Where I share my love of books with reviews, features, giveaways and memes. Family and needlepoint are thrown in from time to time.

Monday, May 10, 2010

It's Monday! What Are You Reading? (5/10/10)



What are you reading on Mondays is hosted by Sheila at One Person's Journey - You can hook up with the Mr. Linky there with your own post - but be sure and let me know what you are reading too!

Currently Reading:

Glaen: A Novel Message on Romance, Love and Relating by Fred Lybrand
(TBB Media)

This World We Live In (The Last Survivors, Book 3) by Susan Beth Pfeffer
(Net Galley)

My Sister's Voice by Mary Carter
(Pump Up Your Book Tour)

It Had to Be You (Weddings by Bella, Book 3) by Janice Thompson
(Baker publishing)

Bathroom Book:

Marked: A House of Night Novel (House of Night Novels) by P.C. Cast and Kristin Cast (my own book - do you believe it??)

New this week:

Finding Jeena: A Novel by Miralee Ferrell
(First Wild Card Tour)

Code Blue (Prescription for Trouble) by Richard L. Mabry
(First Wild Card Tour)

Welcome to Harmony by Jodi Thomas
(from the author)

Current audio books:

Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter by Seth Grahame-Smith
(Hachette audio)

New Moon by Stephenie Meyer
(library)

Books Finished and Reviewed Last Week:

The Threadbare Heart by Jennie Nash
From the author)

Children's books Reviewed Last Week:



Let's Have a Daddy Day by Karen Kingsbury
(First Wild Card Tour)



Books Abandoned Last Week:

The Highest Stakes by Emery Lee - I just couldn't get into this one no matter how hard I tried.  It seems like it will be one that I would like, but the story didn't grab me to make me want to invest any more time in it.
(Sourcebooks)

Books waiting to be reviewed:

Twilight (The Twilight Saga, Book 1) - by Stephenie Meyer
(Library)

Ready - Set - Read!

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Letters to Juliet (Movie Review)

I had the opportunity to see an advanced screening of Letters to Juliet today with my 2 daughters.  We had received free passes through gofobo.com - (If you haven't signed up for this - you should - and it's free!)

Watch the trailer for Letters to Juliet.

Sophie (Amanda Seyfried) is a fact checker for The New Yorker magazine while her fiance Victor (Gael Garcia Bernal) is busy getting ready to open his new restaurant.  They decide to take a pre-honeymoon to Verona, though I suspect that Victor was planning this trip to only check out suppliers/wines and was not really considering Sophie's wants at all.

While there, Sophie visits Juliet's House, where there is a wall that women leave letters in to ask questions of Juliet - usually concerning the men in their lives.  These letters are all answered by Juliet's "secretaries". Sophie stumbles upon a hidden letter that was written in 1957 from a woman named Claire (Vanessa Redgrave) asking if she did the right thing by not meeting her Lorenzo and running off with him.  She is allowed to answer the letter as one of Juliet's secretaries. 

Within a week, while Sophie is still waiting in Verona for Victor to return from his latest wine auction, Claire's grandson Charlie (Christopher Egan) tracks her down and basically calls her crazy for putting all these thoughts in his grandmother's head about finding this love of her life from 50 years before.  What entails is a trek through the Tuscany countryside looking for Lorenzo. 

Amanda Seyfriend was wonderful as Sophie - she is just such a likeable actress.  (I also enjoyed her in Dear John).  She is like the girl next door - just doesn't seem like there would be a mean bone in her body.  Christopher Egan as Charlie was hilarious.  He was such a sourpuss in the beginning - never missing a chance to get a jibe in at Sophie - and she pretty much met him barb for barb.  Even though he wanted to come off all - as he put it - as a "realist"  - His comments to Sophie at times were exasperating, but you could see in his eyes that he was interested in her and wanted to believe as she did in the idea that his Gran might actually find her Lorenzo.  They played very well off of each  other.

Vanessa Redgrave was excellent as Clare.  She was so loving and so full of hope - but this was no naive young girl.  She kept her eyes and ears open as to what was happening between Sophie and her grandson.  I loved the way that she didn't take any of Charlie's "crap" but was also so full of love for him.

If you are a romantic - then this is one movie that you don't want to miss.  We enjoyed it greatly.

