With El Niño slated to drop a warmth, moist winter on numerous the US inside the coming months, everybody’s going to need one factor good to be taught whereas the local weather exterior is frightful. Engadget’s well-read staff have some choices: our favorite books of 2023! We’ve obtained an impressive assortment of genres and titles for you this yr, from horror and true crime to rom-coms and fantasy adventures, proper right here to supply months of leisure for even most likely essentially the most voracious reader.
Final Girl Support Group by Grady Hendrix (Karissa Bell — Senior Reporter, Social Media)
I like horror movies nonetheless horror novels are type of hit and miss for me. I was immediately pulled into Final Lady Help Group, though, which does a variety of winking and nodding at conventional slasher flicks whereas creating a novel story.
For those who occur to’re a fan of horror, then you definately definately’re already conversant within the trope of the “final lady.” Grady Hendrix’s novel doesn’t satirize the final word lady, nonetheless imagines what life is probably like for them after the highest of their movie. Each of the first characters is (loosely) primarily based totally on the final word lady of a conventional slasher, though their storylines don’t actually really feel contrived or predictable. It reads like a fast-paced thriller nonetheless, like so many of the best horror movies, it’s moreover a poignant reflection on trauma. It’s moreover the unusual thriller the place I found myself wanting further on the end of the story. Happily, HBO has signed on to develop a sequence primarily based totally on the information, so I’ll shortly get my need.
The Chromatic Fantasy by H. A. (Avery Ellis — Deputy Editor, Tales)
2023 was the yr I undertook to be taught way more books written by or centering characters who had been like me: which is to say, trans. I tore by Nevada and Dream of a Girl, recognizing bits of myself mirrored once more and seeing variations of me that may exist in the end; I merely barely slogged by Testo Junkie, cringed with Tiny Objects of Skull, gravely nodded along with Whipping Lady and sobbed as Stone Butch Blues kicked me inside the coronary coronary heart again and again. (There’s further. Ask me for options!) The canon of trans literature is unfortunately not huge, and I speedran a superb portion of it, always interleaving comics, zines or manga between novels.
Enter The Chromatic Fantasy.
It popped up inside the new releases a part of the publication from comics mainstay Silver Sprocket, which was all I knew getting in. What I obtained, in what I assumed may very well be a break from often-heavy trans narratives, was… most likely essentially the most pretty T4T romance I’ve ever be taught?? Jules and Casper have some actually cute us-against-the-world chemistry, which is simply further heightened by their standing as literal outlaws — get in loser, we’re robbing rich jerks at swordpoint. The fantastical setting is biggest described as polychronistic: whereas largely hewing to gorgeously rendered extreme fantasy aesthetics, there are, as an example, landline telephones (such the upper to flirtatiously twirl a finger by the wire of), and seemingly the corporate Starbucks, none of which is outlined or have to be.
The Chromatic Fantasy slips effortlessly between swashbuckling glibness (benefits of a protagonist who truly can’t die) and actual emotion. And did I level out it’s lovely? No truly, it’s jaw-droppingly pretty. Congratulations to H. A. on turning into a member of Leslie Feinberg inside the hall of Authors Who Made Me Cry Ugly Tears This 12 months.
Nestlings by Nat Cassidy (Valentina Palladino — Senior Commerce Editor)
Nat Cassidy hooked me remaining yr collectively along with his fantastic novel Mary: An Awakening of Terror, and his sophomore launch is definitely not a droop. Nestlings follows Ana and Reid, a pair with a model new little one who switch into the Deptford, an historic, revered Manhattan home establishing overlooking Central Park. It seems nearly magical that they even acquired the aggressive lottery to maneuver to this otherworldly place. Every Ana and Reid think about their new dwelling could very nicely be the reply to their points: Reid, a struggling musician with a lackluster day job attempting to maintain his new daughter and his wheelchair-bound partner; Ana, a voice actor with effervescent resentments in direction of her little one after a traumatic childbirth left her paralyzed from the waist down.
Nevertheless there’s no peace for the little family as quickly as they switch in. Disturbing events go away Ana paranoid and desirous to get out, whereas Reid dismisses her points as he dives deeper into finding out in regards to the gothic establishing’s historic previous. Baby Charlie certainly not sleeps and regularly fusses, and points go from unhealthy to worse when the youthful mom and father uncover needle-like chunk marks on their daughter.
