Showing posts with label Guest Post. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guest Post. Show all posts

Guest Post: Jessica Redmerski Shares 10 Weird Facts About Herself


Hey Bibliophiles!

Today I have the pleasure to host the amazing Jessica Redmerski on my blog! She's the author of the Everything Under The Sun, a post-apocalyptic romantic suspense novel! 


Jessica will be sharing 10 weird facts about herself, but before that, let me tell you a bit more about her. 




Jessica Redmerski is a New York Times, USA Today and Wall Street Journal bestselling author and award winner who juggles several genres of fiction.

She also writes as J.A. Redmerski.



10 Weird Things About Jessica Redmerski

1) I’m terrified of heights, particularly airplanes or anything man-made (rides at the fair, elevators, tall buildings, etc.). But just thinking about being on a plane gives me anxiety!

2) I smoked for eleven years, until 2007 when my left lung collapsed and I spent five days in the hospital with a tube hanging out of my chest. It’s safe to say that I’ve never touched a cigarette since.

3) I used to love AMC’s The Walking Dead, watched it religiously, until they killed off Carl, and I haven’t watched an episode since! Yes, I’m THAT serious about my favorite characters.

4) I have such a strong sense of smell that I can smell the toxins and sickness coming off a person’s body who is running a fever.

5) I have a mild case of OCD and hypochondria.

6) I used to have a crush on Nomak from Blade II – yes, the character and not the actor who played him, though there’s certainly nothing wrong with him, either.

7) There will always be a huge place in my heart for 80’s music and movies.

8) I have seen the film, The Lost Boys, sixty-five times and at one point I could recite the movie from beginning to end, word-for-word.

9) I am the author of DIRTY EDEN. (Trust me, this fits perfectly on any list of weird things).

10) Years ago, I used to have dreams about fires and if I ever had them three nights in a row, something close to me would catch fire on the fourth day!



Genre: Dystopian, Post-Apocalyptic, Romance, Suspense.



Thais Fenwick was eleven-years-old when civilization fell, devastated by a virus that killed off the majority of the world’s population. For seven years, Thais and her family lived in a community of survivors deep in the heart of the Appalachian Mountains. But when her town is attacked by raiders, she and her blind sister are taken away to the East-Central Territory where she is destined to live the cruel and unjust kind of life her late mother warned her about.

Atticus Hunt is a troubled soldier in Lexington City who has spent the past seven years trying to conform to the vicious nature of men in a post-apocalyptic society. He knows that in order to survive, he must abandon his morals and his conscience and become like those he is surrounded by. But when he meets Thais, morals and conscience win out over conformity, and he risks his rank and his life to help her. They escape the city and set out together on a long and perilous journey to find safety in Shreveport, Louisiana.

Struggling to survive in a world without electricity, food, shelter, and clean water, Atticus and Thais shed their fear of growing too close, and they fall hopelessly in love. But can love survive in such dark times, or is it fated to die with them?


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Guest Post: Belinda Missen Talks About Her Hometown, Inverleigh


Hey Everyone!

I'm super excited to have Belinda Missen, Author of A Recipe for Disaster, as a guest today! 

She's going to tell us a lot about her hometown, Inverleigh, which also acts as a backdrop for her book! 

But before that, introductions!


Belinda Missen is an award-winning and best-selling author, screenwriter, and freelance writer from Geelong, Australia.

A reader from an early age, Belinda began writing her own stories shortly after her love affair with Steven Spielberg’s film Jurassic Park began. What began as fan-fiction soon took deeper root, and she was scribbling out strange little stories in empty notebooks she found laying around the house.

With qualifications in transport and office administration, and a combined career of fifteen years in these industries, Belinda decided to uproot everything in 2013 and return to her first love of writing. She now writes full-time, between cups of coffee, binge watching television, and feeding her cats and husband.

In April 2016, she was awarded the JOLT Courthouse Youth Arts Award in the Inspire 26+ Category for her piece Obsession.

In February 2017, her book Love And Other Midnight Theories clawed its way to the top of the Amazon charts in its category of Performing Arts, beating JK Rowling’s Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them. True story – she has the screenshots to prove it.

When not dabbling in the written word, Belinda can be found mentoring other writers, beta-reading, reviewing, helping others to ready books for publication, and sleeping. In the digital world, she can be found online at Goodreads, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Pinterest.



