Thursday, December 29, 2011

New Year Giveaway Hop


2012 New Year Giveaway Hop!
Enter to win a Kindle copy of my newest books!
Two winners will win both books!
To enter, please leave a comment at the 
bottom of this post with your email address!
You must follow this blog to enter!

LIZZIE BARLOW is running from her past and present mistakes. Not knowing which direction to go, she finds herself hiding out in the same Amish community in which she grew up. With her ten-year-old daughter Abby, in tow, she fears her secrets will catch up to her.

When ABBY discovers her real father may be living just down the road from where they are staying, she sets off on an adventure to meet him. What she doesn't know are the many secrets that her mother never shared with her--the same secrets that will turn her life upside down.

JACOB YODER is a young, Amish widower, trying to raise his ten-year-old son, when his past shows up on his doorstep unexpectedly, threatening to change his life forever.

Will life ever be the same for Lizzie and Jacob? Or will their mistakes change everything?

Look for Book Two: Amish Winter Wonderland, coming January, 2012. 


LOGAN FISHER arrives in Tombstone Arizona in the spring of 1885 to bury his estranged father after he was gunned down during a robbery of the Wells Fargo stage.

An experienced bounty hunter, Logan is determined to join the posse that will help bring the outlaws responsible to justice.  But when the lovely school teacher becomes a distraction, Logan begins to rethink his commitment to the cause.

DAISY MAE PINKERTON is the beautiful school teacher (and the Preacher’s daughter) who turns Logan's head and reminds him of his faith-inspired upbringing, hoping it will melt the ice that's formed over his heart, and convince him to give up his gun-slinging ways. But does she want more from him?

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Writing with Dyslexia



WRITING WITH DYSLEXIA
My mother used to tease me and say I didn’t know my right from my left. She was partially correct. And unfortunately, I didn’t find out why until I became an adult.

It wasn’t that I didn’t know my right from my left; it was that my brain couldn’t process which was which unless I looked at my hands and remembered which hand I wrote with. Thank God I’m not ambidextrous!

Typing is also very difficult for me, even though I took typing classes and I know where the keys are. But when I type, my mind puts the letters in the wrong order. For example: instead of typing “the” for the, it comes out “hte” nearly every time, but when I look at it, it seems normal to me. Some days, it seems I spend more time with my spell check and the backspace key, than I do getting the book down on the page. If not for spell check I wouldn’t get very far…but I’ve discovered a flaw in the spell/grammar check recently when I posted my new Amish Romance, Jacob’s Daughter. An acquaintance on FB informed me after reading the book that there were two separate spots where I used the word “trails”, when I meant for it to say “trials”. Because “trails” is a recognized word, my spell check did not pick it up! I have since then fixed the error, despite the fact that several hundred copies had already been sold containing the error…to those who have that version…I apologize heartily.
  
How can I write like this, you ask? Well since I type so fast, and I cheat and put the spell-check on automatic, I can get a major portion of my writing done fairly quickly despite my dyslexic fingers—or is it all in my head? As a matter of fact, it has to do with vision, and how our minds interpret words, and for some, numbers too. I, unfortunately have trouble with numbers as well. So as a defense mechanism, I would memorize numbers, such as phone numbers, locker combinations (yes, I still remember my phone number that we had when I was a kid, and my locker combination from school). Nowadays, it’s addresses, license plate numbers, etc. But ask me to count cards to play poker, and that’s something I can’t do!

Being a writer, I have tons of books in my head—memorized—getting them onto the computer is the difficult part. Some days, I find myself spelling the words out loud as I type to ensure I’m getting the words down correctly. That method doesn’t work when I’m tired.

Since writing is my passion, I thank God for the technology that we have today that allows me to pursue my dream. It takes a lot of patience and hard work to write with dyslexia, but with persistence and dedication to mastering the skill, I’ve discovered a whole new way to use my talents for good instead of mischief—through the written word. 


Winners Have been chosen!