What follows is an absolute rollercoaster of terror, full of gargoyles, vampiric creatures, sore–infested, suicidal neighbors, cockroach-chomping precise property brokers and lots and loads of bugs. Cassidy does an superior job of drawing readers in with questions on what the hell is occurring on this home establishing that’s so onerous to maneuver into however moreover seems to have no person dwelling in it other than Ana and Reid. The plot is enough to carry readers guessing, nonetheless you truly preserve for the stress Cassidy builds between these refined characters. Ana and Reid’s relationship is put by every verify, and I found myself loving each of them and hating them every at quite a few components of the novel. Cassidy thoughtfully explores a variety of issues in Nestlings by the struggles of his characters: marriage, parenthood, postpartum despair, ableism, antisemitism, grief and slightly extra.
I notably cherished the nuanced discussions spherical being a caretaker, being a mother and the complete totally different points that will suck the life out of a person. There are many refined ideas surrounding motherhood on this information: What does motherhood give to you, and what does it take away? How quite a bit administration does a mother have over their teen? The place does a mother’s have an effect on end? Even with all of those heavy themes working all by this information, Nestlings, individually, is way more fulfilling than Mary as a result of its fixed pacing, refined characters, creepy setting and downright disgusting imagery. – Valentina Palladino, Senior Commerce Editor
Alex Carter #3: A Ghost of Caribou by Alice Henderson (Valentina Palladino — Senior Commerce Editor)
I watched Animal Planet choose it was my job as soon as I used to be a toddler. So my inner teen was thrilled to search out Alice Henderson’s Alex Carter sequence remaining yr. The books adjust to wildlife biologist Alex Carter as she screens near-extinct animal species inside the self-discipline, whereas moreover encountering a model new unsolved murder in each sleepy metropolis she resides.
The latest installment, A Ghost of Caribou, takes our hero to the mountains of northwestern Washington state to hint a single mountain caribou believed to have wandered down from Canada into the contiguous United States. Nevertheless she’s shortly met with hostility and violence: activists and loggers are duking it out over protected lands and the townspeople are on edge after the murdered physique of a forest ranger is present in an space park. On prime of that, Alex learns a hiker went missing a yr prior within the an identical forest by which she’s conducting her evaluation. Alex is shortly pressured to battle for her life, whereas moreover attempting to resolve on the very least two murders that can or might be not associated.
I like a superb cozy thriller, and this sequence looks like one step up from these model staples. It’s a bit further vital with further threatening baddies, nonetheless you proceed to get a contact of a snug vibe as a result of very cautious different of setting and the wildlife part. You really end up finding out fairly a bit in regards to the star animals in these books, as a result of author’s experience as a wildlife researcher herself. Alex is a well-realized protagonist with a clear moral compass and a deep devotion to the security of animals and the setting, nonetheless she’s moreover entertaining to adjust to. And whereas each information takes her to a particular locale to evaluate one different species, there are throughlines inside the sequence that make you want to select up the following installment to see what’s going to happen. The aspect characters (recurring ones like Alex’s father and her biggest good good friend, along with single-book folks) are moreover vibrant and attention-grabbing. I can’t contemplate a larger sequence to decide on up once you love mysteries and suspense novels, and now have a fascination with the animal world.
Adelaide by Genevieve Wheeler (Sarah Fielding — Contributing Reporter)
On the center of Genevieve Wheeler’s debut novel is the titular character Adelaide, a 26-year-old American dwelling in London who believes she’s found her very private prince charming in Rory. She’s sure he’s the love of her life, irrespective of his full disregard for her feelings all by their relationship. Wheeler remarkably launched me deep inside Adelaide’s consciousness whereas seamlessly together with depth and a fuller story by leaping into the views of every Rory and his ex-girlfriend Nathalie.
On the ground, it’s easy to position Adelaide strictly into the romance subject, one different story of lady meets boy. Nevertheless, to take motion belittles the nuanced experience of what it’s want to reside a lifetime of unbelievable moments of delight and piercing episodes of despair — particularly to be human.
