Category: Saturday Miscellany Page 6 of 25

Saturday Miscellany—11/25/23

I’ve thrown this up on a couple of the social media platforms, but I thought I’d ask here, too. I’ve been using Evernote for drafting blog posts, to-do lists, shopping lists, mental notes, etc. for over a decade–but I need a replacement. Any recommendations?

Moving along to the point of this post, the miscellany:

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet Censoring Kids’ Worlds: Laurie Hertzel on the Danger of Banning Books for Children
bullet Exclusive Cover Reveal of “Loose of Earth” by Kathleen Dorothy Blackburn: We spoke to the designer and the author about the design process for the book—Yup. I’m still a sucker for a look at cover design
bullet Your definitive guide to Goodreads ratings. (Or: why does your favorite book have 3 stars?)—probably my favorite link of the week (no disrespect to any of the others)
bullet Using Popular Culture in Crime Fiction by Lee Goldberg
bullet Audiobooks Have Taken Over My Life, and I Love It—many of us can relate, no?
bullet #R3COMM3ND3D2023 continues, so I continue linking to them (and adding to my TBR):
bullet …with Sam Johnson of My Cosy Book Nook
bullet …with Mags of @magslouisethebookworm
bullet …with Anne Coates, author of the Hannah Weybridge series
bullet …with Karen of Hair Past A Freckle
bullet …with Yvonne of The Coycaterpillar Reads
bullet …with Deb of dds_book_reviews
bullet …with Babs Wilkie of Book Escapes with BabsW67
bullet Vote Now for Fantasy-Faction’s Best SFF Books of 2023!—looking forward to these results
bullet When You Don’t Feel Like a “Real” Bookworm
bullet Let’s Discuss Bookworms vs Readers and Bookish Phobias

A Book-ish Related Podcast episode (or two) you might want to give a listen to:
bullet Patrick Rothfuss interview: Part two (of three)—Grimdark Magazine’s overgrown interview with National Treasure, Patrick Rothfuss

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to JK Joy, who followed the blog this week. I hope you enjoy the content and keep coming back.
Meme showing a room covered in bookshelves with the caption Adults Need More Book Forts

Saturday Miscellany—11/18/23

3 weeks in a row posting in the afternoon? I’m not crazy about this trend… Don’t really have anything to say, just getting that off my chest. Hopefully, I get my act together.

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet Why We Need Public Libraries Now More than Ever: Who needs libraries, anyway? Turns out, we all do.
bullet The Low Down on the Greatest Dictionary Collection in the World
bullet What Does Being “well-read” Look Like to You? Dismantling Elitism in Reading Spaces—hard to argue against this (although I realize I just invited some to do so…)
bullet Inheritance of Magic – Series Health—Benedict Jacka talks about early sales/reviews of his new series and compares it to Alex Verus
bullet It’s that time of year:
bullet The CrimeReads 2023 Holiday Gift Guide: 30+ cozy, mystery-ish, book-adjacent gifts for your crime-obsessed loved ones!—some interesting ideas here. Incidentally, if any family members are reading this—I would wear both caps very frequently (particularly the one while flying).
bullet 33 Bookish Gifts for Every Reader on Your Holiday List—from NetGalley’s We are Bookish
bullet Pay It Forward: Fahrenheit Book Bank—Doing this is just one of the things that makes Fahrenheit one of my favorites
bullet This Week’s Punctuation Power Rankings
bullet The Books That Keep Us Company for Decades—Molly Templeton’s latest
bullet It’s time to check in on #R3COMM3ND3D2023 as it recaps favorites from 2023:
bullet …with Bookstagrammer Louise Geoghegan of LouiseReads_UK
bullet …with Kate of The Quick and the Read
bullet …with Bookstagrammer Lynda Checkley of @lyndas_bookreviews
bullet ..with HC, The Irresponsible Reader—who let him opine?
bullet …with Author Joy Kluver
bullet …with Hayley of The Lotus Readers
bullet …with Lynne of Fictionophile
bullet Are you making art or making a product?—a related question for us non-authors: are we reading art or a product?
bullet My Literary DNA—oh, this is good
bullet Short Books You Can Read In A Day
bullet 4 years of Spells & Spaceships: the journey so far and my 10 favourite books.—Only 4?
bullet I Am Pro Prologues!—hear, hear!
bullet Ten Books about Books—a nice little list to work through (I’ve read one from this list, so plenty for me to work on )
bullet M&M’s choose my tbr for December—I love this concept

