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    Commemorate Nakba Day with an evening of readings in NYC.

    Dan Sheehan

    May 14, 2024, 11:42am

    Tomorrow evening, May 15th, at the People’s Forum in Manhattan, the Radical Books Collective and The Polis Project will join forces to organize an evening of readings titled Nakba Then and Now: Refuse Silence to amplify the Palestinian liberation struggle, demand an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, and raise money for the The Ghassan Abu Sittah Children’s Fund and UNRWA’s Gaza Emergency Appeal.

    Ibtisam Azem, Najla Said, Huda Fakhredinne, Maaza Mengiste, Ahmad Almallah, Mona Eltahawy, Siddhartha Deb, and Kesivan Naidoo are just some of the writers and musicians who will be performing on the night.

    Nakba Day marks the devastation of the Palestinian homeland in 1948 through ethnic cleansing and expulsion of a majority of the Palestinian people. The Nakba, or the Catastrophe, is commemorated on May 15th of each year through demonstrations, strikes, protests, and by memorializing the names of villages that were uprooted or destroyed. This year’s Nakba Day, of course, is one like no other before.

    As the event organizers detail in their press release:

    “Today, as we are witnessing another Nakba, the world is also rising up on every continent. We invite you to join in this resistance.”

    This event is also part of the Publishers for Palestine coalition’s Exist, Resist, Return: A Week of Action for Nakba Day. This is a call to “withdraw labor except for Palestine, boycott the war machine, pledge support to local campus encampments, amplify Palestinian voices and foster a sense of community and solidarity.”

    Nakba Then and Now is free to attend but space is limited so make sure to register here if you’d like to be a part of what promises to be an unforgettable evening.

    One great short story to read today: Ursula K. Le Guin’s “The Day Before the Revolution”

    James Folta

    May 14, 2024, 10:30am

    According to the powers that be (er, apparently according to Dan Wickett of the Emerging Writers Network), May is Short Story Month. To celebrate, for the second year in a row, the Literary Hub staff will be recommending a single short story, free* to read online, every (work) day of the month. Why not read along with us? Today, we recommend:

    “The Day Before the Revolution,” by Ursula K. Le Guin

    I love Le Guin’s writing, especially for her use of sci-fi’s speculation to imagine other politics — if we’re making up planets, spaceships, and evil empires, why not also more equitable ways of organizing ourselves? This story is set in the Hainish universe, where Le Guin’s classics The Left Hand of Darkness and The Dispossessed also take place, and follows an old anarchist reflecting on her life and her revolution. This story has all the quintessential Le Guin touches: delicate details, strange and relatable worlds beyond our own, and an honest assessment of the promises and falterings of radical, transformative political dreams.

    The story begins:

    The speaker’s voice was as loud as empty beer-trucks in a stone street, and the people at the meeting were jammed up close, cobblestones, that great voice booming over them. Taviri was somewhere on the other side of the hall. She had to get to him. She wormed and pushed her way among the darkclothed, close-packed people. She did not hear the words, nor see the faces: only the booming, and the bodies pressed one behind the other.

    Read it here.

    *If you hit a paywall, we recommend trying with a different/private/incognito browser (but listen, you didn’t hear it from us).

    Hari Kunzru! Freud! System of a Down (the memoir)! 26 new books out today.

    Gabrielle Bellot

    May 14, 2024, 4:51am

    It’s just about the middle of May, and as the wheel of the year turns towards summer, you may find yourself in need of summer-appropriately-bright-and-hot new literature to read. Well, Dear Reader, you may just be in luck. Below, you’ll find twenty-six new books of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry to consider.

    You’ll find new fiction from Hari Kunzru, Miranda July, Jessica Shattuck, Colombe Schneck, Kimberly King Parsons, and many others, as well as powerful fiction debuts, including Honor Levy’s anticipated (and aptly titled) My First Book and Melissa Mogollon’s Oye, the mesmeric cover art of which graces today’s post. You’ll find buzzed-about poetry collections by Li-Young Lee and Maria Stepanova.

    And it’s a great day for nonfiction lovers, as well. You’ll find On the Couch, a collection of authors’ fascinating thoughts on Freud, including contributions from Colm Tóibín, Jennifer Finney Boylan, Rick Moody, Siri Hustvedt, and more. If you, like me, devoted years of your youth to System of a Down (and also now unabashedly own them on vinyl), you may be intrigued to read its lead singer’s new memoir (of sorts), which explores music, Armenian identity, politics, and more.