Adelaide gives with themes of trauma, friendship, heartbreak, psychological nicely being and, critically, the necessity all of us should not merely be beloved, nonetheless to be understood. As a mid-to-late 20-something American dwelling in London, it’d’ve been powerful to not relate to Adelaide. Nevertheless, these options of Wheeler’s novel made me reckon with the easiest way I switch by life and drove dwelling the reality that — cheesy or not — we’re each the most effective love of our life.
Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir (Cherlynn Low — Deputy Editor, Evaluations)
Enterprise Hail Mary won’t have been launched this yr, nonetheless I solely received right here all through it in one in every of my fairly a couple of makes an try to be taught further books in 2023. Try as I’d, I merely had a tricky time concentrating, and nothing managed to hold my consideration. On Libby, I borrowed and skimmed titles by authors like Blake Crouch and Stephen King — people whose work I always appreciated. And nothing took. I’ll admit it took me larger than 10 pages to truly get hooked on PHM, too. Nevertheless as quickly as I began to absorb the premise, I devoured the information in two days.
In PHM, Weir tells the story of an individual in home, off to investigate a mysterious substance that not solely proves that life exists exterior of Earth, however moreover could consequence within the destruction of our planet. His is on a suicide mission, with not enough gasoline for a return journey. Yeah, the stakes are extreme.
I’m not a scientist, so I can’t vouch for the accuracy of the information’s finer particulars, nonetheless Weir’s evocative descriptions helped paint a rich psychological image of the spacecraft. And though certainly one of many characters inside the story remained an amorphous blob in my ideas, I nonetheless common an inexplicable emotional bond with them, the easiest way chances are you’ll develop to love a boisterous pet.
As with most home adventures, PHM’s characters encounter fairly a couple of challenges and setbacks, making for a gripping be taught. Throw in likable characters, an emotional flip of events and a significantly satisfying end, and PHM merely nabbed the title of my favorite information all yr (to not level out a spot in my coronary coronary heart).
The Future by Naomi Alderman (Lawrence Bonk – Contributing Reporter)
Naomi Alderman’s remaining information, The Vitality, was a extremely large deal. It made every Barack Obama’s and Bill Gates’ best-of lists for 2016, and it even spawned an Amazon Prime Video show. All of the accolades had been well-deserved, as I had certainly not be taught one factor pretty choose it. The information examined the corruptible nature of vitality and the way in which it impacts gender, all whereas remaining a rip-roaring yarn about girls who’ve the facility to control electrical vitality.
Alderman’s latest and largest, The Future, isn’t going to set the world ablaze pretty like its predecessor, nonetheless that doesn’t suggest it’s not an absolute page-turner. That’s for one simple motive. There are already a ton of speculative fiction books that examine near-future experience and the way in which it’d have an effect on humanity. It’s a whole model unto itself. Nonetheless, The Future is a unbelievable occasion of this type of information, and manages to fold in present events, from COVID to Elon Musk and the rise of AI platforms.
To that end, the novel revolves spherical proxy variations of numerous our large tech companies (Apple, Meta, Microsoft, OpenAI and so forth.) and boasts a sprawling narrative with a variety of protagonists, along with a tech vlogger that hits a bit too close to dwelling. There are doomsday cults, narcissistic billionaires, depression-inducing social media algorithms and, in actual fact, a great deal of technological developments. The tech on this information isn’t pie inside the sky. It’s stuff that’s 5 or 10 years out. Alderman is cautious to not give a yr for when the story takes place, nonetheless she does seek the advice of with actor Ryan Reynolds as a “silverfox” and, successfully, he’s 47 correct now.
The story is fast-paced and contains, shock, a doubtlessly game-changing AI. There’s moreover further biblical allegory than chances are you’ll shake a stick at. Alderman, in any case, previously wrote a book that examined the lifetime of Jesus Christ. The Future is tough to position down and successfully worth finding out, even when Bill Gates didn’t put a review up on his weblog. Positive, Bill Gates has a weblog.
This Thing Between Us by Gus Moreno (Cheyenne MacDonald — Weekend Editor)
Every time I wish to advocate this information to any individual, which is fairly sometimes, I typically throw in a small apology for what it’s going to position them by. Proper right here’s me doing that now: sorry, this one’s pretty heavy! Nevertheless rattling, is it a powerful be taught.
