Friday, August 29, 2025

Book Review: At Last

By Jami Denison

“When you marry someone, you marry their whole family.” The newlywed couple may have accepted this sentiment, but the rest of the family doesn’t get a vote. And yet sometimes these new relationships can doom the marriage. Who hasn’t heard of a stepson or mother-in-law whose selfish behavior led to a break-up?

In her latest novel, At Last, Marisa Silver writes of two widows who are bound together when their children marry. Evelyn and Helene find themselves locked in a decades-long battle over whom their granddaughter Frankie loves more. In long chapters with alternating narrators, Silver details important events over the decades that shape the women into their adult and senior selves. 

Helene’s life is full of tragedy: An only child after losing a brother and a sister, she marries an older German doctor who hides a tragedy of his own. The only real love Helene receives in life is from her only child, Tom, so it’s not surprising that she views Evelyn as her competition.

Evelyn’s daughter Ruth is one of three daughters, but she’s the one who seems to need her mother the most. Disdainful of Helene’s lavish Shabbat dinners and her formal manner, Evelyn vacillates between judging the other woman and pitying her. As the years go on and Tom and Ruth’s relationship changes, both women soften.

At Last reads like a combination of Elizabeth Strout and Jennifer Egan. With no real plot, the chapters hopscotch from year and year, describing events in the women’s lives: the wedding, Frankie’s broken arm. Told mostly from Helene and Evelyn’s third-person points-of-view, the book starts with Tom and Ruth’s 1971 wedding, then goes back to the women’s childhoods, then continues moving forward. With all the women in the book grappling with love and career issues, At Last often feels like a portrait of feminism over the past eighty years. 

For a novel without a traditional three-act structure, the writing is incredibly compelling. These women come across so strongly on the page, and the reader roots for them to find love, happiness, and acceptance—both of self and of others. And for someone to step in and help Frankie, whose grown-ups seem too self-absorbed to realize their girl is in trouble.

However, I do think the novel’s construct of checking in every several years lessens the development of the relationship between Helene and Evelyn. While the two share some meaningful events, they never really move beyond being their granddaughter’s other grandmother in an impactful way. In Helene’s case, the most meaningful relationship in her life seems to be the one she shares with her housekeeper, and I would have enjoyed reading more about that. 

Still, with its in-depth characterization, At Last is a poignant reminder of the childhood wounds and internal battles that create a person. It might be a worthwhile lesson for folks dealing with angry stepsons or judgmental mothers-in-law.  

Thanks to Broadside PR for the book in exchange for an honest review.

More by Marisa Silver:

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Thursday, August 28, 2025

Excerpt and Giveaway: Falling into Place

We are pleased to share an excerpt from Allison Ashley's latest novel, Falling into Place! The premise sounds really interesting and we know the excerpt is going to make you want to read the whole book. Thanks to BookSparks, we have one copy to share with a lucky reader!

Synopsis:
Accountant and freelance personal stylist Carly Porter, daughter of a compulsive gambler, knows the personal cost of a bad bet. But when she partners with her best friend, Sasha—publisher of a floundering fashion magazine—Carly can’t resist. The highly publicized makeover of an Oklahoma City bachelor could boost sales and be Carly’s ticket to her dream profession. The bachelor in question is none other than Sasha’s older brother, Brooks.

Hardly the party boy Carly remembers from high school, Brooks is now an antisocial, work-obsessed physician still struggling with a devastating loss. But if it means helping his sister, he’s in. It’s Carly’s job to get him out of those lived-in scrubs, style him to the nines, and bring Brooks back to life. But so far, the only real connection is between Brooks and Carly—and falling for a client could cost Carly the career she’s worked so hard for.

To move forward, they’ll both have to overcome their painful pasts. And whatever the risk, maybe even take a chance on love. (Courtesy of Amazon.)

"I really enjoyed this book. It’s sweet, fun, romantic, and so very heartfelt." 
- AJ (Amazon reviewer)

"This was such a beautiful and emotional story and by that second chapter I was already smiling and laughing out loud. If you love romance that makes you happy and can also make you cry, then definitely add this one on your tbr!" 
- Jen Oddo (Amazon reviewer)

Excerpt:

Carly had never whistled at a client before, but this was Brooks. A (sort of) friend she’d known most of her life, and a man who needed a confidence boost.