    There’s a remarkable recounting of how a white supremacist became deprogramed, and now opposes racism, in The Klansman’s Son. You’ll see books exploring the effects of Trumpism on children’s views of political norms and on education, a collection of Peter Schjeldahl’s recent writings, an exploration of a little-known American dynasty that altered the course of the country’s history, open-hearted memoirs, and much, much more.

    Good stuff, methinks. Let your to-be-read piles gloriously grow, and, as always, read deeply.

    *

    Blue Ruin - Kunzru, Hari

    Hari Kunzru, Blue Ruin
    (Knopf)

    “Brilliant….Coincidence is a dangerous narrative tool to mess around with, but Kunzru pulls it off in Blue Ruin thanks to the subtle characterizations and intricate layers with which he expands his premise. Buried resentments and jettisoned ambitions come to the fore as Kunzru explores themes of racism, opportunism and the inequities of privilege and hardship. The result is an exceptional work that finds new variations on the familiar chestnut that people aren’t always what they seem.”
    BookPage

    All Fours - July, Miranda

    Miranda July, All Fours
    (Riverhead)

    “[July] altered my ideas of what kinds of stories were possible….In her second novel, July brings her singular brand of sardonic melancholia and wide-eyed wisdom to bear on this tale of a semi-famous middle-aged artist who decides to take a left turn from the left turn she had already planned.”
    Electric Literature

    My First Book - Levy, Honor

    Honor Levy, My First Book
    (Penguin Press)

    My First Book [is] a collection of stories that is indeed her first book….Reading Levy is what it must have felt like to read Ann Beattie on her generation in the early 1970s….In this collection’s finest work, Levy’s sentences are cold poetry of a sort….What pushes Levy’s stories…is the empathy you can sense below the starkness….Is a hot take a stab at being found? Levy can dispense these as well as anyone. Crucially, though, she understands that ‘a hot take won’t keep you warm at night.'”
    The New York Times

    Another Word for Love: A Memoir - Wallace, Carvell

    Carvell Wallace, Another Word for Love: A Memoir
    (MCD)

    Another Word For Love is generous in how genuine the journey, the offering feels. Walking alongside a writer who is attempting to come to terms with the enormity of their survival, its joys and aches. And through this genuine nature, through this striking and beautiful prose, rich with touchable imagery, Carvell Wallace has you by the hand, and never lets go.”
    –Hanif Abdurraqib

    House of Kwa - Kwa, Mimi

    Mimi Kwa, House of Kwa
    (ABC Books)

    “House of Kwa answers the question of how one should write about one’s family with generosity and love—to read it is to experience Kwa’s wonder at the strength and resilience of her family, as well as the intimacy of her relationships with them. Traversing the boundaries of a traditional memoir, House of Kwa is the biography of a family that explores the way our lives are shaped by the past we can and cannot remember.”
    Kill Your Darlings

    The Klansman's Son: My Journey from White Nationalism to Antiracism: A Memoir - Black, R. Derek

    R. Derek Black, The Klansman’s Son: My Journey from White Nationalism to Antiracism: A Memoir
    (Abrams Press)

    “I expected an ideological journey. What I did not expect—what sets The Klansman’s Son apart, what had me engrossed–is Derek Black’s meticulous detailing of their emotional journey from White nationalist to antiracist: how they and others felt during each step of their walk away from what and who nurtured them; how internal courage and external love braced each step toward being antiracist. What a deeply moving memoir.”
    –Ibram X. Kendi

    The Invention of the Darling: Poems - Lee, Li-Young

    Li-Young Lee, The Invention of the Darling: Poems
    (Norton)

    “Few poets write like Li-Young Lee…facing the biggest and broadest questions head-on….Fewer still ask these questions so well, and so movingly.”
    Los Angeles Times

    Holy Winter - Stepanova, Maria

    Maria Stepanova, Holy Winter (trans. Sasha Dugdale)
    (New Directions Publishing)

