and i have the only book that i could read, for some reason it was serhiy osoka's book, three lines for maria, i don't understand, probably it's because it's connected with some kind of very deep, childlike peace, yes, and that's it, it's such an escapist thing that i could dive into these stories once and disconnect from the networks and stay somewhere, rest and go for a walk, and this was already in the first weeks, that is, i took it that way. and as if i switched off and returned to reality, that is , for some reason this was the only book for me, somehow yes, it happened, we have one study, i am always very interested in the fact that ukrainians began to read more during the war, and we have statistics provided by the ukrainian institute, it is a comparison of the 20th year and on the 23rd, if... if in the 20th year 8% of people read, and this is a terribly simple number, 8% of all read, then on the 23rd, 19, and this is a paper book in the ukrainian language, so on the one hand i i look at this 19 and it seems that it is good compared to eight, but they are compared with germany,