“I’m just teasing,” she said. “But seriously. Can’t you see how much better that looks? The lines are so much cleaner. You’re casual but sophisticated. Sexy and easy-going. It’s the perfect combination for a first date.”

His lips parted. “I look . . . sexy?”

He glanced at himself in the mirror, white teeth pressed into his full bottom lip as he frowned. He ran one hand across his stomach and turned back to her. She tilted her face up to his, searching his eyes. She’d never ask a real client this question, but he was different. And they no longer had an audience. “Do you really not know how attractive you are?”

Gripping the back of his flushed neck, he cast his gaze once again to his reflection and back to her. “I don’t know. I feel like I’m too much of a science geek to be sexy.”

“Nerds are hot right now.” Now and always, if you asked her. Peter Parker over Spiderman anytime, anywhere.

“Really?”

“Yep.”

“I guess it’s just been so long since I considered my appearance to be something that mattered.”

“It’s not all that matters,” she agreed, still a little unbalanced at the sight of him. The man should wear green every day. “But even if it’s been a while, don’t you remember how much attention you got in high school? Every girl at our school wanted you back then, and you’ve only gotten better with age.”

His hazel eyes were steady on hers, expression unreadable. “Every girl?”

Was he asking if she’d been one of them, or was this a way to boost his ego? She’d give it to him. “Pretty much.”

He didn’t say anything for a moment, watching her, and she had the urge to fidget under his perusal. Bite her lip or step away or move closer . . . something. It was her job to help her clients find their confidence, but something about this felt different. Heavier.

“I’m not proud of the person I was then,” he finally said.

There was a lot she wanted to ask to follow up on that, but when another guy brushed past them to an open fitting room, she decided now wasn’t the time.

Brooks had turned back to the mirror, brow furrowed and posture tight. What was on his mind?

Much of his life was unknown to her, so for the most part there was nothing she could say that might make him feel better. She had no idea what demons lurked, no inkling of the kind of encouragement he needed to realize he was a man worth getting to know. But there was one thing she did know, and it was the thing she’d been hired to help with. So she’d give him one last thought and move on for now, certain she’d come back to this moment and analyze it when she got home.

She leaned forward to speak softly, privately. She was close enough to smell his clean, spicy scent and resisted a sudden, somewhat alarming urge to bury her face in his chest.

“I know I’ve given you a hard time about your style. First impressions matter, so it’s my job to bring out the best in the way you present yourself. But believe me when I say this: I’m adding a few details to the package you’re already working with, yes, but it doesn’t really matter. You don’t need it. You’re a very handsome man, and the fact you don’t seem to know it only makes you more attractive. That saleswoman was even checking you out earlier.”

“She . . . she was?”

“Yes. Believe me, when it comes to how you look, you have nothing to worry about. Nothing at all.”

He blinked a few times and slid his hands into his pockets in a move that didn’t speak of discomfort, but more like humility. Then his lips spread into a self-deprecating smile. “Time will tell if you’re right. But even if you are, looks will only get me so far.”

“What do you mean?”

“I’m not good at the other stuff, either. Like . . . small talk, for example. I don’t remember the last time I went out with someone I didn’t already know inside and out, like my sister, or my brother-in-law, or my best friend James.”

“Don’t you talk to strangers all the time at work? Your patients?”

He shook his head. “Most of my patients are sedated and on ventilators. I talk to their families, sure. But that’s different. I’m in my comfort zone talking about medicine and technology and my treatment plan. I’m not asking them about the weather, or whatever.”

“The weather? Wow, is that what you consider small talk?”

He tossed his hands up in the air. “See?”

“You seem to do fine talking to me.”

“I know you, sort of. And we’re not talking about personal stuff, either.”

She considered him for a moment and the muscles flexing in his jaw as if he was clenching his teeth from stress.

“So let’s change that.”

His expression was a giant question mark.

“Let’s buy your stuff—those jeans for sure, and whatever else you like—and grab dinner. You can practice small talk with me. That way it won’t be so scary on your first date.”

His lips flattened. “I don’t think I said it scared me.”

“Your face said otherwise.”