    “Wildly experimental, and yet movingly traditional. Ironic, and yet obsessed with spell-making. Full of allusions to various different canonical voices, and yet heart-wrenchingly direct. What, friends, is this? It’s that glorious thing: the poetry of Maria Stepanova.”
    –Ilya Kaminsky

    Oye - Mogollon, Melissa

    Melissa Mogollon, Oye
    (Hogarth Press)

    “Funny and smart, Oye grapples with the messy inheritance of intergenerational trauma and how it manifests in the everyday conversations with the people we love. Mogollon has written a beautiful book.”
    –Claire Jimenez

    Swimming in Paris: A Life in Three Stories - Schneck, Colombe

    Colombe Schneck, Swimming in Paris: A Life in Three Stories (trans. Natasha Lehrer and Lauren Elkin)
    (Penguin Press)

    Swimming in Paris is a brilliantly written, searingly intimate piece of biographical fiction, the story of a woman experiencing all of life….Schneck writes of herself at seventeen, at thirty, at forty, at fifty and beyond with an understanding that is enviable. She unhesitatingly invites the reader into her blunt, beautiful, sometimes terrible thoughts, taking us through her triumphs and losses, and in the end reveals an unparalleled strength and empathy.”
    Booklist

    This Strange Eventful History - Messud, Claire

    Claire Messud, This Strange Eventful History
    (Norton)

    “A tour de force, This Strange Eventful History is one of those rare novels which a reader doesn’t merely read but lives through with the characters. Call it the War and Peace of the twentieth and twenty-first century; call it The Long View of a family migrating through many borders, worlds, and eras; call it anything and we fall short. Claire Messud is a magnificent storyteller, and the novel, an all-encompassing history of many human hearts and any human heart, will linger and haunt us.”
    –Yiyun Li

    On the Couch: Writers Analyze Sigmund Freud - Blauner, Andrew

    Andrew Blauner (editor), On the Couch: Writers Analyze Sigmund Freud
    (Princeton University Press)

    “At a time when Freud is so easily written off as ‘an anachronism or a punch line,’ when ‘his story is one that many people think they know,’ [On the Couch] pushes against the myth of that single, already-familiar story by offering unique lines of reasoning and association about a vast array of issues related to him….A solid collage of voices to complicate our picture of psychoanalysis.”
    Kirkus Reviews

    The Art of Dying: Writings, 2019-2022 - Schjeldahl, Peter

    Peter Schjeldahl, The Art of Dying: Writings, 2019 – 2022
    (Abrams Press)

    “Brilliant…a testament to Schjeldahl’s unique ability to make tangible art’s emotional effects on the viewer….This posthumous collection will be a gift to Schjeldahl’s admirers and a revelation to those new to his work.”
    Publishers Weekly

    Down with the System: A Memoir (of Sorts) - Tankian, Serj

    Serj Tankian, Down with the System: A Memoir (Of Sorts)
    (Hachette)

    “A very satisfying and potent account of Serj Tankian’s wild journey from Beirut to California to Yerevan. It’s a journal recounting the crazy birth of System Of A Down, but it’s also a manifesto about politics and art. It’s cool and it’s hot, just like System. Ultimately, it’s the story of one man’s melding of political fire, creative juices, and spirituality. I loved living inside Serj’s head!”
    –Eric Bogosian

    American Bloods: The Untamed Dynasty That Shaped a Nation - Kaag, John

    John Kaag, American Bloods: The Untamed Dynasty That Shaped a Nation
    (FSG)

    “Leave it to the adventuresome philosopher John Kaag to uncover yet another hidden tale central to the history of American life and thought….In a taut and spell-binding narrative, Kaag traces the Blood family’s influence through generations by singling out individuals…always in close connection with the central thinkers and doers of their day: Emerson, Thoreau, Cornelius Vanderbilt, William James. I couldn’t have been more surprised—and delighted—to join Kaag on this voyage.”
    –Megan Marshall

    Last House - Shattuck, Jessica

    Jessica Shattuck, Last House
    (William Morrow)

    Last House is an ambitious historical epic that doubles as an intimate family saga. Jessica Shattuck captures and connects it all—the imperial ambitions of the postwar generation, the rebellion of their offspring in the Sixties, the fallout that we’re still sifting through today. Shattuck writes incisively about marriage, siblings, social activism, and the self-deceptions that allow us to preserve our belief in our own innocence despite all the evidence to the contrary. This is a wide-ranging novel to savor.”
    –Tom Perrotta