Inverleigh – The recipe for a novel
Belinda Missen

Located ninety minutes south-west of Melbourne, Inverleigh is the setting for A Recipe for Disaster. When it became clear to me that I was going to write a book set in my home town, I began wandering around, searching for locations, ideas, and inspiration. What was my story going to look like? Where were Lucy and Oliver going to live? And just what were they planning on doing with their lives?
Inverleigh Hotel – just one of our local bluestone buildings. (Image: Visit Victoria)

While town history is a little sketchy, Inverleigh has been inhabited in one form or another by western settlers since the early 1800s. We’re a town of bluestone buildings and miner’s cottages, reclaimed bakeries, and a disused train station, though this avid train traveller would love to see trains stopping here again.
There’s a certain romance to miner’s cottages. They’re small and cosy, and would be the perfect, affordable way for a young couple beginning their married life together. It made sense that Lucy would still live there. Our local primary school provided the perfect job for her, for a short time anyway.
Another layer to life in Inverleigh is our love of food and wine. Inverleigh finds itself tucked inside the Golden Plains Shire, surrounded by farm land and vineyards ripe for the plucking. While it wasn’t one of the things that drew me to the area ten years ago, it’s certainly one of the things that keeps me here now. Our new-found food and wine culture was one of the huge inspirations for A Recipe for Disaster.
What was once Red Door Café is now Sonny, and you’re lucky if you can find a table there on the weekend. Full of fresh local produce, you want to try the eggs on sourdough toast with smashed avocado and Meredith goat’s cheese. Meredith is another small rural town approximately twenty minutes from Inverleigh, still part of the Golden Plains Shire, and still producing some amazing cheese and wines.

Inverleigh Bakehouse (Image: Visit Victoria)

Inverleigh Bakehouse offers a more casual affair, serving up pies, pasties, and an ever-changing range of slices, cakes, breads, and local produce. While this wasn’t a direct inspiration for A Recipe for Disaster, it certainly helped to have something like this on my doorstep when pondering just what kind of cooking trouble Lucy and Oliver might get themselves into.
Our local pub was closed for several years while it underwent an extensive renovation. Now that it’s open again, and a thriving hub of activity, I pictured it as somewhere Oliver would go on a Friday night, only to be swamped like the local celebrity that he is, before walking home or past Lucy’s place.
That ability to walk to and from locations was a huge draw to me, and one of the things I love about being here. It can be a quick phone call in the morning and within minutes, I’m walking up the street to visit someone for a coffee, to fix a website, or to have a cheeky pint at the pub for lunch. And, as you walk through our streets, you can see that there is still a lot of older architecture, which helps lend Inverleigh to that small-town romance vibe.
The suspension bridge that Lucy complains about is a bridge that I walk over almost daily. It crosses the Leigh River and leads to the new estate on the hill, where houses are more likely to be of a more sprawling, magazine-style layout. Still, everything is within easy walking distance – perfect for late-night rendezvous and quick catch ups.


More than anything, I hope that I’ve done a good enough job of describing what is a beautifully quiet town. There aren’t a lot of us living here, and I sometimes wonder if we’re a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it type of town. But, if you ever find yourself in this part of Victoria, stop at the pub, the bakery, or the General Store. Better yet, see if you can work out who I am. I’ll make you a cuppa and a slice of cake.


Genre: Contemporary Romance. 



Meet Lucy, master wedding cake baker, idealistic school canteen crusader, and someone whose broken heart just won’t seem to mend…
Lucy is quietly confident that she has made the right choices in life. Surrounded by friends and family in a small country town, Lucy can easily suppress the feeling that something is missing from her life.
But when a blast from the past arrives in the form of her estranged husband, international celebrity chef Oliver Murray, Lucy’s carefully constructed life begins to crumble beneath her like overbaked meringue.
Is Oliver’s return all business or is it motivated by something more?
A Recipe for Disaster starts long after most love stories would have ended, proving it is never too late to offer someone a second slice of cake or a second chance.
Perfect for fans of Carole Mathews, Mhairi McFarlane and Carrie Hope Fletcher.


Guest Post: Tani Hanes Talks About A Character Based on a Real-life Person


Hey Bookworms!