“Okay, let’s do it.” He turned to head back to the fitting room, then paused and twisted around again. “At least tell me this: Did you just hide my old jeans, or did you throw them out?”

“I have no idea what you’re talking about.”

Allison Ashley is the author of If Tomorrow Never Comes, The Roommate Pact, Would You Rather, Home Sweet Mess, and Perfect Distraction. She is a science geek who enjoys coffee, craft beer, baking, and love stories. When Allison is not working at her day job as a clinical oncology pharmacist, she pens contemporary romances, usually with a medical twist. She lives in Oklahoma with her family and beloved rescue dog.

Visit Allison online:

How to win: Use Rafflecopter to enter the giveaway. If you have any questions, feel free to contact us. If you have trouble using Rafflecopter on our blog, enter the giveaway here

Giveaway ends September 2nd at midnight EST.

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Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Book Review: How the Hell Did I Not Know That

By Jami Denison

A year is a meaningful structure in memoir. Writers have told of a year spent asleep, following religious edicts, traveling around the world. Years of doing less—no shopping, no sex. In her first book, humor writer Lucie Frost details everything she learned in her year from “couch to curiosity.” In How The Hell Did I Not Know That?, Frost follows every thought in her brain down rabbit holes to answer questions both profound and mundane. 

Retiring young and abruptly, Frost had big plans for herself after quitting her job as an employment lawyer in San Antonio, Texas. But instead of volunteering and making the world a better place, Frost finds herself parked on the couch and obsessed with watching 90 Day Fiance. This binge starts her down her first rabbit hole, as she seeks to discover exactly what it takes to marry someone from another country and bring them to the United States.

Fighting depression and looking for a sense of purpose, Frost decides to research various topics: word origin, religions, psychology, sports, health, etc. Her interests flow in a stream-of-consciousness manner, often prompted by something said by her husband or one of her children. While most of the book is dominated by her findings, there are occasional references to her family, their rescue dog, and Frost’s personal struggles. While the book proports to answer the question of what do we do with our lives when our jobs or children are no longer driving our decisions, it deflects that quest into research. Anyone looking for the answers to bigger questions of what makes a life meaningful might not find them here. Self-knowledge, connection with others, serving needy populations—this memoir is not that type of book. 

Frost classifies herself as a humor writer, and her breezy tone fits that description, even if her explanations are straightforward. But there were enough asides about her personal struggles—weight issues, relationship problems, EMDR therapy—that I wanted to know her, not the address of the vice president. Frost ends the book with her acknowledgements, and the last line of that note left me slack-jawed. While writers are under no obligation to bare their souls or their dirty laundry, memoirists are expected to share their most personal stories. 

Perhaps Frost’s next book will delve more deeply into her personal life, or she’ll echo writers like David Sedaris or Erma Bombeck. While she’s planning her next project, though, I do have an earnest suggestion for what she can do with all the trivia she’s amassed: Try out for Jeopardy! The educational game show has been a meaningful second act for many. 

Thanks to Kaye Publicity for the book in exchange for an honest review.

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Tuesday, August 26, 2025

Sara Goodman Confino's trip back in time...plus a book giveaway

Introduction by Melissa Amster

We're pleased to have Sara Goodman Confino back at CLC today to celebrate the publication of her fifth novel, Good Grief! While I love everything Sara has written, this one is her best one yet. Check out my initial thoughts on my Bookstagram. I've met Sara a couple times and she's just as delightful in person as she is online. She's so funny too! If you haven't read her books yet, don't hestitate to check them out. If you are as big a fan of hers as I am, then you're in for a treat with her latest. Today, Sara is taking us on a virtual trip back in time, to the 1960s. We hope you all enjoy the ride. Thanks to Get Red PR, we have TWO copies of Good Grief to give away!

Sara Goodman Confino is the bestselling author of five novels: Don’t Forget to Write, Behind Every Good Man, She’s Up to No Good, For the Love of Friends, and Good Grief. After spending more years than she’s willing to publicly admit teaching high school English and journalism, she is currently writing full time and trying to make a living off of the crazy stories in her head. She lives in Montgomery County, Maryland with her husband, two sons, two miniature schnauzers, and a goldfish that seems to be vying for the world record of longest living fish. When she’s not writing or frantically parenting, she can be found on the Peloton, at the beach, or at a Bruce Springsteen concert, sometimes even dancing onstage. (Bio courtesy of Sara's website.)

