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The Accomplices LLC

Civil Coping Mechanisms / Entropy / Writ Large Press

  • About
    • About The Accomplices
    • Who We Are
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    • New/Forthcoming
    • Bestsellers
    • All Titles
  • Resources
    • Teaching Guides
    • Where to Submit (Entropy)
    • Trumpwatch (Entropy)
  • Projects
    • Current Projects
    • Past Projects
  • Opportunities
    • Partnership
    • Internships
  • Store
  • Contact
Yearly Archives

2018

The Accomplices Fall 2018 Catalog is here!
Books

The Accomplices Fall 2018 Catalog is here!

by The Accomplices October 4, 2018
written by The Accomplices

We’re excited to share with you the full FALL CATALOG for 2018 today, including all titles from The Accomplices (Civil Coping Mechanisms & Writ Large Press).

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Out Today (Oct 4, 2018):
Coldwater Canyon
by Anne-Marie Kinney

NOVEL / LITERARY FICTION / LOS ANGELES

Kinney’s precise and considered prose examines the insistence on reshaping the past through the lens of one’s own trauma and conceived desires as a means of moving forward. Why do we so often look for solace and redemption through others, pushing ourselves to do anything for them, even when it harms everyone involved?

Hot, gritty, swirling, hypnotic and sensual… an unhinged, sweetly sinister sun-baked noir; all danger, doomed love, and compassion.
—Ben Loory, author of Tales of Falling and Flying

 

The Fat Kid
by Jamie Iredell

NOVEL / LITERARY FICTION / EXPERIMENTAL / WESTERN

A haunting and pulls-no-punches book about a struggling, damaged son and his brutal, damaged father, and the strange uncanny man who seems master of both of them. Kind of like what might happen if William Faulkner started a novel about fathers and sons, had a heart attack, and then David Lynch was called in to finish it.
—Brian Evenson, author of A Collapse of Horses

 

I don’t write about race
by June Gehringer

POETRY / MEMOIR / AUTOBIOGRAPHY / ASIAN-AMERICAN / LGBTQ

[T]his book doesn’t write about race, it writes about the meanings we make. “I write about erasure,” Gehringer writes, and “I write about silence.” But this isn’t just a story, it’s a space. We, as readers, enter into accountability for our dealings with race, transness, family, and class… how it really feels to be placed in proximity to those who fail to love us.
—Ginger Ko, author of Inherit

 

Sad Laughter
by Brian Alan Ellis

NONFICTION / HUMOR

Writing is like trying to make sense of an inside joke you have with yourself but haha joke’s on you ’cause the joke is more sad than funny.

Ellis is the rock and roll king of sad. Most happy people only wish they could be as sardonic, humorous, and at once morose as Ellis. But they can’t.
–Elle Nash, author of Animals Eat Each Other

 


Released Sept 2018:

Learning
by Andrew Choate

MEMOIR / CREATIVE NONFICTION / SELF-HELP / MYSTERY

Free of hierarchical notions about where or from whom one gets an education, Choate gleans knowledge from disparate sources… His father — a mercurial lover of film and art — at his most vulnerable provides the aching center to this text but from there it radiates out in beautifully penetrating waves, touching food, music, sex, and all kinds of dark matter.
–Margaret Wappler, author of Neon Green

 

Tom Sawyer
by Joseph Grantham

POETRY / AUTOBIOGRAPHY

In TOM SAWYER, Joseph Grantham is pulling it all back and stripping the language clean. These are poems about broken hearts and growing up, packed full of jokes and weirdo thoughts from a weirdo mind. When I think about Joseph Grantham, I think, ‘Ah…finally…the last living person who doesn’t judge or shout for a living.’ What sweet poems, from a sweet sweet man.