Sorry I haven't been around since a couple of days! But I'm back now, and that too with a guest! 


I introduce you to Tani Hanes, author of Winter Flower! 


About The Author:



My name is Tani Hanes, and I am a 51 year old substitute teacher. I'm from central California and am a recent transplant to New York City. The most important things to know about me are that I'm punctual, I love grammar and sushi, and I'm very intolerant of intolerance. The least important things to know about me are that I like to knit and I couldn't spell "acoustic" for 40 years. I've wanted to write since I was ten, and I finally did it. If you want to write, don't wait as long as I did, it's pointless, and very frustrating!

Website |GoodreadsTwitterFacebook | Tumblr | Pinterest

Today, Tani is going to tell us about Pete, a character from her books who is actually based on a Real-life person she knew...



~~~

Winter Flowers is the second in the Flower Series. In the first book, Pete & Daisy, we met our couple, and hopefully grew to love them. Now, they’ve become a family, and fame and fortune have found Pete, and he’s on the brink of becoming wildly successful. Pete is one of the most popular characters I’ve ever created. You readers can’t seem to get enough of him, and I think I know the reason for this:

He’s one of the few characters in my books who’s based on a real person.

So I’m going to do what I swore I'd never, ever do, and tell you about the real life Pete.
So many people who read these days like to have face claims for the characters in the books. This post was originally going to be about a dream cast for The Flower Series. But as I started to write, I realized I was having trouble because I already had a real life face claim, for Pete, anyway, and he wasn’t an actor, he wasn’t famous.

For most of my stories, the guy is kind of loosely based on Harry Styles, who has to be one of the most attractive young men on the planet. But Pete wasn't. I mean, he kinda was, because I was in that groove, with the hair and him being a musician, but not really, and I think that's why he’s leapt off the page, and why so many beta readers had such a visceral response to him. I mean, he made so many laugh and cry, oh my god did he make them cry lol! Because he was so real to me. And that made him real to everyone.

But for the above reason, I didn't want to give a face claim for Pete. And there was another reason: He was mine, a real person in my memory, and I didn't want to share him with anyone.

When I was a teenager, back in the Dark Ages, I traveled through Italy on a very crowded train. A very crowded train. I mean, I don't know what Italians do during the day, but at night, a bunch of them get on trains and go places, it seems.

I was nineteen, and I met a twenty-one year old boy named Riccardo. We talked for that one night, for six and a half hours, while sitting on the floor of that train, outside the bathroom, I kid you not. Through the window to our left, a moon hung over the Adriatic, giving the whole floor-outside-the-bathroom thing just the right amount of romantic ambiance. It was sweltering, and I remember little trickles of sweat near his temples.
I have no real memory of what we talked about, isn't that weird?

All I remember is a feeling, of discovery, of beginning, of greed, of wanting to talk more, know more. And I remember not being able to look directly at his face because he was too handsome. The left side of my body, the side closest to him, was warm.

So we exchanged addresses when he got off the train, agreeing to keep in touch, and I went off to Greece, then to Japan for school, and I sent post cards to all the new friends I'd made in Europe, including the handsome, interesting Italian with the delicious accent. He wrote back, and we began a correspondence, like on paper, with pens. It was so fun!

Our letters got longer and longer, more and more personal. Three years later, when I was finishing school in Santa Cruz, California, we finally made plans to meet. Keep in mind that at no time was this friendship anything more than that, at least not officially. I had boyfriends during that time, and he had girlfriends. But wowza.

At the last minute, he couldn't come because he got a summer job that was too lucrative to pass up, in his home town, near where his mother lived. His parents were divorced, and he worried about his mom and was very close to her, so the chance to spend a summer with her was also a bonus (I know, right?).

Then, nothing.

This was before computers, cell phones, all that good stuff. I was worried, then irritated, then pissed off. I told my roommates he'd better be in a coma or dead, that no other excuse would do, and there would be hell to pay when I found out he was carousing at the beachside resort with his new girlfriend or whatever.

So you know what comes next, right?

After three months, I got a letter from Italy in a handwriting I didn't recognize, and when I opened it, a newspaper clipping fell out. It had Riccardo's picture, and I could tell, just from looking at the picture, that he was dead. The article described how he'd been in a car, driving his girlfriend home late at night, when a truck coming in the other direction had crossed the median and struck them head on (I'd begun taking Italian at school, for obvious, nebulous reasons). They'd needed the jaws of life to pry open the car to retrieve his body. His girlfriend had been thrown clear.

So my world got dimmer for a while, like someone turned down the sun.
I've kind of kept in touch with his mother, though it's difficult, given the language barrier. She's a lovely woman, though of course she'd have to be, to have produced such a marvelous son.

Anyway, all of Pete's mannerisms, habits, even his speech patterns, come from my brief physical memories of Riccardo during that six hour train ride, and from his long letters. I remember his voice, how he sounded, the way he moved his hands when he talked, the way his fingers felt when he touched my face (yeah, he did that 🤗).


So what I'm including down here is just a photograph of a photograph, because I'm technologically challenged, and I apologize for that, okay? This isn't the only picture I have of him, but it is the one that shows most clearly how I see him. I think this also explains why Pete is nearly always shirtless in the book!

I sent this photograph to the woman who drew my cover, and I think she did a good job of capturing him.

And I feel good that I’ve immortalized him in such a permanent way. Is Pete a lil bit perfect. Yeah. Because he was, you know?