Congratulations!
Julie Brown
Starbucks, iTunes

Kantu Reads
Amazon, Starbucks

June Manning
Amazon only

Thank you to all who entered. See you in two weeks for the New Year's Blog Hop Giveaway!
Winners chosen using Random.org

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Gift Card Giveaway Hop




THREE winners will get to mix or match their 
choice of TWO gift cards worth $10 each!

iTunes

Starbucks

Amazon.com

McDonald's

To enter, you must follow this blog!
**Bonus entry worth 3 entries: 
Join my Facebook group: 
Samantha's Reading Entourage HERE

Friday, November 25, 2011

25 days of Christmas DONATIONS



In this season of giving, I'd like to challenge my readers to think about those who are less fortunate than we are. I find that around the holidays, most people are willing to give some assistance to others in need. 

But...I have often wondered what would happen if we extended that giving nature of ours to somehow spread that good-cheer throughout every day instead of saving it for the end of the year. Would it become a way of life, and would the world operate just a little more peacefully? Or would it become so commonplace that we should lose sight of the value that those gifts of generosity that we hold dear at Christmas time can be for the giver as well as the receiver?

For most of us who give what we can, when we can, the true treasure lies in knowing that we have benefited our fellow man in a positive way. That is why we cherish our giving season: to give back to society or to change a life.

However, when the year changes over and we promise ourselves a better year ahead, let us decide to hold true to our well-meant resolutions to make our world a better place and to be more generous of ourselves and our financial advantages. By doing so, it might just be our own lives that we end up improving.

PLEASE JOIN ME in raising money for the less fortunate during this Christmas by donating what you can to the online Salvation Army. The money we raise together will provide meals for hungry families, and gifts to CHILDREN who might not get a gift this Christmas without our generous donations. My goal is to raise TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS ($10,000)! Please HELP me reach that goal...

GO HERE TO DONATE NOW:

Sunday, November 20, 2011

ROASTED CHESTNUT STUFFING



Roasted Chestnut Stuffing
Ingredients


1 stick of butter
½ lb. pancetta
1 small onion
2 large carrots finely chopped
4 stalks celery hearts finely chopped
2 cups sliced Portobello mushrooms
3 tbsp fresh rosemary finely chopped
3 garlic cloves, chopped
¼ cup fresh Italian parsley, chopped
1 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese
1 cup canned chicken broth
salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
1 lb day old ciabatta bread
10 oven-roasted chestnuts, broken into medium-small pieces

Melt 3 tbsp butter in a heavy skillet on medium heat.  Sauté pancetta until golden brown.  Set aside in a large bowl.  Melt 3 tbsp butter in same pan.  Add carrots, celery, mushrooms, rosemary and garlic, adding onions last.  Cook until onions are tender.  Stir in chestnuts and parsley.  Heat for a few minutes.  Transfer to bowl with pancetta.  Add cubed ciabatta and Parmesan.  Mix ingredients together and add broth.  Coat well and season with salt and pepper to taste.  Spoon into butter-coated 15 x 10 baking dish.  Cover with foil and bake at 350 degrees for about 30 minutes.  Remove foil and bake additional 10-15 minutes until golden brown.

 Roasting Chestnuts
                                                           
                                           Cut across the round side of each chestnut to prevent exploding in oven.
  Arrange on a cookie sheet.  Roast them in a 425 degree oven until the
  skins have pulled back from the cuts and nut has softened (at least 15-20
  minutes).  After they cool slightly, pinch to remove from skin and break
  into bite-sized pieces.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Wanted: Dead or Alive-NEW COVER!

A Sheriff's Legacy: Book One
SAME BOOK!
NEW COVER!
ONLY 1.99 on Kindle or Nook!
Historical Romance
Logan Fisher arrives in Tombstone Arizona in the spring of 1885 to bury his estranged father after he was gunned down during a robbery of the Wells Fargo stage.

An experienced bounty hunter, Logan is determined to join the posse that will help bring the outlaws responsible to justice. But when the lovely school teacher becomes a distraction, Logan begins to rethink his dedication to the cause.

Daisy Mae Pinkerton is the beautiful school teacher and Preacher's daughter, who turns Logan's head and reminds him of his faith-inspired upbringing, hoping it will melt the ice that's formed over his heart and convince him to put his gun-slinging days behind him. But does she want more from him?


http://www.amazon.com/Wanted-Little-Flower-Romance-ebook/dp/B005XRPPCI/ref=sr_1_11?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1320599541&sr=1-11

From the best-selling author of Amish Romance series: Little Wild Flower

Spooktacular Giveaway Winners


Congratulations to:
Amy Wilde
ChulaV
Nate Miller

Congratulations to:
Courtney A. 
Britt 

Thanks to all who participated.
See you at Christmas for the next blog hop!