Visit Sara online:
Website * Facebook * Instagram

Synopsis: 
It’s 1963, two years since Barbara Feldman’s husband died. Raising two kids, she’s finally emerging from her cocoon of grief. Not yet a butterfly, but she’s anxious to spread her wings.

Then one day her mother-in-law, Ruth, shows up on her doorstep with five suitcases, expecting a room of her own with a suitable mattress. Abrasive and stuck in her ways yet well meaning, Mother Ruth arrives without warning to help with the children. How can Barbara say no to a woman who is not only a widow herself but also a grieving mother? As Ruth’s prickly visit turns from days to weeks to what seems like forever, Barbara realizes Ruth has got to go. But Barbara has an ingenious plan: introduce Ruth to some fine gentlemen and marry her off as fast as she can.

Soon enough, something tells Barbara that Ruth is trying to do the same for her. At least they’re finding common ground—helping each other to move forward. Even if it is in the most unpredictable ways two totally different women ever imagined.
(Courtesy of Amazon.)

“Barbara and Ruth share a similar pain. Living under the same roof, the widowed mother and daughter-in-law butt heads as they wade through loneliness and grief. And when they each scheme to find love for the other one, Confino does what she does best: crafting a brimming tale of family and second chances while finding joy through our sorrows. Special nod to the tiny gems from former books Confino has sprinkled within the pages. But mostly, readers will fall in love with this bighearted story full of hope.” 
—Rochelle B. Weinstein, bestselling author of This Is Not How It Ends

“Sprinkled with romantic side plots for both mother-in-law and daughter-in-law, and cameos from beloved characters of the author’s previous books, Good Grief is another winner from Sara Goodman Confino and guaranteed to delight her large existing fan base and bring in new readers who have yet to experience her charming and hilarious stories.” 
—Meredith Schorr, author of Roommating

One of the questions I am asked most frequently is why I choose to set the majority of my novels in the early 1960s when I clearly wasn’t alive in that era. 

It’s a valid question—I’m an elder millennial who never in a million years thought that I’d be writing about a time period when my parents were children. 

But it’s a multifaceted answer. The starting point is likely that my favorite movie is Dirty Dancing. I used to lie and say it was higher brow titles, like Breakfast at Tiffany's and Casablanca, which I do love. But if Dirty Dancing comes on the tv, I’m watching it. In fact, my dogs hide if they hear “Time of My Life,” because they know one of them is getting held overhead in the infamous lift. 

Did I watch that movie way too young? Yes. Did I understand the abortion subplot? ABSOLUTELY NOT. When I watched it again, older, I was shocked by how much I missed. But even more shocked by how relevant that storyline still was. 

Fast forward to college. My favorite class that I took was a seminar on America in the 1960s. I thought I was going to be learning about hippies, but we focused on the whole decade, with a large chunk of it dedicated to the Kennedy assassination and the ways in which that shifted the entire country’s future. And I somehow got to write papers on Simon and Garfunkle and compare the different portrayals of Romeo and Juliet through the era contrasting West Side Story with the Zeffirelli film. No boring analysis essays here!

And then along came The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (you knew I was going there, right?). The clothes! The colors! The family dynamics! The Jewish humor even if Rachel Brosnahan herself isn’t! I loved it all.

So when a bookstagrammer called me “The Marvelous Mrs. Confino” on publication day for my second novel, an idea was born. I wanted to write something set in that bright, colorful era before the Kennedy assassination, where everything looked so happy. But there was a lot going on beneath the surface that was decidedly less so. And like in Dirty Dancing, a lot of the issues that people were dealing with then are still relevant today. And that’s where Don’t Forget to Write and Behind Every Good Man came into play.

For Good Grief, I wanted to tell a more intimate story. My paternal grandfather died suddenly in 1960, when my father was nine. And my grandmother raised him in an era where she couldn’t even get a credit card without a man signing off on it. What jobs could she get? As a Jewish immigrant, who married at 19, and never went to college? And, she persevered because what choice did she have?