The Threadbare Heart by Jennie Nash (Book Review)

Title: The Threadbare Heart
Author: Jennie Nash
Publisher: Berkley Trade Paperback

My synopsis: Lily had met her husband Tom in Colorado.  Together they raised 2 sons, Ryan and Luke in Maine, and seemed to weather all the changes that the seasons of life brought them.  Upon visiting their family in California - Luke, Ryan and his wife Olivia and daughter Brooke, and Lily's mother Eleanor, Lily starts to see chinks in her marriage.  She begins to think she doesn't know her husband at all.  When an avocado ranch goes on the market, and Eleanor offers to buy it for Lily and Tom, Lily is resentful that her mom would think they could just up and move from Maine to California.  Especially since they were both so close to earning their full pensions at the university where they worked - their house was paid for - how could they just up and move all the way across the country?  In the end, Lily decides that she wants to do this for her husband, for them, because she thinks she is losing him and this will hold them together.

My thoughts:  I could go on and on with the synopsis, but I don't want to give too much away.  The story vacillates with each chapter upon different people in the family - Tom, Lily, Eleanor, Luke, Ryan, Olivia.  With each chapter you learn a little more about their individual history, and a little more about how and why they relate to each other as they do. I really enjoyed the way it was written and could relate to Lily - not necessarily because of length or stability of her marriage, but because of her insecurities.  I enjoyed Eleanor also - she seemed to be a strong woman, a little uncharacteristic for women of her generation - used to taking care of herself and not letting anyone "inside".  She had numerous husbands over the years and, since her last one, has "sworn off men". Olivia I didn't like so much - she seemed to do things to exclude her husband from her and Brooke on purpose, and wasn't very thankful the blessings she had in her life. The ending left me wanting more - I wanted to know what happens between Eleanor and Lily - if they are able to get closer. About Ryan and Olivia and if their marriage is going to withstand it's trials.  We know that Lily is a survivor, but I want to know if she gets to be happy again!

~I received a copy of this book from the author in exchange for my unbiased review.~

The Threadbare Heart
Publisher/Publication Date: Berkley Trade, 5/4/10
ISBN: 978-0-425-23410-5
336 pages

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Winners!



Winners of Eat the Cookie. . .Buy the Shoes
#9 - Julia
#24 - Anonymous/Jackie.smith
#21 Dawn M.











Winners of Heart of My Heart
#6 - Amanda Sue
#33 - Anonymous/ebeandebe
#29 - Jinxy & me









Winners of A Certain Wolfish Charm
#28 - CherylS22
#12 - Simply Stacie














Winners of The Art of Choosing
#13 - Christine H
#8 - Dawn M
#25 - Steve Capell











Winners of The Host
#75 - julieb
#26 - Tabathia
#8 - Crystal












Winners of I Has a Hotdog
#7 - rhapsodyinbooks
#2 - Sandy Jay
#6 - Christine H.








Winners of Green Like God
#25 - Elise
#19 - Steve Capell
#22 - CarolinaGirlMommy











Winners of Hannah's List
Grand Prize winner - #92 - Benita - won a $25 Visa gc and a copy of Hannah's List
#13 - holdenj
#24 - margie










All winners have been emailed and have 48 hours to get me the correct information or I will have to draw new winners.  Congrats everyone!  Look for a slew of new giveaways next week!

Mailbox Madness (5/2 - 5/9)

Bison roam the Black Hills of South Dakota
Mailbox Monday is hosted at The Printed Page . Please visit Kristi and Marcia  and take a look at what packages everybody else got this week!



by Alfredo Cabrera with Matthew Frederick

101 Concise Lessons on Every Aspect of the Fashion Industry: Trends -- Design -- Materials and Costs -- Production -- Marketing -- Licensing -- Outsourcing -- Pricing. . . and more.

This indispensable resource provides essential advice to undergraduates, designers, and anyone interested in the fashion world. Each two-page layout is illustrated and illuminates an important industry topic -- using humor, statistics, or real-life examples to drive the point home. You will find yourself dwelling on each page, as the lessons behind the lessons take root.

It's like getting a fashion school degree in 202 pages.


by Erin Healy

Losing everything has Lexi clinging to her daughter. Hell is determined to loosen her grip.

It's been seven years since disaster struck her family. Lexi Solomon has held it all together since then -- just barely.