~~~

Oh my God, that's so beautiful. And I agree with Tani. Pete sounds perfect, doesn't he?

About The Book:


Genre: New Adult, Romance.
Blurb:

What ever happened to Pete and Daisy? 

When we left them, their daughter had just been born, and some momentous decisions had been made.

It’s now four years later. Their family has grown, as has their love for each other. Clio is a rocky smart, precocious four year old, and she’s been joined by baby sister Francie. Pete’s career as a musician is finally taking off, and things should be rosy; however, fame and fortune bring their own pitfalls, and a voice from the past arrives in their lives, threatening to upset everything they’ve worked for.

Can they survive Pete’s success, and the long shadow cast by Daisy’s past? How will Pete deal with groupies, temptation, and prolonged separation from his family? And how far is Daisy willing to go to protect those she loves? 

Join the Santangelos on this rollicking roller coaster second installment of their journey.


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Guest Post: Kirsten McKenzie talks about The Origin Of Doctor Perry


Hey Bookworms!

Today I have the pleasure of hosting Author Kirsten McKenzie as a guest on the blog. Her book, Doctor Perry releases soon!

She'll be introducing us to Doctor Perry soon! 

But before that, let's get to know her a bit better!

About the Author:

For many years Kirsten McKenzie worked in her family's antique store, where she went from being allowed to sell the 50c postcards as a child, to selling $5,000 Worcester vases and seventeenth century silverware, providing a unique insight into the world of antiques which touches every aspect of her writing.

Her historical fiction novels 'Fifteen Postcards' and it's sequel 'The Last Letter' have been described as 'Time Travellers Wife meets Far Pavilions', and 'Antiques Roadshow gone viral'. The third book in the series 'Telegram Home' will be released in November 2018 by Accent Press.

Her bestselling gothic horror novel 'Painted' was released in 2017, with her medical thriller 'Doctor Perry' following closely in April 2018.


She lives in New Zealand with her husband, her daughters, an SPCA rescue cat and a kitten found in the neighbour's shed, and can usually be found procrastinating on Twitter.