A Book-ish Related Podcast episode (or two) you might want to give a listen to:
bullet SFF Addicts Ep. 79: Jim Butcher talks The Olympian Affair, The Dresden Files, Mentors, Cats & More—am sure no one is surprised that I enjoyed the heck out of this
bullet An Interview With Patrick Rothfuss—not technically a podcast, but I’m putting this interview from Grimdark Magazine here anyway. Also, I haven’t watched yet–but how can it be anything but good?

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet The Narrow Road Between Desires by Patrick Rothfuss—I cannot wait to dive into this novella about Bast (the character I’m least interested in from the series), because I will take any new Rothfuss I can get.
bullet The Great Gimmelmans by Lee Matthew Goldberg—”Middle child Aaron Gimmelman watches as his family goes from a mild-mannered reform Jewish clan to having over a million dollars of stolen money stuffed in their RV’s cabinets while being pursued by the FBI and loan sharks.”
bullet The Secret by Lee Child and Andrew Child—back to 1992 to see MP Reacher at work. I’m trying to get hyped about this, but the fact that I’m #80 or so on the Library’s wait list doesn’t bother me at all suggests I just can’t.
bullet The Lost Cause by Cory Doctorow—Something tells me I’m going to have significant problems with some of this book, but the premise (that I won’t try to summarize here) intrigues me

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to Amy Rice, who followed the blog this week. I hope you enjoy the content and keep coming back.
Reading books would only be boring if you lack imagination.

Saturday Miscellany—11/11/23

We’ve got a bumper-crop of new books this week, and a few other things that show me more than my memory does how little time I spent online this week.

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet Book bans backfiring? Study reveals increased readership for prohibited books
bullet Is Traditional Fiction Publishing Broken?
bullet What’s the Future of Books? Amid historic disruption in the publishing industry, big questions are—rightfully—being asked. Here, experts weigh in on how books (and the ways we discover them) are going to change.
bullet No, I Don’t Want to Join Your Book Club—some non-traditional book clubs
bullet Has It Ever Been Harder to Make a Living As An Author?
bullet Book Thieves Take the Story and Run with It
bullet #R3COMM3ND3D2023 continues to look at favorites from 2023:
bullet …with Nicki Mags of Secret Library Book Blog
bullet …with Karen Kingston of KarenKisreading
bullet …with Author Rachel Sargeant
bullet …Gill of A Good Book ‘n a Brew
bullet …with Joanne of Portobello Book Blog
bullet …with Carol of Reading Ladies
bullet …with Davida Chazan of The Chocolate Lady’s Book Review Blog
bullet Witty and Sarcastic Book Club’s Dragon Week wrapped up this week, so you can read all of the goodness there now.
bullet To celebrate the publication of Femme Fae-Tales anthology, Peat Long conducted Femme Fae-Tales Interviews with all of the authors, like this one.
bullet An Important Reminder from Chuck Wendig