But now Lexi is losing it. The husband who deserted her is back in town, wanting to see their daughter Molly. Her sister's shameless murderer is up for parole. An unsavory old friend is demanding payment for debts that Lexi knows nothing about and can't begin to meet.

And something else is going on -- something Lexi feels but can't explain. A dangerous shift is taking place between this reality and the next. Forces beyond her imagination are vying for control.

A rare novel that will satisfy a wide range of readers, Never Let You Go explores the high-stakes decisions played out in the thin spaces between heaven and earth. As the enemy's grip tightens around Lexi, she will have to decide what's truly worth holding on to.



by Kylie Ladd

That's the thing about falling. It doesn't go on indefinitely, and it rarely ends well. . . plunge, plummet, pain. Even if you get straight back up, even when you regain your footing, after the fall nothing is ever quite the same.

Neuropsychologist Kylie Ladd makes her fiction debut with the most fully realized exploration of adultery in recent years.

A captivating blend of psychological insight, raw emotion, and rare wisdom courses through this enthralling tale of two marriages brought together by friendship -- and the illicit affair that blows their worlds apart.

"I had been married three years when I fell in love," begins Kate, a firecracker of a woman who thought she'd found the yin to her yang in Cary, her sensible and adoring husband. Until the night she shares an unexpected (and unexpectedly public) kiss with their married friend Luke, marking the beginning of a fiery romance that will tear the foursome apart and shake the core of their most intimate hopes and fears.

After the Fall peers into the souls of two young, devoted couples betrayed by the one thing they thought was secure and faultless: their friendship. told in a kaleidoscope of first-person voices, this is an unsettling, morally complex read about the secret longings we all harbor and what happens when the unexpected becomes inevitable.



by Dr. Joel R. Gecht

Ambitious but naive, Brian Roberts is set on a career path that will lead to a psychology degree, financial stability, and emotional fulfillment. His marriage to hometown sweetheart Nancy seems to assure a fine future.

But when beautiful green-eyed Amanda Wagner, a deeply troubled young woman, becomes his patient, the future becomes blurry.  Her dependency on Brian becomes an aphrodisiac for him.  The need and the obsession are mutual.

Brian goes on to become a successful Hollywood TV talk show doc, but he flounders in the pretentious and posh world of Beverly Hills, celebrity, and money. And worst of all, Brian and Nancy are drifting apart.

Then, while making her final decent, Amanda is found dead and Brian emerges as the prime suspect. Nancy sets out to vindicate Brian. Her quest, however, will lead her to the darkest corners of Amanda's tortured past and will not only determine Brian's fate, but will ultimately unlock the secrets trapped within Amanda's family lineage.



by Jodi Thomas

A Place to Belong

Sixteen-year-old runaway Reagan has always wanted a place to belong. She's never had a real home of her own, but maybe she can borrow someone else's. At least for a little while. . .

At the nursing home where Reagan works, Miss Beverly Truman's fond memories of Harmony, Texas, seem to fill an empty space inside the girl. After Miss Beverly passes away, Reagan travels to Harmony, pretending to be the woman's granddaughter, and is taken into the home of Beverly's surviving brother.

Still, Reagan is afraid to trust the gruff kindness shown to her by Jeremiah Truman and the warm friendship offered by another teenager named Noah, who dreams of being a rodeo star. She keeps her distance from Noah's sister, Alex McAllen, who's the town sheriff and busy with her own stormy relationship with volunteer fire chief Hank Matheson.

But when prairie fires threaten Harmony, Reagan learns the true meaning of family, friends, and home. . .


by Katie Crouch

It was the spring of 1985, Hannah Legare was a precocious eleven-year-old completely devoted to her father, Dr. Buzz Legare. One afternoon, he went on a fishing trip in the Charleston, South Carolina harbor, taking the family dog with him. They found the dog later, drifting alone in the small aluminum boat, but Buzz was never seen again.

Fast-forward more than two decades: Hannah is thirty-five, with a successful business and a dedicated husband, Jon, in San Francisco. She's left Charleston far behind, but not the conviction that her father is alive somewhere -- not dead, just missing.  Her obsession begins to play out in self-sabotage, coming to a head one night when, having royally screwed things up with Jon, she finds herself drunkenly climbing up her own fire escape -- with disastrous results.

