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	<title>insomnius.org &#187; Books</title>
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		<title>Opinions About Books: Steven Erikson Special Edition</title>
		<link>http://insomnius.org/blog/opinions-about-books-steven-erikson-special-edition/</link>
		<comments>http://insomnius.org/blog/opinions-about-books-steven-erikson-special-edition/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 07 Nov 2009 13:00:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>insomnius</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Books]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fantasy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[malazan book of the fallen]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[steven erikson]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://insomnius.org/blog/?p=1003</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[When I was a young 'un I read quite a bit of fantasy fiction. I devoured Tolkien,1 Susan Cooper and Victor Kelleher, but I also read Anne McCaffrey and Terry Brooks and whatever other high-volume fantasy I could find on the shelves of my school library. Somewhere along the line, as I read more "literature" [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When I was a young 'un I read quite a bit of fantasy fiction. I devoured Tolkien,<sup>1</sup> Susan Cooper and Victor Kelleher, but I also read Anne McCaffrey and Terry Brooks and whatever other high-volume fantasy I could find on the shelves of my school library.</p>
<p>Somewhere along the line, as I read more "literature" and grew addicted to well-wrought language and compelling ideas, I realised that an awful lot of what I was reading was neither well-written nor interesting. Never one for moderation, I concluded that fantasy was generally terrible and stopped reading it altogether. Well-meaning attempts by friends and loved ones to lure me back into the fold with Terry Pratchett or Janny Wurtz failed miserably.</p>
<p>In the last few years I have discovered a handful of authors who have restored my belief in Fantasy Fiction That Does Not Suck. Most of the credit belongs to George R. R. Martin, Robin Hobb, and the subject of todays post:<sup>2</sup> Steven Erikson.</p>
<p>There are a few things that make Erikson's "Malazan Book of the Fallen" series stand out for me:</p>
<ul>
<li>It is (or will be) ten books long, and he has been publishing them at a rate of about one per year. He only has one to go. (Compare and contrast: Robert Jordan, George R.R. Martin.) And these are substantial books, not something to knock out in a spare weekend.</li>
<li>Erikson has created his own world/universe from scratch, and it isn't drawn from the Tolkienesque elves/dwarves/dragons/wizards memepool <em>at all</em>. This means that the process of discovery is ongoing — and because he has created a deep, interesting world, it is also fascinating.</li>
<li>This is some of the least racist/classist/sexist/homophobic/etc fiction I have read. (More on that in a moment.)</li>
<li>The reader is dropped in the middle of a time of upheaval, with all sorts of factions and interests in play, and shown how events unfold. There are almost no good guys and almost no bad guys.</li>
<li>Erikson does not pull any punches. Important, beloved characters can have just about anything happen to them; a medieval-type world is not presented as a bucolic, honorable sort of place; heroes have skeletons in their closets, and not the kind that can be nobly overcome.</li>
</ul>
<p>One of the things I love most about this series is Erikson's egalitarian approach. There are male and female characters who are violent, lethal soldiers, or charming seducers, or brilliant mages. Characters of all colours - brown, black, white, grey, pink, bronze, blue - are important political and military figures, everyday folks the reader can identify with, and everybody in between. Same-sex attraction is fairly uncommon but not stigmatised or remarkable. Characters from "barbarian" cultures are not simply savages (noble or otherwise), and all sorts of body types are represented without being stereotyped.</p>
<p>It is so rare that I read fantasy that makes me cringe so little.</p>
<p>I recently read two books in the series back to back, a not insignificant undertaking. Here is what I thought about them:</p>
<p><strong><i>Memories of Ice</i></strong> <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
The third book in the series sees things take a turn for the epic. Considering what has already happened in <i>Gardens of the Moon</i> and <i>Deadhouse Gates</i> this hardly seems possible, but as the world's system of gods, ascendants and other powers is slowly revealed we discover just how little we have seen until now. If I have a gripe about this book, it's that the unrelenting significance of everything that happens can cause what I will term <em>epicity fatigue</em>, and the down-to-earth characters that kept things grounded in the first couple of books are suddenly rocketing out of reach of the hapless reader.</p>
<p>Erikson's treatment of his snarled mess of intrigue and his unfamiliar, foreign world is pretty great. Rather than spoon-feeding us, or resorting to having characters explain things they already know to each other, he leaves us to flounder in confusion and pick things up as we go along. The moments of revelation when something falls into place is much more rewarding as a result. He also turns the notion of dramatic irony on its head, frequently having characters bring each other up to speed <em>offstage</em> and then carrying on with the story. This is frustrating at times, but I can only salute its effrontery (and effectiveness).</p>