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Becoming Amish


BECOMING AMISH

When I set out to write my first Amish romance, I wanted it to be out of the ordinary…one that would stand out in the crowd of Amish romance novels.

What I got was a re-write of my own history with a lot of imaginative twists!

Being my first Amish romance novel, I wanted to do what all the “experts” advised and write what I know…I came from a big family, and had spent a lot of time on my uncle’s farm as a young child, and I lived in Goshen, Indiana for several years and interacted with the Amish and observed their way of life, so I already had half the battle played out in my head.

Next came the romance portion…I always wondered what it would be like to be Amish, but never figured you could just walk into their group and say “Hi, I’m here. I want to join and become Amish”. It just doesn’t work that way. That’s where Jane, my main character, came into play. She had to be at just the right age to meet, and fall in love with “the Amish boy next door”.

Knowing that the chances of becoming Amish by marriage was a close impossibility as well, I decided to set the backdrop in the 1970’s, in a time of flower-power, hippies, and love, when that was the backdrop of America…so my end result is a story of a teenage hippie-chick falling in love with the teenage Amish boy next door.

The entire series started out as my own story, and how my life would have been if I’d married an Amish man, had a large family, and lived a great life doing so….but my life just wasn’t like that…so I threw in a bit of reality from my own life and mixed it with Jane’s to bring my readers the story of Little Wild Flower.

Book Four in this series deals with the reality that I lived through as a child of an alcoholic mother, but offers a happy ending filled with forgiveness and strong family bonds in the book (unfortunately not the true ending for me as a child), but I know that readers like a conclusion, where my conclusion and healing didn’t come until years later than it did for Jane, the imaginary me.

In the end, this series goes the direction I imagine my life would have gone if I’d married into an Amish family and experienced the strong bonds of love, faith, and loyalty that the Amish people represent as a whole.

My biggest hope for this series is that my readers enjoy reading them as much as I loved writing them.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Blogoversary Party WINNERS!

Congratulations WINNERS:
$50 Amazon Gift Card: 
Jessica Wolf
10 Kindle copies of The Anniversary:
Jacque Stengel
Mandi
Kathleen Kelly
Amber Gagnelius
June M
Tanya
Heather @ Book Savvy Babe
Sassy
Stacey Hancock
Mindy Brenner
Thank you to all who entered.
Winners chosen using Random.org

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Grave Robbers review

Grave Robbers review
By: Jen@ (http://bookwormcastle.wordpress.com/)

Grave Robbers is a fast paced read that has characters jumping off trains, being thrown into graves and possible visions of people that have died, so the action is non-stop and makes for an exciting read that you will not want to leave behind until you finish. It also has deeper stuff with more marrow: characters make mistakes, shows weaknesses, but also have hopes of transforming. If you love a thrilling pace along with in depth characters who will do anything to go after their goals, this book is for you.

The main character pulls you in from the beginning and makes you want to read more. The story itself is a riveting and tense train ride that grabs you along with fears of falling off and crashing throughout the story- you need to know what happens next even though each lurch of the train makes your heart rate go up and sends your emotions scattering. You hold your breath for the characters as you come to care about them, no matter what they do or have done.
Charlie, a young girl does not come across as your average heroine right away. But she is a character that you will want to keep reading about; she is very much alive (unlike all of those around her) and jumps off the page. Her father is a grave robber. His official job title is grave digger, but he robs them of any valuables before he puts them into the ground. He does this in order to provide for Charlie, as her mother ran off right after she was born.
Charlie is full of spunk and not afraid to rob jewels from a dead lady. Well, okay, maybe she is a little afraid. But she doesn’t let this or anything stop her. Charlie is a girl who is determined to carve out a path for herself and she lets nothing get in the way of her goals. More than anything, she wants to find her mother. Charlie had no idea of her whereabouts until now. She finds out where her mother may be and even though there is a chance she won’t find her, she comes up with a plan to try.
She convinces herself that she needs the lady’s jewels more than the dead lady does, as she will be six feet under and takes them herself, before her dad can touch them. Her moral dilemma is described very realistically and you understand where she is coming from and her reasoning for her actions, as well as her doubts and fears. She thinks she sees things that may not be there and might be a result of her fear and guilt (or are they?). All this and she still doesn’t know if she will meet her goal. But she clings to the belief that this is the most important goal and she will not look back, even if her life is on the line. And her life is indeed on a very thin line while she tries to go through with her plan. This plan is not as safe as she thought, as there are even more dangers lurking around from where she may not have expected. This is one train ride that you need to stay on until the very end.
Charlie is one of those characters that you would not mind jumping off a train with to hear more about, if you can survive the crash landing.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Mixed Reviews