    Woodworm - Martinez, Layla

    Layla Martinez, Woodworm (trans. Sophie Hughes and Annie McDermott)
    (Two Lines Press)

    “If you’re in the mood to read a story about a haunted house that will make your skin crawl, then I cannot recommend Woodworm by Layla Martínez enough. This book has everything, from witches to saints to angels that look like praying mantises to some of the most unsettling portrayals of ghosts that I’ve come across in a long time.”
    Polygon

    Indian Winter - Ali, Kazim

    Kazim Ali, Indian Winter
    (Coach House Books)

    “I have never read anything quite like Indian Winter. A hauntingly poetic and deeply reflective interior and exterior journey through the landscape of the soul—and in particular, the beautifully queer soul of the narrator—this novel proved compelling and compassionate. This is a rare jewel of a book. I was totally and willingly seduced by the language, and ultimately, by the wisdom simmering and shimmering to consciousness in these pages. Wow!”
    –James Davidson

    Wide Awake: The Forgotten Force That Elected Lincoln and Spurred the Civil War - Grinspan, Jon

    Jon Grinspan, Wide Awake: The Forgotten Force That Elected Lincoln and Spurred the Civil War
    (Bloomsbury)

    “At last we have a history worthy of the Wide Awakes. This extraordinary youth movement played a pivotal role in electing Abraham Lincoln in 1860, and sent a loud signal to the world that Americans of conscience would no longer turn a blind eye to slavery. Jon Grinspan combines deep archival research with crackling prose to offer a book of surpassing resonance for their time and our own.”
    –Ted Widmer

    City of Light, City of Shadows: Paris in the Belle Époque - Rapport, Mike

    Mike Rapport, City of Light, City of Shadows: Paris in the Belle Époque
    (Basic Books)

    “In this book, which fizzes with all the energy of Belle Époque Paris, Rapport conveys superbly the conflicts, tension, and anxieties underlaying the glittering spectacle of Parisian modernity. His narrative is brilliantly anchored in the spaces and places of the city. For lovers of Paris, the book should become an indispensable accompaniment to any future visit to the city.”
    –Julian Jackson

    Drive: Scraping by in Uber's America, One Ride at a Time - Rigsby, Jonathan

    Jonathan Rigsby, Drive: Scraping by in Uber’s America, One Ride at a Time
    (Beacon Press)

    “Poverty is a relentless attack on a person’s energy and dignity. Jonathan Rigsby’s memoir gives readers a front seat on that punishing journey. He shows how the gig economy depends on trapping workers on a hamster wheel where they can neither stop nor gain ground. Drive is an engaging personal story, as well as a social chronicle that compels us to work for change.”
    –Colleen Shaddox

    We Were the Universe - Parsons, Kimberly King

    Kimberly King Parsons, We Were the Universe
    (Knopf)

    We Were the Universe is a grief-and-lust-and-breastmilk saturated psychedelic journey, a story told in the eternal present of an acid trip and the spiraling everyday life of a young Texan mother, pushing her daughter’s stroller around an unspeakable loss. This novel is a tonal masterpiece, a record I want to spin forever, and I feel so lucky that I can return to its deep magic.”
    –Karen Russell

    The Red Grove - Fontaine, Tessa

    Tessa Fontaine, The Red Grove
    (FSG)

    “This gorgeous, frightening novel maps the hidden roots that link mother to daughter, and sibling to sibling, and utopia to fear. A deft and enrapturing novel full of underground secrets, ready to spring.”
    –Clare Beams

    The Blue Maiden - Noyes, Anna

    Anna Noyes, The Blue Maiden
    (Grove Press)

    “Bracing….Noyes shows with incisive and imagistic prose how the specter of the eerie, ever-changing Blue Maiden hangs over the residents of Berggrund like a pall as the sisters come of age to face horrifying tragedies. Noyes evokes Shirley Jackson in this inspired and memorable gothic tale.”
    Publishers Weekly

    They Came for the Schools: One Town's Fight Over Race and Identity, and the New War for America's Classrooms - Hixenbaugh, Mike

    Mike Hixenbaugh, They Came for the Schools: One Town’s Fight Over Race and Identity, and the New War for America’s Classrooms
    (Mariner)

    “This book is not only a gripping, up-close story of one Texas town’s descent into political madness, it’s also the larger tale of how powerful moneyed interests are stoking our divisions and turning classrooms into battlegrounds.”
    –Paul Tough

    Children of a Troubled Time: Growing Up with Racism in Trump's America - Hagerman, Margaret A.