Head bandaged and heart bruised, Hannah is ordered home by her strong-willed mother, Daisy, and reluctantly welcomed by Palmer, her much more responsible brother who stayed behind in Charleston. There, she encounters rivals and ghosts from her past, including Warren, the childhood love she could never quite forget. Enlisting his help, Hannah sets out on a quest to discover what really happened to her father so long ago.  Palmer and Daisy worry about the manic measures Hannah will take to dredge up the past. Some family secrets, they reason, are best left buried for good.

Graced by a heroine every bit as memorable as the characters Katie Crouch introduced us to in Girls in Trucks -- antic, flawed, and shrewd -- Men and Dogs is a hilarious and moving novel about family, loyalty, and faith.



by Elizabeth Catherine Wright

1909 and 1910 were tumultuous years for two Chicago families. Frank Lloyd Wright sailed for Europe with his lover, Mamah Borthwick Cheney, leaving his wife Catherine and their six children behind in Oak Park. James Howard Kehler, a prominent advertising man and friend of Wright's left his pregnant wife and their two young sons to marry a widow.

Robert Llewellyn Wright ("Bob"), was Frank and Catherine's youngest son. Five years old at the time of his father's departure, he suffered throughout his youth from the public scandals that continued to surround his father's personal life. Elizabeth Bryan Kehler ("Betty"), born in Oak Park in July 1910, worshipped her absent father, rebelling against the constraints imposed by her stepfather.

Bob and Betty meet in 1932, in the midst of the Great Depression. Sparks fly and they fall in love. Since Betty is in Milwaukee, and Bob in Chicago, they can only see each other on weekends. Their suspenseful love story is told through letters to one another, which grow in frequency and intensity as they struggle to express unfamiliar feelings and search for a way to marry and live together.



by Karen Harper

The extraordinary tale of Elizabeth I's closest ally and most trusted confidante, a woman whose story has never been told. . . until now.

Katherine Ashley, the daughter of a poor country squire, comes to the royal court as a spy for Henry VIII's man Thomas Cromwell. She befriends Anne Boleyn and, as a dying favor to the doomed queen, agrees to become governess to the young Princess Elizabeth. Together they suffer bitter exile, assassination attempts, and imprisonment, barely escaping with their lives. But when Elizabeth is crowned, Kat continues to serve her, faithfully guarding all the queen's secrets, even the ones that could bring down her monarchy.  "Anne Boleyn," Elizabeth once said, "gave me life, but Kat Ashley gave me love."


by Mike Dellosso

Rob Shields has just lost his wife and son. As he is battling depression, denial, and an irrational fear of darkness, an eerie dream convinces him that the answer to the mystery of his son's disappearance is in Darlington, a town found on no map.  Teaming up with a quirky waitress who insists she has been there, Shields begins his quest to find the truth. His search leads him deep into the woods surrounding the town where, once in, there seems to be no way out.



by P.C. Cast and Kristin Cast

Things have turned black at the House of Night. Zoey Redbird's soul has shattered. With everything she's ever stood for falling apart, and a broken heart making her want to stay in the Otherworld forever, Zoey's fading fast. It's seeming more and more doubtful that she will be able to pull herself back together in time to rejoin her friends and set the world to rights. As the only living person who can reach her, Stark must find a way to get to her.  But how? He will have to die to do so, the Vampyre High Council stipulates.  And then Zoey will give up for sure.  There are only seven days left.

Enter BFF Stevie Rae. She wants to help Z, but she has massive problems of her own. The rogue Red Fledglings are acting up, and this time not even Stevie Rae can protect them from the consequences. Her kinda boyfriend, Dallas, is sweet but too nosy for his own good. The truth is, Stevie Rae's hiding a secret that might be the key to getting Zoey home -- but it also threatens to explode her whole world.

In the middle of the whole mess is Aphrodite: ex-Fledgling, trust-fund baby, total hag from Hell (and proud of it). She's always been blessed (if you could call it that) with visions that can reveal the future, but now it seems that Nyx has decided to speak through her with the goddess's own voice, whether Aphrodite wants it or not. Aphrodite's loyalty can swing a lot of different ways, but right now Zoey's fate hangs in the balance.