MIXED REVIEWS
After seeing the many reviews I’ve received from readers of my paranormal fiction, The Apothecary, I decided it was time to offer some author feedback to the many questions surrounding the romance aspect of this book…
While most have said the romance between Ben and Claire was refreshing and exciting, a few select others have labeled it as hasty and a bit unbelievable. To that I say, what’s not to believe?
There are still people today that have arranged marriages where the couple doesn’t even get to meet each other until the moment they are getting married! And since the majority of folks these days have sex within a few days of knowing each other (sometimes even on a first date), I thought it would be refreshing if my couple was married within a few days of meeting and didn’t have sex until after they were married…a lot of my readers found that very romantic.
First of all, let’s remember that this book is fiction, and the romance in it is no more unbelievable than a woman falling for a hot, steamy vampire or a sexy ghost, which seems to be the popular subject in books at the moment.  Let’s not forget that Claire does see ghosts, so that alone sets the stage for her character. 
Secondly, when I write, I like to color outside the lines to bring my stories something that not every other book has. I have to believe that readers are tired of reading the same story over and over where everyone follows the rules, just with a different set of characters and written by a different author. I don't know about you, but I get bored reading the same basic story all the time!
In my Amish romance, Little Wild Flower, I bring a teenage hippie-chick from the 1970’s together with a seventeen-year-old Amish boy, which has probably never happened in real life, but it made for an interesting storyline nonetheless. So you can see that each of my books will offer something out of the ordinary, and I will continue to bring the unusual and unexpected to my readers so that my books will always stand out in the crowd.   
In conclusion, I’d like to point out that not every writer can please all of the people all of the time, no matter how popular he or she is. Reading is a matter of preference for a certain subject matter, and that is why I write several different genres, so I can offer something of interest for the majority of readers, with the hope of pleasing most of the people most of the time.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Surviving Child Abuse...




 Forgiveness: To pardon or excuse: no longer to blame or be angry with someone who has done you wrong.
NIV Bible Dictionary Terms

21 Then Peter came to Him and said, “Lord, how often shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? Up to seven times?” 
22 Jesus said to him, “I do not say to you, up to seven times, but up to seventy times seven.
Matthew 18:21,22 NKJ

In 1995, I began to write my very first book, Little Wild Flower: Unto Others, as a means of “therapy” to overcome some of the difficulties I had growing up with an alcoholic mother. I’d heard somewhere that if you placed your issues in a “journal” as though they were someone else’s life and not your own, it would release the burden by placing it onto a fictional character.
I was all for handing over the pains of my childhood to someone else and making them “her” burdens and not my own. Before I began the book, I knew I was still holding onto a lot of the past, though I’d tried to forgive my mother for the struggles she put me through during her bout with alcoholism.