    Margaret A. Hagerman, Children of a Troubled Time: Growing Up with Racism in Trump’s America
    (New York University Press)

    “With clarity, elegance, and precision and relying on rich interview data, Margaret A. Hagerman shows how the Trump moment has deeply shaped the racialized ideologies and emotions of children. Whether color-blind or white nationalist, children raised in this era will likely retain the scary imprint of Trumpism. I sincerely hope readers, parents, and educators take her suggestions of how to interrupt children’s racism to heart as the nation’s future depends on it. A marvelous book.”
    –Eduardo Bonilla-Silva

    Meet the novelists who are re-analyzing HBO’s Girls.

    Brittany Allen

    May 13, 2024, 2:56pm

    For the past two years, the novelist Alice Elliott Dark has been sending out missives on the writing and reading life via her popular weekly Substack, “Alice on Sunday.” But this March, Dark applied her platform to a curious task: recapping and analyzing old episodes of HBO’s Girls. 

    The project began when Dark responded to an Instagram query from another author, friend, and Lit Hub contributorLynn Steger Strong. On discovering they were both fans of Lena Dunham’s late lightning rod, Dark and Strong decided to embark on a co-rewatch. The authors pondered Girls on their respective Substacks before coming together in an email conversation centered around the final season. The resulting correspondence amounts to a series of essays close-reading the show’s “novelistic” elements.

    Conducted on both “Alice on Sunday,” and Strong’s excellent Substack, “Practicing,” this time-traveling conversation gives podcast vibes. (One pictures Dark and Strong gossiping about Hannah Horvath’s misadventures over martinis.) And as the authors are both self-identified fans of the series, their letters are less critical than joyful, as a rule. But that’s not to say they’re lightweight.

    Dark and Strong grant Girls a full literary analysisas in this letter, from Dark, praising the characters’ introductions. Elsewhere, they compare and contrast the show’s central foursome to characters found in novels by Edith Wharton, Paula Fox, Toni Morrison, and Jane Bowles. For a perhaps-particular fan of the femme coming-of-age story, the whole project is endearing in its depth and particularity. But I wondered about the call to revisit this specificand already much-dissectedcultural property.

    When I reached out, the authors shared that they were called to the show because they were baffled by all the negative critical reception at the time of its release. “I had this vague memory of not being sure if I was allowed to like Girls when it first came out,” Strong wrote. Dark was also “truly taken aback,” by some of the ill-will Dunham incited.

    As a Millennial living in Greenpoint (and traveling on Vulture’s internet) in 2012, I remember that critical clap-back well. And sure, it does look distended in hindsight. Though there are things to criticize about Girls and its creators, many takes on its construction veered into bad faiththat is when they weren’t busy being flagrantly sexist. The fact that the letters don’t often discuss the show in the sickly light of its reception is one of the project’s great pleasures. Examining the series apart from all its cultural freight helps us see its strengths; at a distance (and abetted by the guiding hands of two sharp analysts) one can better admire the show’s mastery of tone, and the canniness in its depiction of characters who both defy and embrace type.

    For both authors, the Girls letters also sprang from a recurring interest in the show’s major themes. “I’ve been thinking a lot lately about time and what it does to women’s relationship to femininity, identity, friendship, and judgment,” Strong wrote. And Dark, who’s latest book Fellowship Point depicts a decades-long female friendship, was also drawn to the series out of love for stories about women and girls.

    Yet Dark is leaving the rewatch with more than fond memories. “What I am most carrying away from the show is excitement about long form structure,” she told me, “and an abiding fascination for how the carefully written and rendered can evoke life so well.” Inspired by the slow-cooker construction of a six-season episodic, Dark is revisiting an urge to try her own hand at a six book series“about periods in a person’s life not unlike my own.”