Three girls. . . playing with fire. . .if they don't watch out, everyone will get Burned.


by Hampton Sides


On April 23, 1967, Prisoner #416J, an inmate at the notorious Missouri State Penitentiary, escaped in a breadbox. Fashioning himself Eric Galt, this nondescript thief and con man -- whose real name was James Earl Ray -- drifted through the South, into Mexico, and then Los Angeles, where he was galvanized by George Wallace's racist presidential campaign.

On February 1, 1968, two Memphis garbage men were crushed to death in their hydraulic truck, provoking the exclusively African American workforce to go on strike. Hoping to resuscitate his faltering civil rights crusade, Martin Luther King, Jr. joined the sanitation workers' cause, but their march turned violent. Humiliated, King fatefully vowed to return to Memphis in April.

With relentless storytelling drive, Sides follows Galt and King as they crisscross the country, one stalking the other, until the crushing moment at the Lorraine Motel when the drifter catches up with his prey. Against the backdrop of the resulting nationwide riots and the pathos of King's funeral, Sides gives us a riveting crosscut narrative of the assassin's flight and the sixty-five-day search that led investigators to Canada, Portugal, and England -- a massive manhunt ironically led by Hoover's FBI.

Magnificent in scope and drawing on a wealth of previously unpublished material, this nonfiction thriller illuminates one of the darkest hours in American life -- an example of how history is so often a matter of the petty bringing down the great.


 

by Paul V. Stutzman

When he lost his wife to breast cancer, Paul Stutzman decided to make some big changes.  He quit his job of seventeen years and set out on a thru-hike of the Appalachian Trail, a 2,176 mile stretch of varying terrain spanning fourteen states. During his nearly five-month-long hike, he battled brutal trail conditions and overwhelming loneliness, but also enjoyed spectacular scenery and trail camaraderie.

With breathtaking descriptions and humorous anecdotes from his travels, Stutzman reveals how immersing himself in nature and befriending fellow hikers helped him recover from a devastating loss. Somewhere between Georgia and Maine, he realized that God had been with him every step of the way, and on a famous path through the wilderness, he found his own path to peace and freedom.


by Catherine Martin

Would you like to experience a new season of growing spiritually and becoming mature in the Lord? You've probably learned that simply trying harder is not the answer. Instead, the secret is to extend your roots deep into the rich soil of God's grace. Join Catherine Martin in this refreshing tour of God's favor, where you will. . .

  • trade your ashes for God's beauty and your poverty for His riches

  • relax in the assurance that Christ is living His life in you

  • follow the Lord's leading through the seasons of the soul

  • enjoy God's gift of a new day

  • embrace God's dreams for your life
Enjoy a quiet stroll through the garden of God's grace, where you can "grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ" (2 Peter 3:18) 

What great things were in your mailbox this week?

Friday, May 7, 2010

The Friday 56: 5-7-2010

Rules:
* Grab the book nearest you. Right now.
* Turn to page 56.
* Find the fifth sentence.
* Post that sentence (plus one or two others if you like) along with these instructions on your blog or (if you do not have your own blog) in the comments section of Storytime with Tonya and Friends.
*Post a link along with your post back to Storytime with Tonya and Friends.
* Don't dig for your favorite book, the coolest, the most intellectual. Use the CLOSEST.

Lily and Tom always repeated that part of the story, when they told it, time after time -- Can you imagine it? A bright magenta river?  Their friends would comment on the tablecloth, and Lily and Tom would talk about finding it in Lyon, which was really a story about how they found each other, how they committed to each other, and how they shared a love that sustained them. (p56, The Threadbare Heart by Jennie Nash - uncorrected proof)






The Threadbare Heart
Publisher/Publication Date: Berkley Trade, May 4, 2010
ISBN: 978-0-425-23410-5
336 pages

Friday Finds: 5-7-2010


Here are my finds this week!


The Lake Shore Limited
by Sue Miller

From the publisher: Four unforgettable characters beckon you into this spellbinding new novel from Sue Miller, the author of 2008’s heralded best seller The Senator’s Wife. First among them is Wilhelmina—Billy—Gertz, small as a child, fiercely independent, powerfully committed to her work as a playwright. The story itself centers on The Lake Shore Limited—a play Billy has written about an imagined terrorist bombing of that train as it pulls into Union Station in Chicago, and about a man waiting to hear the fate of his estranged wife, who is traveling on it. Billy had waited in just such a way on 9/11 to hear whether her lover, Gus, was on one of the planes used in the attack.