Excerpt Little Wild Flower: Unto Others (Book Four)
{The alley was always a safe place to hide whenever my mother was calling for me. It was fall, and her screams blended with the wind, blowing through the dry leaves on the trees that lined the alley. Long branches hung low with the force of the wind, scraping them against the worn, brick road. The constant rustling of the leaves helped to soften her screeching tones, providing me with an alibi for not heeding her warning. Within the row of trees, the leaves on the branches blocked out just enough sun to give the appearance of a long, dark tunnel. At first glance, the alley might have seemed like the setting of a child’s nightmare. For me, any place so devoid of the "witch" could only be a haven.
I walked slowly toward the house, trying to remain in my sanctuary a little longer. At this close range, even my own thoughts couldn’t block out her angry words. 
“Jane, you little blond-headed brat, where are you?”  
Every time she spoke to me in such a cruel manner, it made me cringe with hatred for my own name. I forced myself to move forward, knowing that stalling would only make things worse.
When I reached the tall, snowball bushes toward the house, I could see my mother standing on the back stoop. Anna Mae Reeves was short and grossly thin, with black hair and deep circles that surrounded her eyes. The cigarettes and alcohol seemed to age her far beyond the twenty-eight years that she was.         
As I approached the house, I could see more easily the impatience in the lines of my mother’s face as she waited for me with a wooden spoon in her hand. My thoughts turned to panic, when I realized I was going to get hit for something, regardless of whether I was guilty of it or not. I cowered behind the bushes, watching her tapping her foot against the wooden slats of the porch; it sent an unspoken message that I was going to get hit a lot worse if I didn’t hurry. I dawdled just a bit more, letting my vision blur, and all the while wondering what it would be like to be rescued from this terrible witch who calls herself my mother.
There was no use putting off the pain that was to come for whatever I had or hadn’t done wrong, so I went to her, hoping to get it over with.
“You horrible little brat, I would like nothing more than to kill you right now. Give me a reason. Just give me one good reason why I shouldn’t.” 
She shook her finger at me. “I only let you live for one reason—to clean my house. When I was five, I did twice the work you do. You give me no other choice but to take you out of my misery. So what’s it going to be?” 
I wasn’t quite five yet, but I knew better than to talk back. 
Somehow, I managed to dodge her first swing at me, and I knocked over her bottle of beer that rested on the top rail of the porch. I watched in shock as it rolled down the steps in slow motion, leaving a trail of beer over each step. As it hit the concrete, it echoed a grinding roll before breaking, allowing the remaining beer to escape through the cracks. At that moment, her face began to curl up as I pulled in a deep breath and held it. 
“Look what you’ve done. You’re going to pay for that beer, you little brat.” 
Before I had a chance to get away from her, she managed to grab hold of me, and started hitting me in the head with the wooden spoon. My hands went up to soften the blows to my head, but my knuckles got hit when she swung the spoon without a single pause. She retained her grip on my arm as I doubled over slightly from the sting, trying desperately not to cry.
“Why haven’t you done the dishes yet?” she demanded. 
Her face was close to mine, and I breathed in the sour smell of the beer on her breath as she spoke. 
Experience warned me not to speak, but I was angry.
“I could’ve done ‘em if ya…”
“If I what?” she interrupted.
“If ya didn’t lock me outta the house,” I stammered.
“I don’t lock you out of the house. You are a liar.”
I tried to pull away from her, but she was stronger than me. “I don’t lie and Mitchell says you pass out on the sofa.”
My brother Mitchell told my sister and me that she passes out from all the beer that she drinks every day. He also filled my head by convincing me she was a witch with a crystal ball, and she could see everything I did.
When the beating finally ended, she let me drop out of her grasp and I fell to the ground. “Get up, you pathetic child, and do what I told you to do.”
I struggled to regain my footing in spite of the many bruises I could already feel. I tried not to cry aloud as I wiped blood from the scrapes on my arms and hands, knowing that it would anger her even more to hear me cry. 
“You’re a worthless child, and I don’t know why I let you live. If you don’t get those dishes done before your father gets home, I’ll make you clean the litter box with your bare hands again,” she said. 
After straightening my tattered shorts that I’d soiled in the struggle, and pushing my tear-dampened hair behind my ear, I moved slowly through the screen door and into the kitchen. My mother had suddenly vanished without my knowledge of her whereabouts.} 