<p>Finally, I must mention that this book affected me emotionally in a way I never expected. I think it was largely because the character of Itkovian resonated with me more than any other fictional character I can remember;<sup>3</sup> this is not something I expect from fantasy at all. An extended scene near the end of the book made me more or less fall apart, and I had tears pouring down my face for several pages even after I managed to read on.</p>
<p>Perhaps it is abnormal of me, but saying that it gives rise to uncontrollable emotional expression is just about the highest praise I can give a book.</p>
<p><Strong><i>House of Chains</i></strong> <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
<I>Memories of Ice</i> was a hard act to follow, but I think <i>House of Chains</i> would have been a bit of a letdown anyway. The focus is mainly on characters I find entirely unsympathetic and not especially interesting, and a very large chunk at the start of the book was really not enjoyable to read at all.</p>
<p>That being said, there were yet more revelations about the way Erikson's world is held together, and I appreciated the return of the story to a more mundane footing. There are also new sides revealed to old, supposedly-familiar characters, and some wonderfully subtle nods to events from previous books. And just when you thought Erikson must have run out of atrocities and taboos, he shoves a big handful of new ones into your face.</p>
<p><I>House of Chains</i> is my least favourite book in the series so far, but that only dissuaded me from reading the next <em>immediately</em>. I am not really disappointed by it in any meaningful way, and still have high hopes for the rest of the series.</p>
<ol class="footnotes"><li id="footnote_0_1003" class="footnote">Including the Silmarillion, for which I have a deep and abiding love to this day.</li><li id="footnote_1_1003" class="footnote">I knew I'd get to the point eventually.</li><li id="footnote_2_1003" class="footnote">Incidentally, the gradual reveal of what Itkovian stood for was handled brilliantly.</li></ol>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Opinions About Books, Vol. 1</title>
		<link>http://insomnius.org/blog/occasional-opinions-about-book-vol-1/</link>
		<comments>http://insomnius.org/blog/occasional-opinions-about-book-vol-1/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 27 Sep 2009 11:56:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>insomnius</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Books]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[against the stream]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cormac mccarthy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[henry rollins]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[michael azzerad]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[noah levine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[on writing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stephen king]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[the road]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://insomnius.org/blog/?p=933</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There is no way I am going to keep up with myself if I try to write a separate post about each book I read, so here are the books I have read since last time I wrote about books: Our Band Could Be Your Life: Scenes from the American Indie Underground, 1981-1991, Michael Azerrad [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There is no way I am going to keep up with myself if I try to write a separate post about each book I read, so here are the books I have read since last time I wrote about books:</p>
<p><strong><i>Our Band Could Be Your Life: Scenes from the American Indie Underground, 1981-1991</i></strong>, Michael Azerrad <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p></p>
<p>An interesting overview of some interesting stuff that happened while I was much too young to notice. I've never gotten into hardcore or punk music in any meaningful way, but the anecdotes and (disarmingly frank) first-person accounts of various local scenes in the 1980s made for great reading. It also turned me onto some music I'd never been motivated to check out before, Mission of Burma's <i>Vs.</i> being a particular highlight.<sup>1</sup></p>
<p>The writing was not outstanding, often destabilised by Azzerad's habit of inserting fannish blurbs into his historical overviews. In a way it added to the book's charm, I suppose, in that the stories of a bunch of DIY-loving amateurs who wrote fanzines and started their own record labels is related in the style of an over-excited but knowledgeable fan. Sometimes he wanders well away from his stated topic - for instance, each chapter is titled for the band it focuses on, but the Mudhoney chapter is really about Sub Pop, Mudhoney being a conveniently-placed band from which to hang the story.</p>
<p>Overall, not a great book, but a good enough book about great things, and that is often sufficient for non-fiction.</p>
<p><strong><i>Black Coffee  Blues</i></strong>, Henry Rollins <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p></p>
<p>Henry Rollins' writing has something in common with Chuck Palahniuk's. There is an immature or at least <em>arrested</em> quality to it, with cynicism and aggression being celebrated and, in Rollins' case, clung to. Rollins seems to insinuate that anyone smart, anyone who really thinks, would be as alienated and angry as he is; I think that is a  cop-out.<sup>2</sup> Instead of aiming for an improved future, he turns pain into his identity and proceeds to defend it at all costs. The monotonous cocktail of violence, anger and fear that propels <i>Black Coffee Blues</i> almost completely drowns out Rollins' moments of insight and humanity.</p>
<p><strong><i>The Road</i></strong>, Cormac McCarthy. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&nbsp;</p></p>
<p>This book is amazing. Anybody who says otherwise is crazy or lying.</p>
