayla Lane would do anything to save the home she loves. MacKayla Lane and Jericho Barrons return in the blockbuster Fever series from Karen Marie Moning. “Mac is back and badder than ever!”-J.In this episode of Arts Unveiled, filmmaker Susanne Spröer sets forth to investigate why the idea to burn books took hold at universities across Germany in 1933. The Nazis replaced the Weimar Republic’s once vibrant culture with Nazi propaganda and a carefully tailored concept of what they wanted "German culture” to be.

Numerous writers were forced to go into exile, while many of those who stayed in Germany were imprisoned or murdered.

But books of political dissidents were also burned. Image: akg-images/picture-allianceĪfter Hitler seized power in January 1933, on 10th May of that same year, tens of thousands of books were burned in more than twenty cities in Germany. Authoritative regimes - such as those currently in power in Russia and Iran -do everything in their power to suppress freedom of art and expression to uphold their repressive systems. To this day, dictators continue to fear the power of free speech and uncensored artistic expression. "Where they burn books, they will also ultimately burn people.” More than 160 years after his death, this quote by the German poet Heinrich Heine is still relevant.