—Scott McClanahan, author of The Sarah Book


Aaaaaand what to look forward to in 2019:

Spring 2019:

  • Losing Miami by Gabriel Ojeda-Sague (Poetry, Bilingual)
  • Psychopomps by Alex DiFrancesco (Memoir, Creative Nonfiction)
  • Experiments in Joy by Gabrielle Civil (Memoir, Performance)
  • (the other house) by Rocío Carlos (Poetry, Bilingual)
  • Letters to My City by Mike Sonksen (Poetry, Essays)

Fall 2019:

  • American Symphony: Other White Lies by Suiyi Tang (Experimental, Fiction)
  • Between Appear and Disappear by Doug Rice (Hybrid, Memoir)
  • Ghosts Are Just Strangers Who Know How to Knock by Hillary Leftwich (Short Stories, Fiction)
  • Navigating With(out) Instruments by Traci Kato-Kiriyama (Poetry)
  • The Sky Forever by Kimberly Alidio (Poetry, Experimental)

 


Reviewers & Interviewers: Download a PDF of our Fall Catalog and get in touch about review/press inquires (the5accomplices@gmail.com)

 

October 4, 2018
Read and Listen to “Lies I Tell” by Sara Borjas
Friends

Read and Listen to “Lies I Tell” by Sara Borjas

by Writ Large Press September 26, 2018
written by Writ Large Press

Imagine the beautiful surprise this morning when we received today’s Poem-A-Day (from poets.org) and it was from our dear friend and incredible poet Sara Borjas. It’s called “Lies I Tell” and you should all read it. Here’s an excerpt, followed by a link to the whole piece:

 

As a girl, my mother slept in a shack with no windows and one door: that is the truth. My grandma would slam windows: truth. A mother’s hands are stronger than God: truth. We often use fruit to describe a bruise, like plum or blackberry: truth. My mother’s window blackberried: truth. My mother’s door peached: truth. She loves peaches: that is the truth. My father could not stand them in our house: that is the truth

“Lies I Tell” by Sara Borjas

September 26, 2018
Teaching Guides for the Upcoming School Year
News

Teaching Guides for the Upcoming School Year

by The Accomplices August 30, 2018
written by The Accomplices

It’s back to school time!

With summer drawing to a close and the academic year approaching, we wanted to share with you some of the teaching guides we have for our books. All of our authors are always available for Skype class visits or email interviews. For a full list of all of our teaching guides available for immediate, check out our Teaching page here. 


ICON by F. Douglas Brown offers a baroque reflection of ourselves through our own personal histories, and how it might pertain to the global history at large. Can be used for classes such as Poetry, Creative Writing, Creative Nonfiction & Memoir, African-American Studies, American/Contemporary Literature, and Narrative Studies.

 

 

 

 

 

Gabrielle Civil’s Swallow the Fish is a memoir in performance art that explores the medium from within its beating heart. Adding its voice to black feminist conversations, it combines essays, anecdotes, and meditations with original performance texts to confront audience, motivation, and fears. Can be used in classes involving Creative Writing, Creative Nonfiction & Memoir, Performance Art / Performance Studies, Feminist Literature, Gender Studies / Women’s Studies, and African-American Studies to name a few.

 

 

 

Drowsy. Drowsy, Baby by Jared Joseph is a book and the translation of a book. It is a scroll named Jenny, after Noah’s unnamed wife, both pictured and absent. Like Edmond Jabès, Yoel Hoffman, and Susan Howe, Jared Joseph viscerally merges questions of linguistic, textual, and memorial representation with the persistent violence of religious narrative, historical trauma, and familial haunting. Can be used in Creative Nonfiction & Memoir, Contemporary American Poetry, American/Contemporary Literature, Experimental Writing, Comparative Literature, and Translation Theory.

 

 

 

Wendy Ortiz’s Bruja is a Dreamoir—a narrative derived from the most malleable and revelatory details of one’s dreams, catalogued in bold detail. A literary adventure through the boundaries of memoir, where the self is viewed from a position anchored into the deepest recesses of the mind. Can be used in Creative Writing, Hybrid Forms, Creative Nonfiction & Memoir, Experimental Writing, Feminist Literature, Gender Studies / Women’s Studies, Psychology, and Xicanx & Latinx Studies.

 

 

 

 

How to Keep You Alive by Ella Longpre asks the impossible question of how one maintains a separation between past and present, memory from self, and inheritance from present body. Blurring the boundaries of fiction and nonfiction in a way that mirrors the attempt to capture what it is like to survive and to persist, How to Keep You Alive absorbs and sees the world through a lens of violence and trauma while struggling to maintain a present life in a body that continues to resist, to touch, to create rituals, to see, and to render the unseeable visually brilliant so the unsayable becomes a prayer. Can be used in Creative Writing, Creative Nonfiction & Memoir, Memoir/Anti-Memoir, Experimental Writing, Hybrid Forms, Feminist Literature, and Queer Literature/Bisexual Literature.

