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There is no single right answer to this question, book, or movie.
Books spark imagination, enrich vocabulary, and experience each new story firsthand, page by page.
A good movie is not only a visual enjoyment, but also a spiritual enjoyment, enjoying the performances of the actors and the scenes. What other possibilities have modern computer graphics opened up!
This time we asked people in Panevěž which book or film had the greatest impression and influence on their personality?

Laurinas Valkinas
director
I often think back to director Terrence Malick’s 2019 film A Hidden Life .
He is one of the directors who inspired me: entering the world of this film is like entering a church. The film tells the story of Franz Jagstadt, an Austrian martyr who was killed during World War II for refusing to serve and swearing allegiance to Hitler.
Living in a seemingly idyllic Austrian countryside, Franz became an outcast and later fell into the hands of Nazi torturers. Taking an oath of allegiance would have saved Franco’s life and allowed him to return to his family, but he was ultimately convicted and shot.
This is the story of a man who, in a world maddened by war, says, “I cannot do what I think is wrong. If God has given me free will, I am responsible for what I do.”
Director Terrence Malick draws on the earliest Christian stories in his film, telling the story of the martyr Franco almost prophetically, just as the world grows in the madness and tension of war.

Albina Saradounette
Gabrielė Petkevičaitė-Bitė, Librarian of Panevėžys County
Jane Eyre fascinates me. I always cry when I watch the movie, and every year I reread the novel of the same name by British writer Charlotte Bronte, and that work resonates with me every time.
Even though this movie has changed several generations of actors, it still remains special to me.
Two novels haunted my childhood: Ivan Turgenev’s “Night” about how to be kind to others, and “Jane Eyre” by Sh. Bronte, which impressed me not only the great love of the girl with a tragic fate for Roger, but also her strong spirit and strong will – shaping my ideals. When I wanted to read, but couldn’t read anything, I picked up “Jane Eyre” again.
My personality has also been influenced by Shatriya Ragana’s works. I literally fainted when I read her book “In the Old Manor”. Shatriya Ragana left a vast world in her works.
Gabrielė Petkevičaitė-Bitė’s work also left a special mark. She was born with the talent of a journalist and reacted accurately to everything, and she was allowed to study journalism back then! She was concerned about the morality of society, especially young people, and for Bee, it was different from what happened in society, what young people looked like, how they behaved.
The two women – G. Petkevičaitė-Bitė and Šatrijos Ragana – seem to have embraced Lithuania: one in Zemaitia, the other in Oktaitia. They seem to think there is no statute of limitations.