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Partial Function by JCM Berne—”If Taken starred Michelle Yeoh and was set on a Jurassic Park-inspired Cradle.” As I said recently, I had a lot of fun with this concept and its execution
bullet Resurrection Walk by Michael Connelly—Mickey Haller + Bosch. I’m sure there’s more to say, but who cares beyond that?
bullet The Olympian Affair by Jim Butcher—Yes, it took Butcher an eon to give us the second Cinder Spires book, but something tells me most readers will forgive him for that once we get to dive in.
bullet Noodle Conquers Comfy Mountain by Jonathan Graziano, illustrated by Dan Tavis—this follow-up to Noodle and the No Bones Day is aDORable. I’ll have more to say about it soon (mostly consisting of rephrasing of that sentence).
bullet Calico by Lee Goldberg—a murder mystery and a Western in modern California. That’s really all I know so far, but I can’t wait to learn more.
bullet Chaos Terminal by Mur Lafferty—a murder among a new batch of human visitors to the sentient space station, a conflict between alien races, and an attack from without? Things don’t get boring in this Midsolar Murder sequel.
bullet Bookshops & Bonedust by Travis Baldree—this prequel to Legends & Lattes contains all the warm fuzzies of its predecessor, a dash of action, and a more overt romantic arc.
bullet A Curse of Krakens by Kevin Hearne—the much-anticipated conclusion to the Seven Kennings trilogy is out, which means it’s time for me to read the second volume any day now.
bullet Blood Betrayal by Ausma Zehanat Khan—Detective Inaya Rahman investigates a pair of officer-involved killings. I’m guessing neither of these will turn out to be what they seem at first glance.

I love to read. That doesn't mean I don't have a life. It doesn't mean I'm a nerd. I only love the feeling that...even when you're back in reality you still feel like you're in a different world. - S.A.

Saturday Miscellany—11/4/23

Yeah, this is later than usual. I spent the morning at the Boise Library!’s Boise Book Faire 2023 getting to chat with several local authors about their works. I got to renew acquaintances with a few authors who have shown up here over the last 12 months or so—and met a few who I hope to feature soon.

But that’s for the future (or, I guess, the past), let’s move on to today’s Miscellany.

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet Banned books often get circulation bump, new study finds—a silver lining? Or fodder for conspiracy?
bullet Why Kids Aren’t Falling in Love With Reading: Hint: It’s not just the screens
bullet Make Humanities Fun Again
bullet How Has Big Publishing Changed American Fiction?: A new book argues that corporate publishing has transformed what it means to be an author.
bullet Does Reading Improve Health?
bullet Robert B. Parker: The Master of Crime Fiction
bullet The Story Behind the Story: “A Good Rush of Blood,” by Matt Phillips—I’m so glad I put off reading this until I’d written about the book—I’d have spent far too long working in responses to it. Secondly, I’m so glad Phillips stuck to his guns and gave us the book that he did (wouldn’t have liked it nearly as much if he’d buckled)
bullet Language and translation in Insiders – Shannon Knight—a nice little BTS about Knight’s newest book.
bullet The Science Behind Steampunk and Retrofuturistic Technology—from Jonathan Fesmire
bullet Partial Function Unboxing!—Who doesn’t like a good unboxing video? Watch JCM Berne get the first Partial Function hardcopy! (available Tuesday—order it today!)
bullet Self Published Fantasy Releases – November 2023—In case you needed to do some shopping for yourself/others. Good looking offerings here.
bullet Eternally Fascinating, the Vampire Endures—Author LindaAnn LoSchiavo stopped by Witty and Sarcastic Bookclub to talk about Blooksuckers/vamps/Fangheads/or whatever you want to call them
bullet #R3COMM3ND3D from Damppebbles is back with #R3COMM3ND3D2023. This celebration of the best new books of 2023 is guaranteed to add to your TBR.
bullet BookBlogger David of Blue Book Balloon
bullet Lisa from Owl Be Sat Reading
bullet Book Blogger Carla of Carla Loves to Read
bullet Emily Quinn of A Quintillion Words (which is just a brilliant blog name)
bullet Witty & Sarcastic also kicked-off Dragon Week 2023—Who needs “Shark Week” anyhow? I’m not going to link to every piece here, but you need to go check it out.
bullet Spells and Spaceships is yet again hosting Norsevember, where you can read fun things like The Norns and the Weaving of Fate and The Dwarves of Norse Mythology
bullet And there’s one more November-celebration—SciFiMonth! Some great-looking stuff there, too.