 

In his radical memoir, As I Stand Living, Christopher Higgs uses the constraint based techniques William Faulkner employed for the construction of As I Lay Dying to create a deeply personal and philosophical portrait of the year he became a father. Blending elements of fantasy and confession, Higgs confronts parenthood by divulging his most intimate fears, secrets, sorrows, and hopes as a writer, husband, and teacher. Can be used in classes involving Creative Writing, Creative Nonfiction & Memoir, Composition, American/Contemporary Literature, and Experimental Writing.

August 30, 2018
LABOR DAY WEEKEND SALE
News

LABOR DAY WEEKEND SALE

by The Accomplices August 29, 2018
written by The Accomplices

Get a-meow-zing deals this week(end) on select bestselling titles & new/forthcoming books from The Accomplices. Not only are these great deals, but you can get snag some of our forthcoming titles before they are officially released. Whoa. This sale will end Tuesday, September 4 (at 11:59PM EST).


Choose from the following titles:

? TOM SAWYER by Joseph Grantham (CCM, Forthcoming Sept, 10 2018) – TOM
? LEARNING by Andrew Choate (WLP, Forthcoming Sept, 10 2018) – CHOATE
? I DON’T WRITE ABOUT RACE by June Gehringer (CCM, Forthcoming Oct, 4 2018) – RACE
? COLDWATER CANYON by Anne-Marie Kinney (CCM, Forthcoming Oct, 4 2018) – KINNEY
? SAD LAUGHTER by Brian Alan Ellis (CCM, Forthcoming Oct, 4 2018) – SAD
? THE FAT KID by Jamie Iredell (CCM, Forthcoming Oct, 4 2018) – FAT
? HOLLYWOOD NOTEBOOK by Wendy C. Ortiz (WLP) – HOLLYWOOD
? BRUJA by Wendy C. Ortiz (CCM) – BRUJA
? ICON by F. Douglas Brown (WLP) – ICON
? TO AFAR FROM AFAR by Soham Patel (WLP) – AFAR
? ABDUCTIONS by Chiwan Choi (WLP) – ABDUC
? THE YELLOW HOUSE by Chiwan Choi (CCM) – YELLOW
? HOW TO KEEP YOU ALIVE by Ella Longpre (CCM) – LONGPRE
? SWALLOW THE FISH by Gabrielle Civil (CCM) – CIVIL
? THE SKY ISN’T BLUE by Janice Lee (CCM) – LEE
? THERE SHOULD BE FLOWERS by Joshua Jennifer Espinoza (CCM) – FLOWERS

When ordering, please remember to include your selected titles in the boxes.

(Note: It seems that on some mobile payment systems, it’s skipping the Special Instructions box. If so, just shoot us an email here with your selections. Thanks!)

All prices include shipping. This offer is only available in the United States.


2 for $25

SALE HAS EXPIRED.


4 for $40

SALE HAS EXPIRED.


All titles will ship after Thursday, September 6 and will arrive in approx. 2-4 weeks.

Email us with any questions or concerns.

August 29, 2018
Women Who Submit statement against the Trump Admin’s racist immigration policy
World

Women Who Submit statement against the Trump Admin’s racist immigration policy

by Writ Large Press July 11, 2018
written by Writ Large Press

Our friends of the incredible Women Who Submit have released this statement:

There can be no literary justice without immigration justice. There can be no gender parity in publishing without racial justice. Breaking down submission barriers is not enough if border walls still stand, if prison walls still stand. How many rapturous, beautiful, soul-searing poems is the world being deprived of, because of racism and xenophobia? How many refugee children have dreams of growing up to be novelists or journalists, and are told, by our national policies and our shameful cultural attitudes, “You aren’t worth our time”?

Women Who Submit stands in solidarity with all grassroots organizing to support immigrants and reunify the families ripped apart by the racist policies of the Trump administration. We stand in solidarity with all efforts to abolish ICE, fight police brutality and the surveillance state, and dismantle the vast prison industrial complex that reaps massive profits from the incarceration of Black and Latinx people. We stand in solidarity with the fight against the Muslim ban, and the U.S. imperialist terrorism of Muslim countries.