The novel moves from the snow-filled woods of Vermont to the rainy brick sidewalks of Boston as the lives of the other characters intersect and interweave with Billy’s: Leslie, Gus’s sister, still driven by grief years after her brother’s death; Rafe, the actor who rises to greatness in a performance inspired by a night of incandescent lovemaking; and Sam, a man irresistibly drawn to Billy after he sees the play that so clearly displays the terrible conflicts and ambivalence of her situation.

How Billy has come to create the play out of these emotions, how it is then created anew on the stage, how the performance itself touches and changes the other characters’ lives—these form the thread that binds them all together and drives the novel compulsively forward.

A powerful love story; a mesmerizing tale of entanglements, connections, and inconsolable losses; a marvelous reflection on the meaning of grace and the uses of sorrow, in life and in art: The Lake Shore Limited is Sue Miller at her dazzling best.



Unfinished Desires
by Gail Godwin

From the publisher: From Gail Godwin, three-time National Book Award finalist and acclaimed New York Times bestselling author of Evensong and The Finishing School, comes a sweeping new novel of friendship, loyalty, rivalries, redemption, and memory.


It is the fall of 1951 at Mount St. Gabriel’s, an all-girls school tucked away in the mountains of North Carolina. Tildy Stratton, the undisputed queen bee of her class, befriends Chloe Starnes, a new student recently orphaned by the untimely and mysterious death of her mother. Their friendship fills a void for both girls but also sets in motion a chain of events that will profoundly affect the course of many lives, including the girls’ young teacher and the school’s matriarch, Mother Suzanne Ravenel.


Fifty years on, the headmistress relives one pivotal night, trying to reconcile past and present, reaching back even further to her own senior year at the school, where the roots of a tragedy are buried.


In Unfinished Desires, a beloved author delivers a gorgeous new novel in which thwarted desires are passed on for generations–and captures the rare moment when a soul breaks free.





Private Life
by Jane Smiley

From the publisher: A riveting new novel from the Pulitzer Prize–winner that traverses the intimate landscape of one woman’s life, from the 1880s to World War II.


Margaret Mayfield is nearly an old maid at twenty-seven in post–Civil War Missouri when she marries Captain Andrew Jackson Jefferson Early. He’s the most famous man their small town has ever produced: a naval officer and a brilliant astronomer—a genius who, according to the local paper, has changed the universe. Margaret’s mother calls the match “a piece of luck.”


Margaret is a good girl who has been raised to marry, yet Andrew confounds her expectations from the moment their train leaves for his naval base in faraway California. Soon she comes to understand that his devotion to science leaves precious little room for anything, or anyone, else. When personal tragedies strike and when national crises envelop the country, Margaret stands by her husband. But as World War II approaches, Andrew’s obsessions take a different, darker turn, and Margaret is forced to reconsider the life she has so carefully constructed.


Private Life is a beautiful evocation of a woman’s inner world: of the little girl within the hopeful bride, of the young woman filled with yearning, and of the faithful wife who comes to harbor a dangerous secret. But it is also a heartbreaking portrait of marriage and the mysteries that endure even in lives lived side by side; a wondrously evocative historical panorama; and, above all, a masterly, unforgettable novel from one of our finest storytellers.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Thursday's Threads

I have decided that the only way that I am going to start working on some of my needlepoint projects again is to start blogging about them!  The one on the top of the page is getting kind of stale and I would like to replace it with something new!  So let me introduce you to those projects that have some interest to me right now.

My son really guilted me into this when he came and asked me where his Nemo was the other day - he meant this -



I'd like to know where Nemo is also - do you see him on the canvas?  Do you see anything on the canvas?  How to tell a 5 year old that I haven't even started!

Then I have this project called Anasazi Song by Carole Lake - which I started over a year ago.  I just received the directions for another one like this called Anasazi Dream (I think).  As you can see, I actually have some done on this one but I would like to finish it before I start on the "Dream".






That's what I am working on this week.  If you have any projects you are working on - from beading to woodwork - leave a comment and or a link. I would love to get some inspiration!

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