    That’s a happy accident, because the letters were not designed as homework. Both writers emphasized the pure pleasure of this exercise, and in her first letter, Strong assured her readers that the rewatch was “meant only as something to read when you need to not look at the awful for a while.” And though we might quibble about whether the word ‘awful’ applies de facto to being twenty-four (who can forget this clip, from Hannah’s trip to the ob-gyn?) that impulse feels on the money.

    If you’re also in the mood to leave this timeline, I recommend glancing backward with these two great friends.

    The strange, online lives of “book husbands.”

    James Folta

    May 13, 2024, 12:36pm

    Screenshots from TikTok

    If you spend any time on BookTok or Bookstagram or book-adjacent Reddit (Bookit? Booddit? Boot?), you’ve probably come across the “book husband.” Since encountering the phrase, I haven’t been able to shake it. I’ve been muttering things around my apartment like “I am, as always, your humble book husband” and “What did you say about my book husband?!”

    Other than one of those sticky internet phrases that gets stuck in your brain, what is a book husband? What are their lives like? Should I… become one?

    Online, a book husband is one of two types: a hot fictional character, or someone married to a book influencer. The former is just good old horny-reading. Having a book husband or boyfriend is an online way of saying you’re fantasizing about a fictional babe—I haven’t bumped into anyone with a “book fiancé” or “book ex” yet, but I’m sure they’re out there.

    Having a crush because you’re immersed and having emotional responses to an invented world is, to a certain extent, the entire point of fiction. And reorienting your personality around an imagined relationship has surely been around since someone said “Is there a Mrs. Guy-Painted-On-The-Wall-Of-The-Cave?” in the Lascaux caverns.

    But the stranger usage of “book husband” is to describe an influencer by transitive property: someone who is married to a book influencer or enthusiast. The phenomenon strikes me as another flavor of “wife guy,” a subset of internet main character who gets their e-fame from posting about their spouse. Wife guys have enough clout and notoriety to warrant a Wikipedia entry and an article about how there are too many articles about wife guys.

    Book husband content piggybacks off of a wife’s book posting, and you get a lot of stuff cataloging the burdens of dating a reader, like this “booktok husbands be like” video with jokes about how the husband carries all the books or doesn’t get attention when the wife’s reading. Or this “I’m a book girl’s husband” video about listening to your wife talk about books or gaming while she reads. “What about me,” the book husbands lament.

    Book husbands are also looped in for videos where they’re shown receipts for how many books a wife bought and gawk at the cost, or for trends like the “door lean,” a type of sexy entryway enticement/relaxation inspired by romance novels.

    Beyond this one pose, there’s a lot about sex stuff in these videos. Like this “application to be a book boyfriend”—a less committed variant of the book husband—that is mostly about sex. This comes up often, and there are a lot of jokes about how the wives are getting horny from reading, how the books have unrealistic male characters, the fact that sex is being described on the page, and so on.

    What sticks out to me after looking at so much book husband stuff is the weird, possibly unintentional misogyny: women read and men roll their eyes at it. This is part of a wider meme on social media to gender everything, creating categories of things appropriate only for girls and boys, husbands and wives. “Book husbands” are like “girl dinner” or “boys thinking about the Roman Empire,” part of a wider, joking trend towards reductive essentialisms.

    And that reduction extends to the idea of reading presented in these clips, which shrink a love of books to the performance of reading. As Brittney Allen wrote the other day, these videos are showcasing something counter to the often slow and inward-facing pleasure of reading, which gets subsumed by the conspicuous consumption of books. I’m certainly as guilty as anyone of fetishizing print, but what I’ve always loved about reading is that it opens and expands my world—narrowing my identity to a “book reader” makes that joy seem brittle and friable.

    Not everything I found was competition and content, though. Searching for “book husband” turned up a lot of threads of people asking for recommendations: non-bookish husbands looking for a good gift for a reader’s birthday, or partners looking for a book to open their husbands to the world of reading. These were sweet and sincere for the most part, people looking to make a connection.

    I’m being too hard on the book husbands, who like many wife guys, seem to really love their wives and are, if anything, too earnestly enamored. And I know a lot of this phenomenon is rooted in the drive to churn out content—BookTok is more Tok than Book—and getting a husband in on the hustle makes sense. I just wish the jokes were better, and that the underlying observations weren’t quite so mired in insecurity and exasperation.

    Now if you’ll excuse me, I have to go perfect my door lean.

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