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Hacker by Duncan MacMaster—Jake Mooney, a ghostwriter turned reluctant amateur-sleuth, gets pushed into solving another murder–this time of an old nemesis.

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to cchittom and Ashleigh Mordew who followed the blog this week. I hope you enjoy the content and keep coming back.
The 15 mins I read before bed are the best 3 hours of the day

Saturday Miscellany—10/28/23

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet How many books Americans own — and how they organize them—fun with statistics (which is good, because what those stats represent isn’t so fun)
bullet A New Fantasy and a 20th Anniversary for Christopher Paolini—I didn’t read past Eragon (but had one kid who got obsessed). But it’s hard to deny the impact he had.
bullet Addicted to Scarcity—Book Publishing’s Retail Price Problem
bullet A Big Year for Little Golden Book Bios—(not the point, but some of these look really cute)
bullet Q&A: Bruce Borgos, Author of ‘The Bitter Past’
bullet Magic to Serve, Not Solve, a Story: KJ Dell’Antonia on Magical Rules in Literature
bullet How Do You Manage Reading Expectations?

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet The Innocent Sleep by Seanan McGuire—the 18th Toby Daye novel gives Tybalt’s perspective on recent events. Given that we know how things go after reading the 17th novel, I’m curious about how this will keep my attention (but assume it will)

I am haunted by all the editions of books that are prettier than the ones I already own. @vanillamoonx

Saturday Miscellany—10/21/23

A little bit of catch-up from last week, a little bit of stuff I found this week, and just a touch of things I will have found next week.

(two out of three ain’t bad).

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet Dispatch From the Ghosts of Bookstores Past
bullet We Don’t Talk About Harry Potter: The perils of publishing a diverse magic school series in the shadow of a juggernaut
bullet Bros Are Coming for BookTok. These TikTokers Aren’t Having It
bullet The Man Who Invented Fantasy: All those wizards, ogres, and barely-clad elf queens in the bookstore? You have Lester del Rey to thank.
bullet How to Exclaim!—varied thoughts on !
bullet Agony Editor: Judging your own book’s cover design – and what to do about it
bullet What Makes Some Long Books Feel Too Long?—Templeton again asks the important questions
bullet How Far Afield Can Sci-Fi and Fantasy “Fake Swearing” Get Before You Feel Uncomfortable?—honestly, I enjoy the fake swears. But, whatever…fun post anyway.
bullet Bookish Jobs I Would Do For Free—yup
bullet Worlds Unlike Our Own and The Strawberry Post both recently celebrated their 5th Anniversaries. Each in an interesting fashion.
bullet Why Shakespeare still matters—odd that this needs to be said, but…
bullet 10 Books That You Must Read Once in Your Life—yeah, maybe. I wonder if I put off reading a couple of these for a few more decades, do I get to live longer? How authoritative is that “must”?
bullet The Five 2013 Reads I Remember Best—I enjoy Finn’s premises almost as much as his posts
bullet The SciFiMonth Challenge—it’s right around the corner, are you participating?
bullet On Writers, Reviewers, and a Pointless Tangle—tempted to just post this link on social media every so often for the next decade

A Book-ish Related Podcast episode (or two) you might want to give a listen to:
bullet Lone Wolfe – Steve Hockensmith – Episode 32—a fun chat with the author of the Holmes on the Range series about fiction, Nero Wolfe, his own material and more. Couldn’t agree more with everything he said about The Big Sleep, incidentally.

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Up on the Woof Top by Spencer Quinn—a new Chet and Bernie book? Sign me up. Based on the last “Christmas” novel for these two, the holiday will be part of the setting, but it could be read without regard to the season.