This Issue Between Us is normally described as being a couple of haunted Alexa-style wise speaker generally known as Itza, nonetheless that’s solely partially true. Truly, it’s about grief, cultural id and inescapable cycles of hardship. It’s suggested from the perspective of Thiago, who seems to be recounting for his late partner, Vera, the an increasing number of bizarre and horrifying experiences he’s confronted after her sudden lack of life from a freak accident. The apparent supernatural possession of Itza is initially positioned as a result of the catalyst for the horrors that play out all through the novel.
Thiago’s unraveling psychological state as he grapples with the dearth of his partner and a haunting that begins to sort out a further cosmic top quality builds proper right into a frantic sense of dread. It’ll break your coronary coronary heart repeatedly. There are some pretty sturdy scares, too, with numerous deeply unsettling moments which have lingered in my memory, popping once more up as soon as I’m driving alone on a darkish nation freeway or taking my canine out at night. Whereas This Issue Between Us didn’t come out in 2023 (it was revealed in 2021), I didn’t get spherical to finding out it until this yr, and it’s most certainly the information I’ve thought of most since.
Don’t Fear the Reaper by Stephen Graham Jones (Cheyenne MacDonald — Weekend Editor)
Stephen Graham Jones is a form of authors who’s in order that good, you end up desirous to inhale his full physique of labor immediately after ending whichever information first obtained you hooked. As a minimum, that’s the way in which it went for me. I be taught one, and I wished infinitely further. So, I was previous excited to hunt out out that 2021’s My Coronary coronary heart is a Chainsaw — a love letter to slasher motion pictures and social misfits — was not solely getting a sequel, nonetheless would in the long run be spun proper right into a trilogy. Don’t Concern the Reaper, which received right here out in February 2023, is the second information in that sequence and it’s obtained all the heart of the first one, if no extra.
Don’t Concern the Reaper continues the story of slasher-obsessed Jennifer “Jade” Daniels and the residents of Proofrock, Idaho, who 4 years prior endured a town-wide tragedy that irrevocably modified their lives. This time, because of they can’t catch a break, a convicted serial killer known as Darkish Mill South is on the free after he managed to flee from a jail convoy shut by all through a blizzard. And our our bodies are starting to pile up. Throughout the first information, Jennifer/Jade’s acute knowledge of final lady survival experience took coronary heart stage as she tried to make people see the indications of a slasher of their midst sooner than it was too late. Now, she’s repressed that part of herself and her protégé, a survivor of the sooner information’s climactic event, has taken the torch.
It has all of the climate of a superb slasher story and tons of movie references for model followers to latch onto. There are twists that may put your thoughts to work, plus a variety of moments that are purely supernatural. Like Graham’s totally different works, it moreover includes a variety of obligatory subtext about being an American Indian. Jade, the final word lady to complete all final ladies, is Native. So is the killer, Darkish Mill South. In the end, Don’t Concern the Reaper is a surprisingly beautiful narrative about trauma (non-public and generational), perseverance and therapeutic. The third and supreme information in The Indian Lake Trilogy comes out in March 2024 — so that you’ve merely enough time to fulfill up with the first two sooner than then.
Birnam Wood by Eleanor Catton (Amy Skorheim — Commerce Reporter)
I didn’t know quite a bit about Birnam Picket sooner than deciding on it up — merely that it had a Booker Prize winner for an author and a Shakespearean title that made me actually really feel wise for vaguely remembering Macbeth. Appears, it’s in regards to the battle between an anarchist New Zealand gardening collective and a doomsday-prepping American tech-bro billionaire, which, had you given me a million guesses…
The story has a great deal of meat on its bones, grappling with the Giant Issues with environmentalism, capitalism, class struggles and the absurd ineffectuality of grassroots movement inside the face of unfathomable wealth. The precept players inside the gardening collective are idealistic nonetheless erratic Mira, her dissatisfied second in command, Shelly, and Tony, a Bernie-bro trust-funder with a self-righteous inflexibility that butts up in opposition to his need for glowing recognition.
When Mira scouts out an infinite plot of land the collective would possibly doubtlessly “borrow” for some guerilla farming, she meets billionaire Robert Lemoine who has already earmarked the property for his luxurious end-time bunker. When he impulsively (sociopathically) decides to monetary establishment roll the gardening collective, the group has to determine. And on the very least one in every of them has to find out what Lemoine is definitely doing out inside the pristine lands of New Zealand’s South Island.