Women today can find work much easier, and childcare, while expensive, is available. We can get our own credit cards, car loans, mortgages. But we’re still expected to do it all—balance a career, a family, a home, and with social media, it often feels like everyone is doing it better than we are. 

Barbara, the main character, who suffers a similar loss to my grandmother’s, eventually realizes she can’t do everything herself. She has to be able to ask for and accept help—an issue that modern women struggle with as well. She faces antisemitism, inspired by a real incident that happened to my grandmother in that era, but mirroring today’s climate in ways I couldn’t have anticipated when I wrote the book. 

I love seeing how far we have come. But writing books set in the past has helped me see how far we still need to go as well. And I think that’s an important lesson for today’s readers—it wasn’t that long ago that we, as women, lacked the rights we take for granted today. And it isn’t impossible that we could revert to not having them again. And that, combined with a love for Dirty Dancing, is why I’ll continue to tell these stories. 

Thanks to Sara for visiting with us and to Get Red PR for sharing her book with our readers. (And now we have "Hula Hana" in our heads.)

How to win: Use Rafflecopter to enter the giveaway. If you have any questions, feel free to contact us. If you have trouble using Rafflecopter on our blog, enter the giveaway here

Giveaway ends September 1st at midnight EST.

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Monday, August 25, 2025

Book Review: Mrs. Christie at the Mystery Guild Library

By Jami Denison

Like many mystery fans, once I outgrew Trixie Belden and The Three Investigators, Agatha Christie was the first adult author I picked up. Miss Marple remains one of my favorite detectives, and her ability to sniff out a murderer using keen observation skills and sad knowledge about the worst of human nature remain unmatched. 

Author Amanda Chapman has brought Agatha Christie into the 21st century with her debut mystery, Mrs. Christie at the Mystery Guild Library. In it, the 20th century British author appears in modern New York City to help book conservator Tory Van Dyne to catch a killer and come out of her shell. 

Tory Van Dyne, offspring of a wealthy and eccentric New York family, lives in the Mystery Guild Library, a converted rowhouse left to her by a relative. She’s such a devoted Agatha Christie fan that she had remade one of the rooms in the museum to be an exact replica of Christie’s home library in England. Still, she’s shocked when the Grand Dame herself appears in the flesh, bored with the Great Beyond and wanting to help solve a mystery. Soon, one presents itself: Tory’s cousin Nicola, a Broadway actress, watches in horror as her agent, Howard, is pushed in front of a subway train and killed. Soon, other folks in Nic’s circle start dropping… and Tory is terrified that Nic might be next. With a cast of characters including a hot detective, a gay library assistant, a precocious 10-year-old girl, and a yappy dog or two, Tory and Mrs. Christie—whomever she may really be—have plenty of help in pulling apart this who-dun-it.

Chapman has the pacing and twists of a Christie novel down pat. Every Monday night, the team meets in the library to talk about the case and its latest complications, and Mrs. Christie—often quoting her own fictional detectives—asks questions and adds insight. The final reveal is straight out of Christie’s playbook. 

The protagonist, however, isn’t Mrs. Christie but Tory, and Tory is a worthwhile narrator, caring and curious. But neither character is Miss Marple, and the story unfolding for weeks across New York City doesn’t hit the same way that a three-day garden party at an English country home might. The reader hardly knows the victims, making it hard to care about their deaths or feel a sense of urgency in reading the pages. The story engages intellectually, like a crossword puzzle, but not emotionally, which many contemporary mystery fans want. 

Still, the novel is fun, and Agatha Christie fangirls will love all the references to her books. We can learn a lot about human nature by paying attention to people as closely as Christie’s detectives did… even if some of what we learn isn’t so good. 

Thanks to Berkley for the book in exchange for an honest review.

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Friday, August 22, 2025

What's in the (e)mail...plus a book giveaway

All (or most) of these books can be found on AmazonBarnes & NobleBookshop.orgAppleKobo, etc.