<p>And yet I didn't give it five stars! There are only two reasons for this: I found the ending slightly unsatisfying (possibly because I had been bracing myself for something quite different since approximately page three), and dialogue of any length, while rare, was difficult to follow (probably because both of the main characters were "he" and there were no quotation marks). </p>
<p>Everything else about this book is amazing. It is bleak and realistic like nothing I have ever read before, and so unobtrusively written that it's possible to completely forget that one is reading at all. I read it on the train and before work and in my lunch break, and despite the piecemeal consumption and the public, emotionally-neutral locations I found myself wanting to cry, or crawl under something and hide away for hours, or both. It hits <em>hard</em>.</p>
<p>I am extremely skeptical about the upcoming film adaptation. I seriously doubt that any filmmaker could capture McCarthy's world on film, especially with a live-action adaptation. At the same time, though, I am a bit excited about it. Maybe it, too, will be amazing.</p>
<p><strong><i>On Writing</i></strong>, Stephen King. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p></p>
<p>I had been resisting <i>On Writing</i> for a long time. Anything recommended so highly by people I admired and people whose tastes I often shared couldn't possibly be any good, right?</p>
<p>Right?</p>
<p>In the end it was a mixed bag. I liked the personal-memoir "CV" section, found the "Toolbox" section interesting despite King's avowed love of Strunk &#038; White<sup>3</sup>, and could take or leave much of the "On Writing" section. Interestingly, that was the part that King mentioned struggling with in the last section, "On Living", which was by far my favourite.</p>
<p>I think my problem with much of the writing advice was that I had already either received it second-hand from King's many acolytes, or figured it out for myself. That is hardly an objective basis for criticism of the book, but I have never pretended that my opinions about these things are anything but subjective.</p>
<p><strong><i>Against the Stream</i></strong>, Noah Levine. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p></p>
<p>The subtitle of this book is "A Buddhist manual for spiritual revolutionaries", which really makes me cringe, but I read the thing anyway. The subtitle is a good indication of why I dislike the book as a whole. Levine spends a lot more time playing up to his his militaristic theme than he spends on actual ideas, which makes me think I am just not his target audience. He is also glibly literal about reincarnation and prone to using a lot of buzzwords, but he does have some interesting things to say about celibacy and equanimity (the latter being something I struggle with, and the main reason I picked up <i>Against the Stream</i> to begin with).</p>
<ol class="footnotes"><li id="footnote_0_933" class="footnote">I still don't like Henry Rollins or Black Flag, though, so there.</li><li id="footnote_1_933" class="footnote">In fact, any variation on "Happy people are either unintelligent or in denial" gets my goat.</li><li id="footnote_2_933" class="footnote">I am going to have to read <i>The Elements of Style</i> so that I can make such dismissive remarks legitimately. Damn it.</li></ol>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>What I&#8217;ve Been Reading &#8211; August &#8217;09</title>
		<link>http://insomnius.org/blog/wibr-august-09/</link>
		<comments>http://insomnius.org/blog/wibr-august-09/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 01 Sep 2009 23:07:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>insomnius</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Books]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://insomnius.org/blog/?p=705</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Books I've finished reading this month: The 2&#189; Pillars of Wisdom, Alexander McCall Smith. Lent to me by a co-worker, this is an omnibus edition containing three books about a ridiculous German professor of Romance phililogy . It was the first bit of purely comic writing1 I had read in a long time, so although [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Books I've finished reading this month:</p>
<ol>
<li><i><strong>The 2&frac12; Pillars of Wisdom</strong></i>, Alexander McCall Smith. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
Lent to me by a co-worker, this is an omnibus edition containing three books about a ridiculous German professor of Romance phililogy . It was the first bit of purely comic writing<sup>1</sup> I had read in a long time, so although it took me a while to realise that each book was just a collection of little stories (and so none of the isolated weird occurrences were setups for eventual, devastating punchlines) it was fairly enjoyable.</li>
<li><i><strong>Non-Fiction</strong></i>, Chuck Palahniuk. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
Disclaimer: aside from <i>Fight Club</i>, I am yet to like any of Palahniuk's novels. I suspect that he only has one real thing to say, and <i>Fight Club</i> allowed him to express it most purely; puerility and an unpleasantly overplayed cynicism drag down his other excursions into fiction. In <i>Non-Fiction</i> I found more or less the same thing to be true, in that the most compelling pieces examined human (and especially masculine) isolation and alienation, while the rest tended to rely on shock value or simply fail to be anything but dull.</li>
<li><i><strong>Hunters in the Snow</strong></i>, Tobias Wolff. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
A random selection from my housemates' bookshelf because I hadn't gotten around to getting a library card yet, this collection of short stories was affecting but somewhat unrewarding. I can't love a collection of stories about people being selfish and hypocritical without redemption or consequence. I just don't understand the point of it, unless it is to depress the reader.