To talk an extreme quantity of additional in regards to the machinations of the plot is to current away a variety of the fun. Nevertheless I’ll say that I ripped by the information’s 400 pages. Birnam Picket manages to meld the breath-holding tempo of a mode thriller with the psychological archaeology of probably the greatest literary reads. And no totally different novel in present memory has launched a larger thesis as to what it’d take to derail the runaway put together of helpful useful resource exploitation.
Girlfriend on Mars by Deborah Willis (Nathan Ingraham — Deputy Editor, Info)
Girlfriend on Mars tells the story of a put together wreck that I merely couldn’t look away from. Suggested in every the first-person view of complacent stoner Kevin and in third-person of his girlfriend of 14 years, Amber, the story bounces between their two views as Amber tries to win a actuality current that’ll ship her and one different contestant on a one-way journey to Mars. Your complete time, I was fascinated by whether or not or not Amber would win the competitors and truly stroll away from Earth endlessly and equally engaged in watching Kevin’s descent into full-on agoraphobia as a result of the one specific particular person he cares about principally tells him she’s eager to depart the planet and him endlessly.
The two foremost characters are massively flawed, one factor that’s obvious correct from the start, nonetheless you care about them discovering some measure of peace and happiness regardless. Amber’s aspect of the story is a scathing critique of a variety of elements of American custom, with the Elon Musk-esque billionaire funding the journey to Mars decreasing corners and disregarding safety at every flip merely to make a income. Takedowns of the influencer world and the very fact current obsession with watching beautiful people duke it out are well-trodden territory, nonetheless there’s an extra little little bit of grotesqueness to these proceedings, given that people flying to Mars are assuredly going to die there, in the long run, and likely on digital digital camera.
Kevin’s story is a lot smaller, nonetheless the outcomes of his proximity to Amber’s rising fame are highly effective to watch — everyone needs a little bit of her, which suggests they want a little bit of him, all the whereas determining that her success inside the contest makes it more and more extra most likely she’ll certainly not see him as soon as extra. The information is very readable, nearly fluffy with its actuality current tropes, nonetheless the ultimate third is quietly devastating in a signifies that caught with me larger than I anticipated as soon as I started. At first, Girlfriend on Mars feels as delicate as a result of the image on the quilt, nonetheless there’s surprising depth and darkness in these pages.
Time’s Mouth by Edan Lepucki (Nathan Ingraham — Deputy Editor, Info)
As a result of the title suggests, Time’s Mouth has some elements of time journey to it, nonetheless it’s decidedly not science fiction — or on the very least, it’s not merely science fiction. Edan Lepucki has some experience straddling genres, as her 2014 novel California deftly straddled a post-apocalyptic setting with literary fiction musings on family and environmental breakdown. Within the an identical vein, Time’s Mouth focuses on a woman who can revisit any time in her earlier and the implications it has on every her and future generations of her family. Like a number of good time journey story, transferring backwards and forwards in time ends up having shocking repercussions, and they also come collectively in a extremely satisfying means as, years later, her son discovers his daughter can do the an identical issue.
It’s not an easy story to position into phrases, involving a sinister California commune of “mamas” who worship Ursa and her time-travel reward. Being launched up in such an setting makes her son Ray want a totally utterly totally different life, nonetheless he’s drawn once more to her world when his daughter Opal independently realizes she has the an identical expertise as her unknown grandmother. At first, I believed the story would maintain Opal and Ray’s life with out intersecting once more with Ursa, who Ray has completely distanced himself from. Nevertheless when the two worlds collide as soon as extra after a few years apart, it ends in a stunner of a reckoning for the family. Time’s Mouth made me every need I’d revisit my earlier and see it from a particular delicate whereas moreover making me grateful that I’m caught firmly inside the present, other than my reminiscences.
Beware of Chicken by Casualfarmer (Andrew Tarantola — Senior Reporter, AI)
It’s the an identical motive I don’t watch standing dramas: The world’s on fireplace and each little factor is already horrible, why would I watch rich and extremely efficient people be horrible to 1 one different as leisure? I merely haven’t received the emotional bandwidth currently to adjust to alongside the intricacies of courtly intrigue, betrayals and political maneuvering amongst competing noble properties, nonetheless I’ll spare a day to be taught a healthful isekai growth fantasy like Be careful for Hen.
