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Dames of Dialogue Blog
Monday, 11 May 2009
EVELYN HORAN ANSWERS THE DAMES' DOZEN
Now Playing: Christy Tillery French
Topic: Dames Dozen (interviews)
author1-photo1.      Tell us about your latest published book and your current writing project.

 Aging with Gentle Attitude includes humorous, light-hearted comments and opinions on aging and personal views on life’s experiences throughout the years. Articles are interspersed with collected humor and nostalgic tidbits reminiscent of days and times seniors knew, and can relate to, with a tender regard for the past. It stresses a viewpoint that includes acceptance of change and a hopeful attitude toward the future. Aging with Gentle Attitude is an appealing book for seniors and others interested in the many experiences of their parents and grandparents.

2.    Your Jeannie, a Texas Frontier Girl series has been compared by reviewers and readers to the Laura Ingles Wilder Little House on the Prairie series. How do you feel about that? What do you think the two series have in common? What are the differences?

 I am flattered and most pleased to be given that comparison. The two series have in common similar customs, traditions, and values of the frontier in our country in the mid eighteen hundreds. The Jeannie books are set on the Texas frontier, and the Little House books are set in the central part, the frontier prairie states of our country. The Jeannie books are more about ranch life, and the Little House books are more about farm life.

13.    You write fiction and nonfiction. Which do you prefer to write and why?

I enjoy writing in both genres as much depends on the story to be told and the events to be reviewed.

4.    Do you have a specific writing regimen? If so, what is it?

I usually write in the mornings when I feel energetic and fresh.

5.    Do you do anything “outside the box” in regards to promoting?

My main objective now in marketing and promotion is to write letters to libraries, schools and bookstores. I don’t do many booksignings, although I did in the first year of my Jeannie books. I am a senior citizen touching on “eighty young years” and I find I don’t have energy for more activity. I have also decided, at this time, after ten published books, my writing is for family and friends for the most part and those in the media who have previously purchased books, or are interested in a purchase via my promotion letters.

6.    What’s your most favorite thing about writing? What’s your least favorite?

My favorite thing about writing is to be able to communicate in such a way that the reader feels as if he is “in the scene” and is interested in the life of the protagonist, as if he were his friend. My least favorite thing about writing is a lack of personal motivation and a lack of interesting plot development.

7.    Who’s your biggest fan?

My biggest fans are probably my email author friends who have been most supportive of all my books and in writing their great reviews; also, my immediate family, including my helpful editing friend and husband, Elmer McDaniel.

8.    Who are your favorite authors? Have any influenced your writing?

My favorite authors are those who have written quality western fiction and other kinds of fiction that have been made into excellent movies and TV series, specifically, Larry McMurtry. My roots are in Central Texas and McMurtry’s are in the Texas panhandle. We have experienced lifestyles in our early years that are similar.

9.    What advice would you give to aspiring writers?

Work hard, study and learn all you can about writing. Edit and revise and send your best effort to the publisher. Don’t give up when rejection slips arrive. I have received many. It isn’t that your work is inferior as much depends on the needs of the publisher. Remember, the more you write, the better your skill. One’s writing can always be improved. It is never a “finished” work. I am continuing to learn. And do remember, money and fame are not the primary concern. Most of us will never get rich from writing. We write to share, to promote our theme, to instruct, to give to others in some worthy way through our writing. We need to write to bring pleasure, to uplift, and to entertain our readers.

10. Tell us something about your part of the country – we love to travel.

Southern California has many sources of interest. I live about sixty miles from San Diego so there are all the tourist attractions available from the Pacific Ocean to Sea World, museums,  theaters, and Old Town.  In Temecula, a city of l00,000, there are many restaurants, a large shopping mall, smaller stores, theaters, and several miles away, a large Indian Casino called Pechanga. The casino attracts large numbers of folks from the Southern California area. Temecula has many beautiful trees, flowers and shrubs growing in landscaped yards of lovely new homes. It is located in a warm valley surrounded by rolling hills. One can drive to nearby Palomar, the Observatory, to Julilan, where apple tree orchards grow, to Beaumont where there are cherry trees, and  take a drive to Palm Springs an hour away, and two hours away are Lake Arrowhead and Big Bear in the San Bernardino mountains.

11. Chat about your pets – we love them, too.

No pets but prefer small dogs like cocker poos. 

12. What’s your favorite Southern food? 

I like Cracker Barrel for good Southern food. There are no Cracker Barrels in Southern California that I know of.

For more information about Evelyn, go to: http://www.authorsden.com/evelynhoran


Posted by damesofdialogue at 3:29 PM EDT
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Wednesday, 25 March 2009
Evelyn Johnson, Librarian
Mood:  lucky
Now Playing: Maggie Bishop
Topic: Dames Dozen (interviews)

1. What has been the biggest change in the library field in the last five years? The biggest change I have seen in the library field is patrons do not come to the library just to check out a book. Our library is constantly being used for computer use. We have 18 computers for the public to use as well as WiFi. We are always having a wide range of programs for adults and kids. We check out DVD's, Books on CD and a new invention called Playaways. Plaways is like an Ipod with a book instead of music. One sad thing that has changed is I find that we rely on computers moreso now to find reference questions instead of books.

2. How is Watauga County Library, Boone, NC, funded? We are funded by the State, County and Town of Boone and our Friends of the Library

3. How has the current economic slow-down affected the library? We are much busier so it has not slowed down with library use. We will know soon what our budget will be but I am afraid we will have to spend very wisely in the next year or so.

4. What types of books are the most popular with users? Bestsellers, mysteries, local authors and some nonfiction

5. How do you decide which books to buy for the library? I read reviews in library journals and we take patron suggestions

6. What do library volunteers do? They answer the phone, help with programs, shelve and help with different activities that are going on at the present time.