As I wrote each page of the things that earmarked my formative years, the burdens amazingly lifted from my shoulders onto the pages, leaving me with a collection of bad memories that now belonged to “Jane”, my fictional “me”.
Before I knew it, I had written an account of more than 12 years of my life in fictional format.
Knowing I could never publish such a work in its present state, I set out to change Jane’s life.
Now, in its watered-down state, the reader gets the basic premise of “Jane’s” childhood, while allowing it to remain fictional. I had come to realize that once it reached the page, it was no longer about me; it was about Jane. And because it was Jane’s life, I no longer needed to carry it around with me.
I was well on my way to letting go and forgiving my mother for the past. But I wasn’t done yet…I had to transform Jane’s life, thus Little Wild Flower: Book One, was created. In Book One of my Christian fiction series, I give Jane the power of God, something that was almost non-existent in my own life while growing up.
It was important to me to show the readers how Jane had progressed and how her relationship with her mother had changed. Out of that desire, my relationship with my mother began to heal.  
While arming the fictional me with the power of forgiveness for her mother, a true miracle happened in my life. Through the act of giving Jane’s life to God, I gave my own burdens to God, and opened my heart to forgiving my mother once and for all. What a relief it was to be able to see her through God’s eyes and with God’s heart of forgiveness.
After telling my mother I’d written the book (part of my healing process), she urged me to publish it because she felt it could help someone else who might have had similar experiences. Though I agreed with her, I wanted to show how the power of forgiveness had transformed Jane and her family to what it is today. But in order to demonstrate those miraculous changes, I knew I would have to wait to release Little Wild Flower: Unto Others, until after the readers were able to see Jane’s life transformed in Little Wild Flower: Book One, an Amish/Christian fiction.
Though these books are fictional, the purpose for them is as powerful as God’s love. 


Jane Abigail Reeves was raised as a city girl. In 1977, at only fifteen, Jane and her family moved to a farmhouse in a rural Amish community in Indiana as a respite for her alcoholic mother. Jane hates farm life, until she stumbles upon Elijah, the Amish boy next door. As she slowly ventures out of her comfort zone, she begins to mimic her family’s acceptance of Amish living and realizes it’s a practical solution for squelching the dysfunction of her family’s past. Can a hippie-chick like Jane find friendship with a sixteen-year-old Amish boy, despite their cultural differences?  Will their feelings for each other change as they grow up? 

Thursday, June 30, 2011

The New York Times Best Selling Author, John Locke, joins Freedom Giveaway Hop!


This month I have the honor of giving away a copy of my friend, John Locke's, new book along with mine, for TWO great giveaways! 
TWO winners will get a Kindle copy of both books!
Attention all Indie Authors: You NEED this book!

How I sold 1 Million eBooks in 5 Months

Now, for the first time ever, John Locke reveals the marketing system he created to sell more than 1,100,000 eBooks in five months! 

His Credentials:

  • John is the eighth author in the world—and the first self-published author in history—to have sold 1 million eBooks on Kindle!
  • He is the first self-published author to hit #1 on the Amazon/Kindle Best Seller’s List, and the first to hit both #1 and #2 at the same time!
  • He is a New York Times best-selling author!
  • He has been featured in the Wall Street Journal and Entertainment Weekly!
  • He has had 4 of the top 10 books on Amazon/Kindle at the same time, including #1 and #2!
  • He has had 7 books in the top 34 and 8 books in the Top 50 at the same time!
These numbers are not positions within a category. They are positions that include all Kindle sales including fiction, non-fiction, magazine subscriptions, and game apps!


By the middle of March, 2011, it had been calculated that “every 7 seconds, 24 hours a day, a John Locke novel is downloaded somewhere in the world.”

…All this was achieved PART TIME, without an agent, publicist, and at virtually no marketing expense!
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Ddigital-text&field-keywords=john+locke&x=0&y=0



A Secret in the Attic
Amy has two best friends. Emma is her best friend and rival, Jonathon is her childhood sweetheart.
But then she meets Jake, and everything changes. 

When Amy finds an ancient book in an old steamer trunk in her grandmother’s attic, her world is turned upside down. 

The book contains an old gypsy curse; a curse so powerful it’s called The Curse of the Widowed Bride

Amy’s secrets could destroy all of them, but what’s a few secrets between friends? 

Only one can break the curse. 

Which one will walk down the aisle? 

Find out in this urban fantasy... 


Giveaway Entry Requirements:

Enter giveaway in 3 easy steps!
  1. Follow this blog
  2. "Like" this blog
  3. Leave a comment with your email address at the end of this post 
It's that simple!

You MUST follow and "like" 
this Blog to enter!
Last Day to Enter is July 7, 2011  Comment section below link list!
TWO winners will get a Kindle copy of both books!

Horse and Carriage

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