While in this location, a character identifies several objects in need of “a little rhubarb to purge their excess of bile.” When a woman enters this location, she rushes out and returns with holy water and a sprinkler to exorcise the spirits. A seated man in this location with raised arm and surrounded by various creatures appears above a caption about a “world of disorderly notions” in an engraving by Gustave Doré. That man is told by his (*) niece that a magician entered this location in a cloud and stole from it in order to conceal the real reason that the entrance to this place has been plastered shut. Tirant lo Blanch is spared when a priest and a barber set fire to many objects from this location in an attempt to end a man’s delusions of grandeur. For 10 points, the book La Galatea is found in what room owned by a knight-errant in a Miguel de Cervantes novel? ■END■
ANSWER: Don Quixote’s library [or Don Quixote’s study; accept equivalents such as the library in Don Quixote; prompt on library or study by asking “belonging to whom?”; prompt on Don Quixote’s house or equivalents]
<Morrison, Long Fiction>
= Average correct buzz position