Full statement at WWS.

July 11, 2018
F. Douglas Brown, Mike the Poet & Others in Long Beach 6/30
Events

F. Douglas Brown, Mike the Poet & Others in Long Beach 6/30

by Writ Large Press June 30, 2018
written by Writ Large Press

If you’re in Long Beach, CA tonight (or can get there), check our our authors F. Douglas Brown and Mike “the Poet” Sonksen at Gastby Books.

They’ll be joined by our friends Ángel Garcia, in town from Nebraska where he’s doing his studies, and Hymnal. Plus more!

Long Beach Lodestars
Open Mic Poetry Party

Long Beach Lodestars
is a night of poetry
featuring F. Douglas Brown,
Shy But Fly, AK Toney, Nikia Billingslea,
Cherisse Yanit Nadal, Edward Swan,
Angel Garcia &
Terry Robinson aka Hymnal.

Hosted by Mike the PoeT.

Stay tuned
for Poetic
Pyrotechnics

Sat. June 30th @5pm

June 30, 2018
Announcing Forthcoming Titles from The Accomplices 2018-2020
News

Announcing Forthcoming Titles from The Accomplices 2018-2020

by The Accomplices June 25, 2018
written by The Accomplices

We’ve got a lot of great things coming up, including new projects from The Accomplices, and new titles from all 3 of our lines: CCM, #RECURRENT, & Writ Large Press. Get excited.

September 2018

  • Learning by Andrew Choate (Writ Large Press)
  • Sad Laughter by Brian Alan Ellis (CCM)
  • Tom Sawyer by Joseph Grantham (CCM)

October 2018

  • i don’t write about race by June Gehringer (CCM)
  • Coldwater Canyon by Anne-Marie Kinney (CCM)
  • The Fat Kid by Jamie Iredell (CCM)

February 2019

  • Losing Miami by Gabriel Ojeda-Sague (#RECURRENT)
  • Experiments in Joy by Gabrielle Civil (#RECURRENT)
  • (the other house) by Rocío Carlos (#RECURRENT)
  • Psychopomps by Alex DiFrancesco (CCM)
  • Ghosts are Just Strangers That Know How to Knock by Hillary Leftwich (CCM)
  • Letters to My City by Mike Sonksen (Writ Large Press)
  • Navigating With(out) Instruments by Traci Kato-Kiriyama (Writ Large Press)

October 2019

  • American Symphony: Other White Lies by Suiyi Tang (#RECURRENT)
  • Between Appear and Disappear by Doug Rice (#RECURRENT)
  • Mama Wata by Omotara James (Siren Songs)
  • The Depression by Mathias Svalina; photography by Jon Pack (CCM)

February 2020

  • Myth of the Garbage Patch by Maya Weeks (#RECURRENT)
  • Emotion(al) Anthropology: The Secret Lives of Negroes (Show Tunes for a Show That Hasn’t Been Written Yet) A Post-American Project by Ernest Hardy (Writ Large Press)

 

June 25, 2018
What Humanity Can Learn From Plants
Friends

What Humanity Can Learn From Plants

by Writ Large Press June 17, 2018
written by Writ Large Press

Our fellow Accomplice Janice Lee with a gorgeous essay on Porochista Khakpour’s Medium magazine, OFF BEAT:

Let’s consider trees. Standing in an immense forest still induces feelings of awe. This isn’t just about sheer size or power, but how a forest, a community of towering trees, affects our perception of interconnectivity and intimacy and breath by reminding us of the forces of life, the impossibility of presence, and the obviousness of influence.

What Humanity Can Learn From Plants by Janice Lee

#TheAccomplices

June 17, 2018
Amazing New Book from Our Friend Porochista Khakpour
Friends

Amazing New Book from Our Friend Porochista Khakpour

by Writ Large Press June 11, 2018
written by Writ Large Press

Sick, the long awaited and amazing new book from friend and hero Porochista Khakpour is out!

She is battling through her illness to hit the road for the book tour. If you have a chance, please please PLEASE do yourself a favor and catch her if she is in your town.