Justus Yassans
priest
I have been friends with books since I was a child, first with fairy tales, then with ballads, poems, spells and legends.
The ironic, selfish, girlish Cičinskas, painful and unfulfilled love stories of Jūrate and Kastytis, Neringa and Naglis come alive in memory.
School bench and became familiar with the poetry of Alma Karosaitė, Vytautė Žilinskaitė, Violeta Palčinskaitė, Ramutė Skučaitė.
The illustrations by artists of the time were very effective, eloquent and easy to understand. On my childhood bookshelf, my own works were arranged like this: “Mushroom Wars” by Justin Marcinkevičius, “The Fairy House Standing”, “Sugar Lamb” by Petros Chivilkas, followed by works by foreign authors: “Panama is very beautiful.” “Robinson Cruz” by Horst Eckert, “Robinson Cruz” by Daniel Defoe and “Captain for Fifteen Years” by Julio Verne.
The book “Isa slėnis” by Česlov Miloš, given to me by the poet Elvyra Pažemeckaitė, had a huge impact, and we waded with the poet along the Nevėzis, through the bushes and tall grass, and visited the places where Miloš himself spent his childhood. It was very impressive. I even thought for a moment that the book was also about my childhood and family environment.
I don’t follow any trends, I don’t follow fashion. While everyone was buzzing and frantic reading books by Kristina Sabaliauskaitė, I was most calm reading Juozas Baltušis. When Myronis intervened, I got tired of castles surrounded by mold and lichens, I read novels by Sigitas Paluskis or Richard Gavier. Sometimes I let myself read poems by Julius Janonis. And then it was time to go to Birž and look around. Or the other way around – I wandered around Zidike and Uzventi, taking pictures. When I came back, I realized that I needed to reread “The Old Manor” by Satria Witch while crying.
Books help me to know, to meet, to understand each other, to make friends. Sometimes it happens like a sign. Even this year I got to communicate with Algimantas Kaminskas, Vytautas Žilinskaitas, Nijole Sadūnaitis, wow… Memories, autographs, their books, feelings. I may have to come back and check it out.
As a child, I used to watch the American series “Little House on the Prairie”, and with my family and neighbors, we never missed an episode of the German crime series “The Old Man”. We dropped all our work and affairs and watched the Lithuanian “Gimines” and later “Atžalas” with our noses glued to the screen. My favorite movies: “Tadas Blinda”, “Niekas nenorejo mirti”, “Virto žuolai”, “Redwood Paradise” and “A Woman and Her Four Husbands”. I could also add the American love-war drama “Pearl Harbor”, “Elsie of Gilia”, “Emilia of Liberty Avenue”, “The Poet”. These are the movies that moved me. Bring tears to my eyes and make me think. I am also interested in the works of Janina Lapinskaitė, Algimantas Puipa, Šarūnas Bartas. But I am more of a reader. I devote the autumn and winter seasons to quiet, slow reading and thinking.
Sometimes it just happens. We were sitting with friends in Dijevaniskos, the center of Lithuania. They were carrying vodka, matches and fuel, and I found a couple of poetry books by Justinas Marcinkevičius and Salomea Neris on the book exchange. It was unfashionable and perhaps even dangerous to deal with such names and books. And for the old boy that was me, that was it, I took it and smiled happily all the way home.
Viktorija Daujotytė’s book “When You Write You Are Not Afraid” is coming out soon. An autobiographical text”, which I’m really looking forward to. When I get there, I’ll still have time to read Česlov Juršėnas’s “Mosaic of a Boring Life”.
The works of Lithuanian writers are dear and close to me. I find everything I need there without difficulty. There is nothing to belittle, to shrink, to be shy, to stutter. I have created the standard of authors and works, I no longer change or expand it. Prose writers: Vytautas Bubnys, Juozas Aputis, the two Romualds – Granauskas and Lankauskas, poets: S. Nėris, Vytautas Macernis and Paulius Širvys. All literature comes from life, is about life, about human affairs, expectations, hopes, happiness, collapse, failure, endings.

Deva Tankunath
Panevėžys V. Mikalauskas Art Stadium Project Manager, Tour Guide, Lecturer
My experience is that it all relates to my work and travel. I really like to read about the places I am going to before or after my trip. I remember picking up Victoria Hislop’s book The Island before I went to Crete. It told about the island where the lepers were taken, and about life in Greece. The book opened up another world for me. Books give you the key to some secret or information you didn’t understand. Smallpox. What is it? When will they end? This island in Crete is visible from many five-star hotels. There is also a ferry to get to.
This summer, when I went to Latvia on the Baltic Sea, I took The Sea by Alessandro Baric. It was a very good choice for me. Each of us has a unique relationship with the sea. The main idea of the book was like the key to my vacation: it would be great if all rivers led to the sea. In other words, it would be great if our lives were so wonderful.
I also like autobiographical books. One of them is “My Father Chagall” by Gloria Godrech. A very talented artist with some connection to Vilnius. The book reveals his creativity, the relationship between parents and children.
I haven’t read a Lithuanian author for a long time. Right now, I’m waiting in line at the library for Danutė Kalinauskaitė’s “Whites Before Blacks”. I have Bronius Radzevičius’s “The Road to Dawn”. This novel is a cult book for me.
Sometimes the knowledge you read is also useful in practice. We went to China. I read a novel about China during the trip. We had a lot of questions that the local guide couldn’t answer. You asked what flowers were in bloom – the famous cherry blossoms, plums or peaches? What sticks with sugar they sell? After reading about it in the book at night, I could tell my travel friends that it was a Chinese dessert.
There are all kinds of courses nowadays – writing, reading, speaking, etc. But the foundation of everything is reading. That’s how vocabulary and ideas are formed. The word is powerful in every sense of the word. I read somewhere a great idea: having a library at home will have a positive impact on children’s lives even if they don’t read.
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