</li>
<li><i><strong>The Yiddish Policemen's Union</strong></i>, Michael Chabon. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&nbsp;</p><br />
This book was recommended to me by the co-worker who lent me <i>The 2&frac12; Pillars of Wisdom</i>, and it <em>completely</em> exceeded my expectations. There was not a single thing about it I didn't like<sup>2</sup>, and there was so much to love. Note-perfect dialogue, noir-flavoured humour amongst drama with real emotional weight, all against a fascinating backdrop of Jewish culture. And beautifully written - sometimes great writing is great because it gets out of the way and you never notice it's there, but I loved the way <i>The Yiddish Policemen's Union</i> kept making me stop and think "Wow".</li>
<li><i><strong>Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World</strong></i>, Haruki Murakami. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
This was my third attempt at reading Murakami, and if it didn't work out I was going to give up on him altogether. Unfortunately, I am still undecided; I feel a strange mix of interest and repulsion when I read his work, and while <i>Hard-Boiled Wonderland</i> was by far the most interesting instance so far I would still hesitate to recommend it to anybody. His dialogue never rings true for me<sup>3</sup> and his characters have no emotional life that I can discern, but on the other hand he takes bizarre fantasy worlds and integrates them perfectly into stories that are matter-of-fact and down-to-earth. I blame postmodernism.</li>
</ol>
<p>I have also been reading a great many non-book things, as usual, but would like to make particular note of <a href="http://andrewrilstone.blogspot.com/2009/08/to-download-right-click-on-image-and.html">Who Sent The Sentinels?</a> by Andrew Rilstone, which would probably be even more interesting to anybody who knows more than zero about comics.</p>
<p>I would also like to note that I have reached my self-imposed target of 52 books for the year (just a little bit early). I think I will use that as an excuse to abandon this monthly-ordered-list format, which I don't like as much as I did in the beginning, but I will continue to write at least something about each book I read. It feels like a valuable exercise and I enjoy doing it even when I don't enjoy doing it.<sup>4</sup></p>
<ol class="footnotes"><li id="footnote_0_705" class="footnote">That being said, one chapter early on made me thoroughly, pathetically sad and that took quite a while to wear off.</li><li id="footnote_1_705" class="footnote">A rarity. I even liked the way it ended, which almost never happens.</li><li id="footnote_2_705" class="footnote">To be fair, it's hard to know whether to lay the blame for that at the feet of the author, the translator, or simply my lack of familiarity with the way Japanese people talk to one another.</li><li id="footnote_3_705" class="footnote">If you know what I mean.</li></ol>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>What I&#8217;ve Been Reading: July &#8217;09</title>
		<link>http://insomnius.org/blog/wibrjuly-09/</link>
		<comments>http://insomnius.org/blog/wibrjuly-09/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 31 Jul 2009 11:46:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>insomnius</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Books]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://insomnius.org/blog/?p=643</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Books I've finished reading this month: Art and Lies, Jeanette Wintersen. Sometimes Art and Lies was breathtaking. Sometimes it was utterly opaque and alienating. I suspect it would reward re-reading; I also suspect that my recent Jeanette-Winterson-binge made it impossible for me to appreciate it for itself. Instead, I was alternately repulsed by repetitive self-indulgence [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Books I've finished reading this month:</p>
<ol>
<li><strong><i>Art and Lies</i></strong>, Jeanette Wintersen. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
Sometimes <i>Art and Lies</i> was breathtaking. Sometimes it was utterly opaque and alienating. I suspect it would reward re-reading; I also suspect that my recent Jeanette-Winterson-binge made it impossible for me to appreciate it for itself. Instead, I was alternately repulsed by repetitive self-indulgence and overwhelmed by resonance. I appreciated Handel, loved Picasso a little bit, and rather disliked Sappho - and then I was devastated by the way it all came together in the end.</li>
<li><strong><i>Franny and Zooey</i></strong>, J.D. Salinger. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
Lacking the intensity and charisma of a Holden Caulfield, <i>Franney and Zooey</i> came across as self-absorbed and arrogant even as it appeared to ridicule the self-absorbed and arrogant. Salinger's style was still quite contagious (my internal monologue was full of Salinger-esque tics for days after reading this book and the next), but without any soul to animate it this time.</li>
<li><strong><i>For Esmé - with Love and Squalor</i></strong>, J.D. Salinger. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
This collection caught my eye mainly because I have desperately loved the phrase "with love and squalor" since We Are Scientists used it for an album title. The contents were a mixed bag; I loved <i>A Perfect Day for Bananafish</i><sup>1</sup> and the title story, while some of the others were emotionally vacant tales of terrible people.</li>
<li><strong><i>Watchmen</i></strong>, Alan Moore. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&nbsp;</p><br />
I waited until after seeing the film to read <i>Watchmen</i>, a decision now entirely vindicated. My relative illiteracy when it comes to comics and graphic novels was alleviated by my familiarity with the story, and my likely crushing disappointment had I read the book first was entirely avoided.<sup>2</sup> <i>Watchmen</i> is, quite simply, brilliant. A kind lender enabled me to read it this time, but I will be buying my own copy.</li>