Facebook | Twitter | Instagram

Now, let's hear (read?) the story of the origin of Doctor Perry!

~~~~

After my father died unexpectedly, my brother and I both quit our jobs with the New Zealand Customs Service to run the family antique store. I’ve always been in love with old things, so it wasn’t a hardship for me. I can recall a story from when I was younger, of my father buying a Lladro statue off a regular customer and some time later the police visiting the shop and telling Dad that the regular customer — a well dressed, middle aged woman, was stealing from the rest home she worked in, and selling the stolen belongings all around town, including selling Dad the Lladro statue. That story stayed with me and made me think how easy it must be to steal from the elderly, when ever-changing staff are in and out of their rooms, and perhaps the residents are a bit befuddled in their old age, and their families never visit to query the missing china statue or the gold watch or the pearl necklace? My grandmother suffered from Alzheimers, and her pearl necklace did go missing at some stage. Whether it was the staff, or whether she put it somewhere ‘safe' we’ll never know. 

I tend to store these little life snippets, and when I sit down to write, it’s a bit like opening a drawer, and rummaging through all the thoughts and memories and life experiences until just the right thing jumps out, and then I use that in my writing.

My mother is now at the stage of looking to move to a retirement village, so she and I have been touring all the rest homes, retirement resorts, and secure apartments for the older person in Auckland. And I can tell you, not all of them are created equal. 

There are some which do have an all pervasive scent of urine and cabbage. There are some which are more like hotels, and I’d be happy to move there in a heartbeat. There are some which are so old, the Fire Service are terrified of a fire breaking out there because they know they wouldn’t be able to save all the residents in time. 

Imagine that? Imagine going to a call out where you know the place is so old, and so unsafe, yet it’s still allowed to operate as a facility for the elderly? How can any government allow that?

My grandmother lived in her secure facility for ten years, and my mother visited her every week. I visited, taking my young children with me. At times my girls would get scared by some of the other residents. But what was scarier, and sadder, were the number of patients with dementia who never had any visitors — residents abandoned by their families. That alone was enough to sow the seeds for Doctor Perry. An unscrupulous nursing home, or doctor, could easily take advantage of a whole sector of society abandoned by their loved ones. My grandmother’s carers were an amazing group of people. And they loved her like she was a member of their own family. But not all elderly people are so lucky. Maybe the words between the pages of Doctor Perry will make some people question the facilities their loved ones live in, or maybe it will up the number of visits! Either way, in my heart I hope readers of Doctor Perry feel just as aghast at the treatment of the residents at the Rose Have Retirement Home as I did writing it, because it’s not that far removed from reality for some people. Fact is often scarier than fiction…

~~~~

I agree with Kirsten on that. Fact is almost always scarier than fiction!

Here's some info about Doctor Perry (the book!):


Under the Hippocratic Oath, a doctor swears to remember that warmth, sympathy, and understanding may outweigh the surgeon’s knife or the chemist’s drug.

Doctor Perry assures his elderly patients at the Rose Haven Retirement Home that he can offer warmth, sympathy, and understanding. Doctor Perry is a liar.

Hiding from a traumatic past, Elijah Cone wants nothing to do with the other residents at the Rose Haven, content to sit at his window waiting to die. He’s about to learn that under Doctor Perry death is the easy option...

Add To Goodreads.





Guest Post: H.N. Lynn Talks About Underrated Genres


Hey Bookworms! 

Today, we have with us Author Hannah Lynn as a guest on the blog! Her book, The Afterlife Of Augustus Waters releases soon! 

Before beginning, let me introduce her to you! 

About the author:


Hannah Lynn was born in 1984 and grew up in the Cotswolds, UK. After graduating from university, she spent ten years as a teacher of physics, first in the UK and then around Asia. It was during this time, inspired by the imaginations of the young people she taught, she began writing short stories for children, and later adult fiction. Her first novel, Amendments, was published in 2015, her latest novel, The Afterlife of Walter Augustus, is out July 2018. Now as a teacher, writer, wife and mother, she is currently living in the Austrian Alps.

Twitter | Facebook | Goodreads

Now, I'll let Hannah take over!

       ~~~


When Anky and I were in discussion about the possible themes for my guest blog, this was the first idea that was brought up, and to be honest, it jarred with me. Underrated Genres. Underrated by who, I thought? By me? By the mass population of readers? Perhaps they were the same thing. I had no idea. That said, I love a challenge so was on board with the idea. However, I decided that I needed to research things a little further before I started writing. The teacher part of me loves a bit of data, so that was what I went looking for.
First, I went to the money. According to www.bookstr.com Romance and Erotica are where the money is, in fact, the gap between these and the other genres is huge. According to the data, the top five money earners was as follows:
1) Romance/Erotica - $1.44 billion
2) Crime/Mystery - $728.2 million
3) Religious/Inspirational - $720 million
4) Science Fiction/Fantasy - $590.2 million
5) Horror - $79.6 million
So were there any surprises to me here? Well you only need to look at the Amazon charts to know that Romance is always up there and every year there is another smash hit crime/mystery series, so I suppose those weren’t a surprise, but Religious and Inspirational, yes, that was bit surprising but less so than the absence of Historical Fiction.
Now, I am not a Historical Fiction reader by nature. In fact, it would probably be the last book I would pick off a shelf, so why did I expect to see it there? Well, as a self-published writer whose first book was Speculative Fiction and second book is Contemporary Fiction with an otherworldly edge, it seems like every agency and every blog out there are happy to read Historical Fiction but less happy to accept Fantasy and Sci-fi. I needed more data.