Set in an alternate universe of Qi cultivation (whereby its practitioners meditate and partake in vigorous teaching to understand superhuman powers and godlike immortality), the story follows Jin Rou, an provoke cultivator who’s having a extremely unhealthy day. First our protagonist finds themself isekai’d from a earlier life in modern-day Canada into the physique of a Warring State interval provoke cultivator — one who was merely severely overwhelmed by his fellow disciples. Not about to carry throughout the jerks who merely bludgeoned the ultimate mannequin of him into putty, Jin Rou picks up, leaves his sect behind and hightails it to most likely essentially the most distant, least magical (and subsequently least dangerous) space he can uncover in his new world, intent on dwelling out the quiet lifetime of a hermit farmer. Too unhealthy for Jin, the universe has totally different plans.
On this three-book persevering with sequence, Jin Rou’s efforts to remain anonymous present comically ineffective — whether or not or not because of his steadily rising menagerie of human and spirit animal disciples or his inexplicably fertile farming efforts — significantly after members of his former sect come sniffing spherical. For those who occur to’re a fan of massively OP protagonists like John Sutton from Battlemage Farmer and Saitama of One Punch Man, or are into LitRPGs like Path of Ascension, Mark of the Fool and Unbound you’re going to love Be careful for Hen.
Once Upon a Crime by Fergus Craig (Daniel Cooper — Senior Reporter, UK)
It’s always fulfilling watching educated fake to be unhealthy at their job, because of it requires quite a bit effort. There’s an art work to doing one factor badly in an entertaining signifies that doesn’t merely spill over into tragedy, or worse. Now take into consideration how onerous it’s to jot down down a information that’s intentionally unhealthy that certainly not wears out its welcome, and likewise you’ll see why I’m in awe of As quickly as Upon a Crime.
As quickly as Upon a Crime is written by Fergus Craig, nonetheless it’s truly the debut novel from Craig’s comic character Martin Fishback. Fishback is a middle-aged, middle-of-the-road middle-Englander who, after his pressured early retirement, aspires to turning into towards the legislation writer. His lowbrow model would possibly far exceed his experience, nonetheless that’s not going to stop him writing his private crime novel, damnit.
Fishback’s foremost character, Detective Roger Le Carré, is the plain case of self-insert fic you’ll see all yr. He’s a sprightly all-star police officer with an previous model sensibility (be taught: He share’s Fishback’s provincial tastes and attitudes) and a knack for love. Le Carré may be the one man who can cope with the grand felony conspiracies on the suggest streets of… rural Exeter.
Along with the ultimate bathos of attempting to cross off a sleepy cathedral metropolis as a felony hotbed, Fishback is weak to a tangent. To not level out needing to pad some sections of his information the place he’s gone to Wikipedia to help add ballast to the phrase rely. All of this may occasionally more and more sound unhealthy, nonetheless inside the palms of a grasp like Craig, it threads the needle to perfection.
I didn’t even know the information existed until I observed it on a desk in a information retailer in London, clocked the title and reflexively started finding out. In about three hours, I’d devoured it, hooting with glee to the good annoyance of my children and the other passengers on the put together.
The Year of Less by Cait Flanders (Malak Saleh — Properly being & Well being Reporter)
The Year of Less is a biography of a woman in her late twenties caught in a cycle of accumulating debt. She decides to make an entire life change after racking up virtually $30,000 in financial institution card debt. Wanting once more, she’s going to’t even recall numerous the problems she’s mindlessly purchased. Flanders decides to drawback herself and by no means retailer for a whole yr. For 12 consecutive months, she solely purchases absolute necessities like groceries and gas for her automotive. Her endeavor begins small, with a ban on points like takeout espresso and new books. By the highest she’s gotten rid of 70 p.c of her belongings and saved larger than half of her earnings. She retains her readers looped in by her on-line weblog the entire means. By the highest of her endeavor, she achieves her goal of solely making purchases that are in alignment alongside along with her bigger life targets. Flanders’ story could make you want to create your private mannequin of a non-public procuring ban. Though chances are you’ll not likely really feel compelled to make such drastic cuts in every aspect of your life, The 12 months of A lot much less would possibly encourage you to spend further consciously.
This textual content initially appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/the-best-books-we-read-in-2023-163028702.html?src=rss
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