<ol class="footnotes"><li id="footnote_0_643" class="footnote">Perhaps it is more accurate to say that I <em>adored</em> it, thinking about it invariably invokes both ecstasy and despair, and I consider it to be a perfect story.</li><li id="footnote_1_643" class="footnote">At the same time, I am newly impressed with some aspects of the adaptation, and newly equipped to disagree with some criticisms that were levelled at it.</li></ol>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>What I&#8217;ve Been Reading &#8211; June &#8217;09</title>
		<link>http://insomnius.org/blog/wibr-june-09/</link>
		<comments>http://insomnius.org/blog/wibr-june-09/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Jul 2009 09:19:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>insomnius</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Books]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://insomnius.org/blog/?p=531</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Books I've finished reading this month: Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, Tom Stoppard. Read this in anticipation of showing a friend the movie for the first time. That viewing has been delayed by various factors, but I was glad of the excuse anyway. Also, plays always seem easier to read if I have seen them [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Books I've finished reading this month:</p>
<ol>
<li><strong><i>Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead</i></strong>, Tom Stoppard. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&nbsp;</p><br />
Read this in anticipation of showing a friend the movie for the first time. That viewing has been delayed by various factors, but I was glad of the excuse anyway. Also, plays always seem easier to read if I have seen them on stage or on film previously.</li>
<li><strong><i>The Passion</i></strong>, Jeanette Winterson. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&nbsp;</p><br />
Stranger than <i>Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit</i>, and sufficiently unlike an ordinary novel to leave me feeling as though I hadn't just read anything, perhaps just listened to a symphony or walked through an art gallery. Often grotesque, always poetic.</li>
<li><strong><i>Sit Down and Shut Up</i></strong>, Brad Warner. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
While Warner's schtick wears a bit thin sometimes, I really enjoyed this re-read (possibly my third or fourth?) and anticipate many repeats in the future. The content beind the schtick never gets old, and is always worth reminding myself of.</li>
<li><strong><i>Sexing the Cherry</i></strong>, Jeanette Winterson. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
I didn't write anything about <i>Sexing the Cherry</i> right after I finished reading it, which was a mistake; 1.5 Winterson books later, it has mostly receded into the foggy depths of my mind, obscured by intricate clusters of Winterson's recurring themes and motifs.<br />
The grotesquerie <sup>1</sup> is more obtrusive and gratuitous than in <i>The Passion</i>, and there is only the most tenuous of narrative threads to hold on to, but the book is strewn with nuggets of insight, beauty and delight. I like much of it, and I love the way it folds in on itself towards the end (which added half a star to my rating, in the end).</li>
<li><strong><i>Boating for Beginners</i></strong>, Jeanette Winterson. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
This was much lighter going, and although I became weary of humorous and/or pointed anachronism in fiction some time ago I rather liked it. Irreverent and sometimes very funny, while still having Things To Say about life and identity and how weird we human creatures are.</li>
</ol>
<ol class="footnotes"><li id="footnote_0_531" class="footnote">What a great word. Grotesquerie.</li></ol>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>What I&#8217;ve Been Reading &#8211; May &#8217;09</title>
		<link>http://insomnius.org/blog/wib-may-09/</link>
		<comments>http://insomnius.org/blog/wib-may-09/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2009 00:13:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>insomnius</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Books]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://insomnius.org/blog/?p=527</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Books I've finished reading this month: Artemis Fowl, Eoin Colfer. I now believe that it is not just Terry Pratchett; I seriously doubt that I will thoroughly enjoy anything in this vein in the near future. Somewhat odd, since it is similar to what I most often feel capable of writing; perhaps my subconscious always [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Books I've finished reading this month:</p>
<ol>
<li><strong><I>Artemis Fowl</i></strong>, Eoin Colfer. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
I now believe that it is not just Terry Pratchett; I seriously doubt that I will thoroughly enjoy anything in this vein in the near future. Somewhat odd, since it is similar to what I most often feel capable of writing; perhaps my subconscious always suspects that I would much rather be writing (post?)modern fantasy strewn with anachronisms than reading it.</li>
<li><strong><i>A Room of One's Own</i></strong>, Virginia Woolf. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
What issues I have with this book only arise because of developments in feminism and related areas that have come after it; it would be unfair to blame Woolf in any way for not being decades ahead of her time. Besides, I was instantly consumed by adoration of her natural, insightful, humorous manner, and she likes Jane Austen as much as I do (and for similar reasons). This is a lovely book.</li>
<li><strong><i>Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit</i></strong>, Jeanette Winterson. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&nbsp;</p><br />
If <i>A Room of One's Own</i> is lovely, <i>Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit</i> is sublime. By turns funny and heartbreaking, and with odd deviations from the standard storytelling mode that only drew me in further, it is probably the best thing I have read so far this year.</li>
<li><strong><i>The Voyage Out</i></strong>, Virginia Woolf.<p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