Saturday Miscellany—10/14/23: DIY Edition

If you’re reading this, I’ve discovered that my fears have been realized and I couldn’t figure out how to format this post on my phone.(well, not really “fears” I didn’t really think I’d pull it off)

So, you’re going to have to do the work this week, sorry! I’m willing to be that things worth reading have been posted at:
bullet The Hub
bullet CrimeReads
bullet Witty and Sarcastic Book Club
bullet The Write Reads’ Blog Of the Daythe whole feed, too, probably. But those are more on brand for this post.
bullet Peat Long’s Blog
bullet
A Literary Escape
bullet
Mark As Read

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet The Mysteries by Bill Watterson, Illustrated by Bill Watterson and John Kascht—We’ve all been wondering what Bill Watterson has been up to since that last sled ride into the unknown. Well, here’s part of the answer. Can’t wait to dive in!
bullet An Inheritance of Magic by Benedict Jacka—I just loved this entry to a new UF series and think you will, too. As I opined earlier.
bullet ‘Twas the Bite Before Christmas by David Rosenfelt—Andy and co. bring the warm fuzzies (and murder). I talked about it recently.
bullet Long Past Dues by James J. Butcher—I cannot wait to see how the second book in this series builds on it’s very strong predecessor.
bullet The Art of Destiny by Wesley Chu—I jumped the gun a couple of weeks ago, so I’m going to repeat myself: the sequel to The Art of Prophecy is one of my most anticipated reads of the year, and I honestly have no idea when I’ll be able to get to it. Possibly January (at least 2024 will get off to a strong start).
bullet A Grimm Decision by Jeffrey H. Haskell—depending how my reading went this week, this publication will either put me one or two books behind in this very solid SF series. (but I’m so behind I refuse to look at the blurb)

Saturday Miscellany—10/7/23

I thought I had a little more for this post, but I’ve apparently been as busy this week as I felt. Still, it only takes 3 items to make a list, so I have two to spare.

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet The Most Popular Book the Year You Were Born—kind of interesting
bullet An Interview with K. R. R. Lockhaven—a great interview from Spells & Spaceships with a Friend of the Blog.
bullet On Dead Dogs and Other Reading Dealbreakers—Molly Templeton talks about having those boundaries about books we won’t read.
bullet 29 Best Classic Books actually worth reading for Adults—some great Classics were listed here
bullet Book-to-Screen Adaptations: Fantasy Edition—some good thoughts on Fantasy adaptations

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Godzilla and Godzilla Raids Again by Shigeru Kayama, translated by Jeffrey Angels—two novellas written by one of the creators of everyone’s favorite kaiju, showing what the movies were intended to depict. Now in English for the first time—it’s just a great look at his background. I had a good time with this.

Saturday Miscellany—9/30/23

In the back of my mind since the Mid-Year Freak Out tag back in July how strange it is that I hadn’t been moved to tears by a book in a while. Richard Osman’s new one took care of that for me yesterday*, so now I can focus on other things in the back of my mind. Like, what stupid jokes am I going to make in my Festivus post this year or something equally important.

* Big ol’ jerk creating characters that you can’t help but care about.

Thursday, I attended Rediscovered Bookshop‘s latest Grown-Up Book Fair at White Dog Brewery, and showed remarkable restraint (but still walked away with some gems)—today, I get to go to the Boise Library!’s Comic Arts Festival, which is always a good time. That’s a lot of people-ing in just a few days, but a lot of bookish (and other) goodness, too. If you’re one of the handful of readers I have in this area, you should definitely come by. If you’re not in the area, I hope you have some bookish goodness to get up to (even if it’s just sitting in a comfortable spot with a good read)