A quick stumble through www.writingcooperative.com led me to an infographic by www.ebookfriendly.com designed by UK-based creative search agency Mediaworks for Furniture UK. (Sorry if my quoting seems a bit manic here, I just don't like people not getting credit for things they do).
Now for me, one thing even better than data is a graph. (I once said this on a Kindle forum and Hugh Howey messaged me back with a graph meme. It is one of my career highlights so far). Once again Historical Fiction was at the bottom of the rung occupying 3% of sales, the same as YA. Only magical realism came in lower with 2%. Now magical realism I enjoy. Kafka on the Shore was one of the first Murakami books I read I have been hooked ever since, but I was still surprised to find Historical Fiction so low. If what I have seen is true — and they come from pretty good sources — Historical Fiction is, if not the most underrated, the least read genre of book.
Now, I said before that Historical Fiction is the last thing I would take off a shelf, and I stand by that. Throw me Neil Gaiman, Margaret Atwood or perhaps something humorous, like Adrian J Walker, please. Next, I'll head to mainstream contemporary fiction and then, possibly, YA. However, last year I found myself in that exact position of having nothing else to read.
A last-minute change in plans saw me taking my daughter to stay with a friend for a weekend and I forgot to take a book. Not having a book at any time is painful, but when you know you’re going to be in bed early — lots of young children — and you actually have some time, you need a good book. On her shelf, she had only one adult book. (I know what you’re thinking. In actual fact, she is an English teacher and staunch believer in libraries and ebooks). That book on her shelf was a Historical Fiction.
It was that or nothing so obviously I had to give it a go. I will admit, my expectations were low, yet within the first six pages, I was hooked.
It was one of the nights where you know you need to go to sleep, but you just can’t stop. You just have to read that next chapter, then the next and the next. The following morning, from the moment I woke up, it was all I could think about. What were they going to do? How was it going to pan out? Would she really side with her father rather than her husband? And that was only the start of the book, it got even worse towards the end. I was so desperate to know the ending I could have only been reading 70% of words on each page. (This is an awful habit of mine, which drives my husband crazy). When I finished the book I was crying. Balling. Happiness, sadness, grief, the lot. I was in a state of shock. It had been the most emotional rollercoaster that I had experienced with a book in years, and it was something I would never have chosen to read in a million years.
So now, I suspect you're wondering I am reading Historical Fiction on a regular basis? Strangely, no. Despite this amazing book I still find it hard to pick one off the shelf. I hadn’t even thought about it — not the book, but reading another Historical Fiction— until writing this post and that is desperately sad. Why? Because the book I read was part of a series, part of something I know I would love. Had it been sci-fi I would have been there in a shot. With a YA series, I would have no doubt bought the box set. So, in the interest of expanding my reading, and getting out of my box, I just ordered a copy of the second one online and I can’t wait to get it.

This book from an underrated genre that left me in tears was, in case you're interested to know, Here be Dragons, by Sharon Kay Penman. Give it a go, you won’t be disappointed.

~~~

That was so enlightening! Thanks Hannah, for this awesome post!

Curious about Hannah's latest book?

Here's a little bit about it:


Walter Augustus is dead. His current state of existence has become a monotony of sweet tea and lonely strolls, and after decades stuck in the Interim — a posthumous waiting room  for those still remembered on Earth — he is ready to move on. Only when he is forgotten by every living person will he be able to pass over and join his family in the next stage of the afterlife. At last the end is tantalizingly close, but bad luck and a few rash decisions may see him trapped in the Interim for all eternity.

Letty Ferguson is not dead. Letty Ferguson is a middle-aged shoe saleswoman who leads a pleasant and wholly unextraordinary life, barring the secret fortune she seems unable to tell her husband about. However, when she takes possession of an unassuming poetry anthology, life takes on a rather more extraordinary dimension.


Buy The Afterlife Of Augustus Walters:


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