Strangely, this had some of the problems Woolf takes other authors to task for in <i>A Room of One's Own</i>, and I am not sure how satirical it was supposed to be. Apart from a thoroughly infuriating ending and lots of characters making sweeping generalisations on behalf of the author, I didn't mind it.</li>
<li><strong><i>Sense and Sensibility</i></strong>, Jane Austen. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
This reads like it was practice for <i>Pride and Prejudice</i>, and judging by the end result such practice was quite necessary. I will have to read more Austen to find out if I actually like her, or if it's just <i>P&#038;P</i>.</li>
</ol>
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		<title>What I&#8217;ve Been Reading: Apr &#8217;09</title>
		<link>http://insomnius.org/blog/what-ive-been-reading-apr-09/</link>
		<comments>http://insomnius.org/blog/what-ive-been-reading-apr-09/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 02 May 2009 22:20:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>insomnius</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Books]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://insomnius.org/blog/?p=508</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Books I've finished reading this (last) month: The Golden Fool, Robin Hobb. Fool's Fate, Robin Hobb. The New American Splendor Anthology, Harvey Pekar. The bits I really liked in this were bits I remembered fondly from the movie. A somewhat haphazard collection Sleeper Vol. 2: All False Moves, Ed Brubaker. Wow. Talk about trash. The [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Books I've finished reading this (last) month:</p>
<ol>
<li><strong><i>The Golden Fool</i></strong>, Robin Hobb. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&nbsp;</p>
</li>
<li><strong><i>Fool's Fate</i></strong>, Robin Hobb. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&nbsp;</p>
</li>
<li><strong><i>The New American Splendor Anthology</i></strong>, Harvey Pekar. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
The bits I really liked in this were bits I remembered fondly from the movie. A somewhat haphazard collection </li>
<li><strong><i>Sleeper Vol. 2: All False Moves</i></strong>, Ed Brubaker. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
Wow. Talk about trash.</li>
<li><strong><i>The Left Hand of Darkness</i></strong>, Ursula le Guin. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
The first non-Earthsea book of le Guin's I've read, this was an odd combination of of original ideas about gender and the same old science-fiction gender-role narrow-mindedness. Also set in a pretty interesting world, though.</li>
<li><strong><i>The Salmon of Doubt</i></strong>, Douglas Adams. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
I'd avoided reading this for a long time because it seemed rude to read something the author hadn't been behind publishing, but there was actually some pretty enjoyable reading in there. And the Hitchhiker Fatigue that I've developed doesn't seem to affect Dirk Gently stories.</li>
<p>Then I got completely stuck on <i>The Pickwick Papers</i>, which I took forever to decide not to bother finishing, so didn't read nearly as much as I might have otherwise.</p>
<p>I have also realised that my star ratings have been skewed too far to the right, so I'm going back to rejig previous entries.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>What I&#8217;ve Been Reading: March &#8217;09</title>
		<link>http://insomnius.org/blog/what-ive-been-reading-march-09/</link>
		<comments>http://insomnius.org/blog/what-ive-been-reading-march-09/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 31 Mar 2009 23:46:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>insomnius</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Books]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://insomnius.org/blog/?p=497</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Books I finished reading this month: Jonathan Strange &#038; Mr Norrell, Susanna Clarke. Lacking in substance for such a physically substantial book, but quite entertaining in its way. Would have been easier to digest as three volumes; pity the three "books" within don't work as stand-alone books. The Killing Joke, Alan Moore. Maus II, Art [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Books I finished reading this month:</p>
<ol>
<li><strong><i>Jonathan Strange &#038; Mr Norrell</i></strong>, Susanna Clarke. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
Lacking in substance for such a physically substantial book, but quite entertaining in its way. Would have been easier to digest as three volumes; pity the three "books" within don't work as stand-alone books.</li>
<li><strong><i>The Killing Joke</i></strong>, Alan Moore. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&nbsp;</p></li>
<li><strong><i>Maus II</i></strong>, Art Spiegelman. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&nbsp;</p><br />
Mere words are insufficient to express how awesome this book is. The first instalment, which I read a couple of years ago, is just as amazing.</li>
<li><strong><i>The Complete Ballad of Halo Jones</i></strong>, Alan Moore. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
Oddly unengaging, but moderately entertaining.</li>
<li><strong><i>Everyday Zen</i></strong>, Charlotte Joko Beck. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
Despite her repeated disclaimers about not getting too "woo woo" (nb: this is probably not the actual phrase she used), Joko did lose me a couple of times because of the way she approached the concept of God (or "the Master", as she somewhat gratingly put it). Other than that, this was generally fantastic.</li>
<li><strong><i>Letters from the Asylum</i></strong>, John Knight. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
The thing about poetry is that I can recognise it as being probably objectively good without any sort of subjective enjoyment. I think I relate to poetry similarly to the way I relate to music, rather than prose: all that I want from it is an emotional response, which comes from recognising an expression of something that is true for me. Technical considerations have little or nothing to do with it. So I am sure this collection of poetry, which I struggled to relate to, is much better than I found it. (There were a couple of poems that I really liked, but the rest were fairly alien to me.)</li>