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet Spenser at 50: The Evolution of Robert B. Parker’s Iconic Character—How did I not think to spend the year celebrating this anniversary?
bullet From one legend of Mystery Fiction to a couple of others: Lee Goldberg in Conversation with Michael Connelly—a great video from a recent event in Agoura Hills
bullet Five Enduring Reasons to Love the Mass Market Paperback—agreed. I’d love for a resurgence of this format (as would my overburdened shelves)
bullet The Coolest Bookshelves from Our Contest: We’ve asked for the best shelfies, and you delivered—Electric Lit got some nifty submissions to a recent contest
bullet Are the Dragons in Fourth Wing Better than in Game of Thrones?—These are the kind of vital debates that need to be had. (even though I’m pretty sure I hadn’t heard of Fourth Wing until The Orangutan Librarian talked about it)
bullet What Do You Think About Books Marketed Solely on Vibes and Tropes?
bullet Why I Love Middle-Grade Books
bullet Three Middle Grade Fantasy Series You Should Read—Over at FanFiAddict, Matt Pittman picks three great series. I’d have picked two of these myself had I tackled the question—not sure I’d have gone with The Wingfeather Saga myself, but I can’t argue against it.
bullet Interview with a Second Grader: Hidden Gems—an interview about books with Jodie’s 2nd Grader. The fact that this leads off with a dragon book says something about the household, I think (something good, I stress. Also, completely un-surprising.)
bullet I linked to this earlier in the week, but I’m going to share it again. On My Radar: September 2023—Celeste’s month-end wrap-ups are a great way to catch up on things you should’ve read earlier.

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet The Running Grave by “Robert Galbraith”—Robin goes undercover in a cult to help rescue their client’s son. I haven’t seen anyone up in arms about this release, which is a bit odd. Maybe since the target is a cult this time? I’m just excited that this is under 1K pages (not by much, but at the rate this series was going, I was expecting to injure my back)
bullet The Chalice of the Gods by Rick Riordan—Percy Jackson is gearing up to go to college—but he and his friends have to deal with new challenges from Mount Olympus first. I’d stepped away from Riordan recently, but new Percy adventures just might get me to reverse course.

All I want is peace, love, understanding and a library bigger than the Grand Canyon

Saturday Miscellany—9/23/23

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet The Authors Guild, John Grisham, Jodi Picoult, David Baldacci, George R.R. Martin, and 13 Other Authors File Class-Action Suit Against OpenAI
bullet Who Needs Plot When You Have Vibes?—this approach to novel writing appeals to me, but almost every book described here would drive me nuts. Maybe I need to try one or three, though.
bullet The Early Days of American English: How English words evolved on a foreign continent.
bullet Anjili Babbar On The Rise of Irish Crime Fiction
bullet An interesting rebuttal to the publisher’s statement on the reading order for The Chronic (what?) cles of Narnia
bullet 5 Reasons We Love to Read—my local bookstore compiled a list of why their staff loves to read
bullet 10 Reasons to Leave a Book Review—I’d quibble with some of these items—but on the whole, a helpful post. Particularly for non-book bloggers.
bullet Authors and Reviews—may the tribe of Douglas Lumsden increase
bullet Arthurian inspired fiction: Where to start reading—So much temptation in so few words. A good companion list to the one Celeste posted a few months back, between the two of these, your Arthur-itch is sure to be scratched.
bullet The Wish Givers Cover Creation: The Process in Pictures—A deep dive into the process of making this cover
bullet Ranking books based on their first lines.—by Geaux Read Books, “Nothing heavy, just a fun video ranking books based on the first line of that book”
bullet Are You a Stubborn Reader? Know Your Reading Tastes

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Slipped up and mentioned this last week, but I’m still excited for: The Last Devil to Die by Richard Osman—The Thursday Murder Club is back in action—who cares what it’s about?
bullet The Art of Destiny by Wesley Chu—the sequel to The Art of Prophecy is one of my most anticipated reads of the year, and I honestly have no idea when I’ll be able to get to it. Possibly January (at least 2024 will get off to a strong start).
bullet Starter Villain by John Scalzi—”Charlie’s life is going nowhere fast. A divorced substitute teacher living with his cat in a house his siblings want to sell, all he wants is to open a pub downtown, if only the bank will approve his loan. Then his long-lost uncle Jake dies and leaves his supervillain business (complete with island volcano lair) to Charlie.” Oh, that sounds fun. Particularly when you add in “unionized dolphins [and] hyper-intelligent talking spy cats.”

Image of a man laying in a bed covered with books on the phone saying 'Sorry, my weekend is all booked.'

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