NG = NetGalley


Melissa:
Husband of the Year by M.A. Wardell from Forever (NG)
We Were Never Friends by Kaira Rouda from Poisoned Pen Press (NG)
Mad Mabel by Sally Hepworth from St. Martin's Press (NG)
The Fix by Mia Sheridan from Over the River PR (NG)
Once Upon a Time in Dollywood by Ashley Jordan from Berkley (NG)
Just Add Happiness
by Julie Hatcher from Lake Union (NG)
Sorry for Your Loss by Georgia McVeigh from Dutton (NG)
Keeper of Lost Children by Sadeqa Johnson from Simon & Schuster (NG)
The Hospital by Leslie Wolfe from Grand Central (print)
Every Version of You by Natalie Messier from Gallery (NG)
Totally Fine
by Nick Spalding from Amazon UK (NG)
And Then There Was You by Sophie Cousens from Putnam (NG)
Missing Sister by Joshilyn Jackson from William Morrow (NG)
More Than Enough by Anna Quindlen from Random House (NG)
One and Only by Maurene Goo from Putnam (NG)

Sara:

Definitely Maybe Not a Detective by Sarah Fox from Random House (NG)
The Great Forgotten by/from K.L. Murphy (ebook)

Allyson:
Seeing Other People by  Emily Wibberley and Austin Siegemund-Broka from Berkley (NG)

What could be in YOUR mail:

Delayed Intention by Barbara Rachel

Barbara has TWO copies to share with some lucky readers!

Old friends. Unfinished business. A chance to make it right.

Lily Mendes and Joshua Cohen were best friends who nearly became something more… until one fateful night pulled them apart.

Nineteen years later, Josh is a devoted son, loyal brother, and dedicated physician. Love isn’t on his radar — the only girl he’s willing to commit to is his rescue dog, Ginger.

Hundreds of miles away, Lily only wants to feel safe, enjoy her work at the hospital, and avoid triggering her overbearing mother. As far as she is concerned, dating is off the table.

Fate—and a few unexpected choices—bring them back into each other’s lives. Timing is everything... and this time, it might finally be right.

Delayed Intention is a heartfelt story of friendship, forgiveness, and the possibility of a second chance. (Synopsis courtesy of Amazon.)

"If you love emotionally intelligent fiction with heart, depth, and a generous dose of joy, don’t miss this one." 
- Natasha Nadel (Goodreads reviewer) 

"This is a very enjoyable read that you will not want to put down, and it also will engage you in some thoughtful introspection about love, relationships, and healing."
 - Caitlin (Goodreads reviewer)

How to win: Use Rafflecopter to enter the giveaway. If you have any questions, feel free to contact us. If you have trouble using Rafflecopter on our blog, enter the giveaway here

Giveaway ends August 27th at midnight EST. 

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Book Review: You Belong Here

By Melissa Smoot

Beckett Bowery never thought she’d return to Wyatt Valley, a picturesque college town in the Virginia mountains steeped in tradition. Her roots there were strong: Beckett’s parents taught at the college, and she never even imagined studying anywhere else—until a tragedy her senior year ended with two local men dead, and her roommate on the run, never to be seen again…

For the last two decades, Beckett has done her best to keep her distance. Then her daughter, Delilah, secretly applies to Wyatt College and earns a full scholarship, and Beckett can only hope that her lingering fears are unfounded. But deep down she knows that Wyatt Valley has a long memory, and that the past isn’t the only dangerous thing in town… (Synopsis courtesy of Amazon.)

Suspenseful stories that take place in small towns are some of my favorites. It makes it almost harder to know who the antagonist could be and who to trust. You Belong Here kept me on edge from start to finish. I really enjoyed how the pieces of the puzzle all seemed to come together, starting from twenty years prior, and just when I thought I had it figured out, I was thrown off course again. 

The setting, a college in a small town in the Virginia mountains, was easy to imagine. I could picture the forest of trees and steep paths up and around the mountain terrain. It also added to the eeriness of the plot. I liked the parallel of the mother’s and daughter’s worlds colliding at the same college, but twenty years apart. I felt it made me want to fight for the daughter, Delilah, and hold her mother accountable for her past mistakes. 

I was surprised many times while reading by the twists and new information that would come to light. I would then have to rework my mind around this new information and change up my predictions again. If you want to read something that will have you hooked immediately, this is it.

Thanks to Simon and Schuster for the book in exchange for an honest review. 

More by Megan Miranda:

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