<li><strong><i>Fool's Errand</i></strong>, Robin Hobb. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&nbsp;</p><br />
Reading this made me so happy! Robin Hobb was one of the authors that reintroduced me to "fantasy fiction that doesn't suck"&trade;, but her Liveship Traders trilogy was so painful and unrewarding to read that I had feared the Farseer Trilogy was an anomaly. The first book in the Tawny Man series was a joy to read, however - possibly because the tone and setting are more to my liking, or possibly just because it wasn't all about horrible, tedious, self-centred characters. I'm not sure if what I saw as dramatic irony was supposed to be mysteries unknown to the reader for most of the book<sup>1</sup>, but I am happy to forgive the occasional heavy-handedness for an original tale, well-told.</li>
<ol class="footnotes"><li id="footnote_0_497" class="footnote">I have no idea if that makes sense to anyone but me</li></ol>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>What I&#8217;ve Been Reading: February &#8217;09</title>
		<link>http://insomnius.org/blog/wibr-feb-09/</link>
		<comments>http://insomnius.org/blog/wibr-feb-09/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Mar 2009 06:21:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>insomnius</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Books]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://insomnius.org/blog/?p=492</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Books I have finished reading this month: The Early Asimov Volume 3, Isaac Asimov. Science fiction of this vintage is a funny thing. Some of the stories seemed very trite or obvious, but would that be the case had I not had access to decades of Asimov-inspired work? Probably not. And there were a couple [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Books I have finished reading this month:</p>
<ol>
<li><b><i>The Early Asimov Volume 3</i></b>, Isaac Asimov. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
Science fiction of this vintage is a funny thing. Some of the stories seemed very trite or obvious, but would that be the case had I not had access to decades of Asimov-inspired work? Probably not. And there were a couple of stories near the end which, despite their age and the somewhat dated language, were excellent.</li>
<li><b><i>The Nightmare Factory</i></b>, various artists and writers, based on stories by Thomas Ligotti. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p></li>
<li><b><i>The Nightmare Factory Volume 2</i></b>, ditto. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
I enjoy making impulse-borrowings from the library's comics and graphic novels section. Sadly, the pickings up here are much slimmer than at City Library in Melbourne, but some of the creepy stories in these books weren't half bad. At least one actually did inspire a dream, although I wouldn't call it a nightmare.</li>
</ol>
<p>Also about halfway through a couple of other books, but focusing on anything long has been difficult this past month.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>What I&#8217;ve Been Reading: January &#8217;09</title>
		<link>http://insomnius.org/blog/wibr-january-09/</link>
		<comments>http://insomnius.org/blog/wibr-january-09/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 31 Jan 2009 04:24:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>insomnius</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Books]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://insomnius.org/blog/?p=386</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Books I've finished reading this month:1 The Photographer's Eye: Composition and Design for Better Digital Photos, Michael Freeman. This was so excellent that I am going to write about it at greater length at some stage. The Subterraneans (and Pic), Jack Kerouac. I suspect that The Subterraneans displays Kerouac at his worst, and I don't [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Books I've finished reading this month:<sup>1</sup></p>
<ol>
<li><b><i>The Photographer's Eye: Composition and Design for Better Digital Photos</i></b>, Michael Freeman. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&nbsp;</p><br />
This was so excellent that I am going to write about it at greater length at some stage.</li>
<li><b><i>The Subterraneans</i> (and <i>Pic</i>)</b>, Jack Kerouac. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
I suspect that <i>The Subterraneans</i> displays Kerouac at his worst, and I don't (just) mean in an artistic sense; without the journeys and discoveries of <i>On the Road</i> or <i>The Dharma Bums</i>, all we can see is the deeply sexist, racist, irresponsible, selfish artist as he portrays himself (with unflinching honesty, to his credit). <i>Pic</i> is more tolerable but at the same time appalling in its ignorance; "this is what black folks are like", says the "other"-fetishising white guy.</li>
<li><b><i>Tales from Outer Suburbia</i></b>, Shaun Tan. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&nbsp;</p><br />
Beautiful.</li>
<li><b><i>The Book of Three</i></b>, Lloyd Alexander. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p></li>
<li><b><i>The Black Cauldron</i></b>, Lloyd Alexander. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p></li>
<li><b><i>The Castle of Lyr</i></b>, Lloyd Alexander. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p></li>
<li><b><i>Taran Wanderer</i></b>, Lloyd Alexander. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p></li>
<li><b><i>The High King</i></b>, Lloyd Alexander. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
The <i>Chronicles of Prydain</i> were fun to read over a couple of days. I liked the setting's inherited Welshness, and would have enjoyed the real series more if I had read it at a younger age; I tend to be much more demanding of fantasy fiction nowadays and found the simplicity a little wearing, especially towards the end (with its not-surprising-at-all big reveal and ensuing consequences, sigh).</li>