Schedule below. Find our more about her and the book at her site: porochistakhakpour.com

June 11, 2018
ICON Release Party – 6/22 @ Civic Center Studios
Events

ICON Release Party – 6/22 @ Civic Center Studios

by Writ Large Press June 4, 2018
written by Writ Large Press

Join us in celebration for our dear friend Dougie’s new book! It’s a stunning work that you won’t soon forget. In Downtown LA.

The Accomplices are proud to introduce the new work from F Douglas Brown, ICON. Come celebrate the release with special guest readers, art, live music and a DJ dance party.

About ICON:

Brown, inspired by Lawrence’s 1938 panel series, which observes both Frederick Douglass and Harriet Tubman, brings ICON, a biographical/poetic reflection doing the task of considering and re-considering role models, heroes. Through conversations with poets, pop stars, comic book sensations, and of course, the historical characters Douglass, Tubman and Lawrence, Brown distills this discussion into an examination of the self.

What folks are saying about ICON:

“Here is a poet who tracks a formidable lodestar in his chosen namesake, Frederick Douglass, and wrestles with his legacy through illuminative ekphrasis, dedicated truth-telling, and the indomitable will to claim one’s identity from a world that seeks to negate it. Writing with self-discovery through a multitude of form and historical insight, Brown charts a Tubman-trod course across millennia, culture, and language. Through his multihued blood-line that flows with memory to sing the kill away, we find ourselves delivered into a daring rendition of humanity at its best despite the worst of circumstances.”

– Tyehimba Jess, author of Olio and winner of the 2017 Pulitzer Prize

Books for sale will be on-site.
No Cover, Just Love.

June 4, 2018
Reboot of our website. Finally
WLP

Reboot of our website. Finally

by Writ Large Press June 4, 2018
written by Writ Large Press

Welcome (back), friends.

For some reason, the seemingly simple thing of maintaining our website has been at the absolute bottom or our priority over the past months/years.

THAT ALL ENDS NOW!

Thanks to our partner Janice Lee, we have redesigned our website.

Not only will you find links to purchase our books here, but also info on all our different projects, such as #90x90LA.

Also, on this homepage, you will find a good old fashioned blog. Not only will we be posting stuff about Writ Large Press, CCM, and Entropy AKA The Accomplices here, but we will be sharing with you things that of interest in the publishing world, stuff about friends, tidbits we are learning, and other useful information.

So please visit us regularly and we will make sure that you gain something in return.

Thank you.

WLP Team

June 4, 2018
SPRING SALE
News

SPRING SALE

by The Accomplices March 8, 2018
written by The Accomplices

Didn’t go to #AWP18? Or just want to get in on a great deal on new titles from Writ Large Press & Civil Coping Mechanisms? Take advantage of our sale. Select new titles on sale, this month only.

SHOP THE SALE

 

March 8, 2018
Coping with Cooper Wilhelm, Author of ‘Dumbheart/Stupidface’
Books

Coping with Cooper Wilhelm, Author of ‘Dumbheart/Stupidface’

by CCM January 8, 2018
written by CCM

#CopingWith is CCM’s interview series run by editor Joanna C. Valente


Cooper Wilhelm is the author of his debut book “Dumbheart/Stupidface” which was released November 13, 2017 from CCM. Of his book, Bijan Stephen said,“Good love stories aren’t interesting to read about. Thankfully, Dumbheart / Stupidface provides a wonderful reprieve; Wilhelm writes the brutal truths of what it means to love someone with a detached ferocity generally observed in nature, as when a tiger devours a deer. And it is as exciting to watch.”

Luckily, he talked to me about his favorite gif, meal, and apocalypse plans:

Describe your favorite meal. 

Some kind of roasted or barbecued meat. I’m thinking of doing a double roast when I turn 30 where we’ll roast meats and then my friends will say mean things about me. Last year some friends slowroasted a porkshoulder in this small apartment. It was winter and the kitchen and the living room were one continuous swish blanketed richly in oven heat. We’d meant to cut the shoulder up and serve it on plates like civilized aristocrats but it never made it off the cutting board. A little shy picking and then there was frenzy. It was an iridescent goddamned joy.

What music do often you write to, if at all? 

I like music a lot so I usually can’t write with it on. The best way for me to write is by doing it as a secret when I’m supposed to be doing something else.