<li><b><i>Lost Boys</i></b>, Orson Scott Card. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
This is not as good a book as a three-star rating suggests. I enjoyed reading it not because it is a good book, but because it is a fascinatingly bald-faced piece of Mormon propaganda that betrays much more of Orson Scott Card's terrible values than any of the Ender series I have read so far. The whodunnit/ghost story wrapped around the outside simply gives the novel an excuse to exist; antagonists and plot points are set up with great care and little sophistication, and the real value of the book lies in immersing oneself in such an alien, intolerant set of values, presented with all the goodwill in the world. </p>
<p>What I learned from reading this book: the place of a woman is to make babies (LOTS of babies) and take care of the home, while also serving the community as much as is asked of her by people in the church who are more important; people who play Dungeons and Dragons are socially retarded savants who probably like to molest children; mentally ill people cannot function as normal members of society &mdash; HOWEVER, psychiatrists are malignant, religion-hating witch-doctors who think they know everything and basically aren't real doctors at all; personal concerns are unimportant and must always be secondary to the <del>demands</del> needs of the church hierarchy; women are weak and cry about things while men are strong and bear their burdens nobly, perhaps becoming angry sometimes; it is okay to behave in an abhorrent manner if you are righteous. Oh, and good always triumphs over evil.</li>
<li><b><i>The Reality Dysfunction</i></b>, Peter F. Hamilton. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
Would have rated higher if it weren't for the woeful clumsiness of the writing. Comma splices everywhere, semicolons where there should be commas, impenetrable forests of adjectives with nary a comma in sight, bizarre overuse of the verb "to boil" in various forms, and such poor expression generally that I fervently hope Hamilton has since found a better editor. However, the story was <i>much</i> better than the first couple of pages indicated, even if not much that happened at the end of the book rang true for me. A fairly fascinating universe and an interesting enough story to overcome the significant handicap of an author who does not write especially well, but I couldn't face reading the next in the series right away. (Sorry, Luke.)</li>
<li><b><i>Night Watch</i></b>, Sergei Lukyanenko. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
Vampires and wizards and magical goings-on in post-Soviet Russia. Unlike unread-but-surely-abominable vampire stories like <i>Twilight</i> or anything by Anne Rice, <i>Night Watch</i> is fun to read, perhaps because it is not actually a vampire story (it just has vampires in it). The writing is smooth and unobtrusive (as is the translation, incidentally), a real relief after reading Orson Scott Card and Peter F. Hamilton, and the world Lukyanenko has built offers an interesting blend of updated mythology (all that stuff about garlic and silver was encouraged by the bad guys, because it doesn't actually work) and a supernatural Cold War (a treaty binds good guys and bad guys alike, and much quibbling and rule-bending ensues), with all of the drinking and train stations and name-and-patronymic addresses that I've come to expect from everything written by Russians. </li>
<li><b><i>Day Watch</i></b>, Sergei Lukyanenko. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9734;&#9734;&nbsp;</p><br />
Unfortunately not up to the standard set by <i>Night Watch</i>, <i>Day Watch</i> is still not a bad read. Perhaps because there is not much mileage to be had from introducing the universe after so much of that was done so effectively in <i>Night Watch</i>, or perhaps because it focuses on the "bad guys" who make up the Day Watch,<sup>2</sup> <i>Day Watch</i> seems to meander a little despite the high stakes and soul-searching it contains. I did like the journey of the mysterious Vitaly, and overall <i>Day Watch</i> is not bad at all - just not as good as <i>Night Watch</i>.</li>
<li><b><i>The Hand That Signed The Paper</i></b>, Helen Demidenko. <p><strong class="rating">Rating:</strong>&nbsp;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&#9733;&frac12;&nbsp;</p><br />
I have only the vaguest of memories of the Helen Demidenko/Darville controversy that raged years ago, mainly because I was in primary school at the time and thus didn't have my finger on the pulse of the literary world. As a result, I came to <i>The Hand That Signed The Paper</i> without too many preconceived ideas. I was struck by the way it humanised people on the "wrong" side in eastern Europe during World War II; the anti-Semitism of many (most) of the characters was hard to stomach, but so was the unavoidable question raised: can anybody really know that they would do the "right" thing, faced with starvation and torture and the absence of hope? It's easy to sit on a moral high horse when you've been comfortable all your life. That being said, the overarching theme of the book seemed to be that people responsible for atrocities during wartime should not be prosecuted for war crimes, which I can't agree with, and I can't quite believe that <i>none</i> of the characters' hatred originated in the hatred of the author. Uncomfortable reading, and absolutely worth my while.</li>
<p>At the start of this year I thought I would aim to read one book each week. I suppose I've built up quite a buffer against the inevitable burst of apathy that will come.</p>
<ol class="footnotes"><li id="footnote_0_386" class="footnote">Confession: I started reading the first two in 2008.</li><li id="footnote_1_386" class="footnote">Despite the refreshing lack of clear victors in Lukyanenko's plotlines, perhaps he is not too comfortable taking the side of evil after all? There is certainly plenty of focus on Night Watch characters in this book, although the reverse is certainly not true.</li></ol>]]></content:encoded>
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