What are three books that you’ve always identified with?

Robert Hass’s Sun Under Woods.

An anthology of haikus that Stephen Addiss edited.

And Liber Null made so much sense when I picked it up. It felt like skeins saying thoughts I’d had back to me.

Choose one painting that describes who you are. What is it?

It’s probably the painting Grace Linderholm (who is taking commissions by the bye) did for my book DUMBHEART/STUPIDFACE. It’s based on Bottom from A Midsummer Night’s Dream. That play has felt talismanic to me for a long time and I love that moment when they discover Bottom has the head of an ass and say “Bless you, Bottom, you are translated!”

Choose a gif that encompasses mornings for you. 

What do you imagine the apocalypse is like? How would you want to die?

The problem is that all the apocalypses are rolling in at once. Honestly it feels like what will happen is that the earth will just quit. No more food will grow, no more drinkable water will reveal itself. There will be a generation of suffering and then silence.

But that’s not how I want to go out. I’d prefer something sudden and preceded by maniacal laughter. Maybe crashing a zeppelin in a way that inconveniences people I hate.

If you could only watch three films for the rest of your life, what would they be?

I suspect Evil Dead 2 will never get old. Its strangeness has lingered for years and is so essential it feels like it will keep flashing in revelation like a prism spinning on a string. The Shape of Water gave me hope and I think that means I could watch it forever. Also Exiled feels like 3 movies tied together against their will and I love it.

How would you describe your social media persona/role?

I tend to tweet a lot about poetry and socialism and witchcraft but not in a way that really makes them go together. There’s a lot of overlap in those communities, but I get the sense people come for the poetry, tolerate the occultism, and bail because of the politics. Maybe if I were more discreet about things that aren’t poetry I’d have more of a following but I don’t want to be dishonest by omission.

What’s your favorite animal and why?

Pigs, easily. They’re astoundingly human in both good and bad ways. The only animal besides us that can be naked.

What do you carry with you at all times?

Right now it’s a little red notebook I’ve been keeping to mark coincidences and synchronicities and such since I started doing saintcraft. I’m a little self-conscious about it but I wanted to be serious and scientific about trying to communicate with deities and the dead.


Cooper B. Wilhelm is a poet, researcher, and occultist living in NYC. He is from Maine. He’s published stuff with people. Into the Dark is a radio show he did about witchcraft (all the episodes are still available as podcasts). PoetryAndStrangers is a thing he does where he writes poems on postcards and then mails them to strangers he looks up in phonebooks.

 

valente

Joanna C. Valente is a human who lives in Brooklyn, New York, and is the author of Sirs & Madams (Aldrich Press, 2014), The Gods Are Dead (Deadly Chaps Press, 2015), Marys of the Sea (The Operating System, 2017), Xenos (Agape Editions, 2016) and the editor of A Shadow Map: An Anthology by Survivors of Sexual Assault (CCM, 2017). Joanna received a MFA in writing at Sarah Lawrence College, and is also the founder of Yes, Poetry, a managing editor for Luna Luna Magazine and CCM, as well as an instructor at Brooklyn Poets. Some of their writing has appeared, or is forthcoming, in Brooklyn Magazine, Prelude, Apogee, Spork, The Feminist Wire, BUST, and elsewhere.

January 8, 2018
accomplices-ramen-cats

The Accomplices LLC is a literary arts partnership and media company dedicated to amplifying marginalized voices and identities, particularly writers of color, through traditional and new media publishing, public engagement, and community building.


CCM + ENTROPY + WLP = THE ACCOMPLICES


The Accomplices is made up of the entities Civil Coping Mechanisms: publisher & promoter of kick-ass independent literature, Entropy: a magazine and community of contributors that publishes diverse literary and non-literary content, and Writ Large Press: an indie press that uses literary arts and events to resist, disrupt, and transgress.

We’re coping. No, we're thriving.

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I am an accomplice, too.

be/trouble The Depression Between Appear and Disappear American Symphony Ghosts Are Just Strangers Who Know How to Knock Entering the Blobosphere Experiments in Joy Psychopomps Losing Miami the other house Letters to My City I Don't Write About Race Coldwater Canyon Learning to afar Tom Sawyer ICON Hollywood Notebook

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