7. What is your earliest memory in a library? I have been at the library 31 years. I was hired to work for a summer and never left. Mary Sue Morgan asked the commissioners for extra funding to hire me so I owe it all to her. There were only 4 of us working at that time compared to 19 now. My earliest memories are going out on the Bookmobile with Mary Brown. We would deliver books throughout the community and had a great time doing it.

8. How did you get started in the library science field? I began taking classes part time at ASU after I began working here although I worked in the library at the high school. I loved to read. I grew up out in the community and there was not a lot to do except read. Again, Mary Sue Morgan was a big help getting me started with my classes. It was a long haul but I finally finished, getting married and two kids later.

9. What do you like to read? I am a mystery reader, yes I like the works of gory James Patterson. I do read a lot of Southern Authors.

10. Tell us about your pets. I am the grandmother of a wonderful Lab named Lucy. Lucy is my son’s dog but they both still live at my house. She is the smartest dog I have ever had and I have always had a dog. We also have a turtle named Raphael. Raphael is about 13 years old and will probably out live us all.

11. What do you like most about living in the North Carolina mountains? I grew up here so I can't compare it to anywhere else but I love the closeness of the community where everyone knows almost everybody. I love helping others and I love my family and church. I love the way we can see the seasons change and I can't think of another place I had rather be.

12. Who is your favorite southern author? Well, my favorite Southern Author is Lee Smith and my favorite book that she wrote is Saving Grace. I love the characters in the Karin Gillespie books as well.


Posted by damesofdialogue at 5:00 AM EDT
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Wednesday, 18 March 2009
Maggie Bishop Answers the Dames Dozen
Now Playing: Interviewer: Christy French
Topic: Dames Dozen (interviews)
  

1.Tell us about your writing. I started with romance and have turned to murder in my Appalachian Adventure series. Shortly after moving to the North Carolina mountains, I realized that simply living with this topography was like getting to know a challenging character so I write cozies in which the setting is almost a character. In Murder at Blue Falls, a CSI wannabe leads trail rides. When her horse finds a body, Jemma starts to investigate, Detective Tucker enters and the mystery twists and turns from there. In the sequel, Perfect for Framing, there’s trouble a-brewing at a Property Owners Association and Jemma is once again involved with a mystery. Emeralds in the Snow involves downhill skiing, a treasure hunt and a cold case mystery. Appalachian Paradise is pure romance on a five-day backpacking trek. And there’s my cat book, Meow Means Me! Now!, dictated by my feline in rhyme which takes him from being a kitten to an old guy.

2.Are you a member of any writers’ critique groups? If so, do you think it has benefitted you? I’m a member of High Country Writers, a group in Boone, NC, that I founded in 1995. We have a critique session on the second meeting of the month. By critiquing other manuscripts, I pass forward the help I received when I started out. At this point, I rely on my Editor to critique my work.

3. Tell us about the workshops you’ve put together.

Currently I have designed four workshops to help other writers. On Stage! Book Signings gives the steps needed to set up, attend and follow up book signings. Five Keys to Writing a Mystery, Internet Connections and Begin to Write that Novel/Memoir are designed for a one-hour format. They are all interactive and have handouts.

4. You have written five books. What have you learned about writing that you wish you had known when you started? Has it gotten any easier? Study the craft and try the tips to improve your writing. I just returned from a Break Into Fiction retreat, a workshop on character driven plotting, given by Mary Buckham and Dianna Love and now know that plotting can be easier. Also, don’t talk about your story before and during the first draft. Parts of the soul of the tale leak out when you do that. Your energy for the discovery dissipates. Hold onto that precious part of creating.

5. You write mystery and romance. What do you think the two genres have in common? Both plot lines evolve out of the character’s growth. We feel better when someone becomes a better human being and we, as readers, can feel the change in the character as they learn something about themselves. I write commercial fiction and expect a positive outcome at the end of the story.

6. How did you come up with your Appalachian Adventure series? Experiencing the outdoors by hiking, skiing and horse back riding takes me back to an appreciation of nature and I want to pass on that feeling to readers. I decided to have four male cousins run into adventure, romance and mystery in the mountains. Since I was a ski patroller, I was able to use first-hand background information in Emeralds in the Snow to give authenticity to the novel.

7. What do you think sets this series apart from other mystery series? The setting, the characters and the mysteries are unique to the mountains. I’ve put a fictional dude ranch near Boone, NC, because I think we need one. Jemma Chase’s love of CSI doesn’t interfere with her three jobs – trail-ride leader, carpenter and photographer. In today’s economy and in the service orientated jobs in a tourist area, she resembles the local people. However, she is from off the mountain originally and continues to learn the ways of the proud and crafty Appalachian people.

8. Are you a pantser or outliner? Until recently, I claimed to be a panster, wanting to discover the story as I wrote. The one time I plotted ahead, the story lay on the page. I ended up destroying all evidence of that story. However, now I view the panster-outliner as a continuum and I’m a 3 on a scale of 1 to 10 (panster being number one, of course).

9. Do you have any particular writing rituals? The house has to be quiet and I sit on the couch and write the first draft longhand in ink on a tablet. I stop by four and have a glass of champagne.

10. What advice would you offer other writers? Read and write. Ask yourself, if your writing world were perfect, when would you write? How many days a week? Then arrange your schedule to be as close to that as possible and write. Log the hours written onto a calendar in a prominent place. After two months of writing those four or five days a week, give yourself an award. A massage would be good. When writing the first draft, turn off the internal editor. Give yourself permission not to judge.

11. Why did you start writing? One year when my husband and I headed off to a vacation on a dude ranch, someone in the office gave me a contemporary romance to read. That year, I read four hundred books and held down a demanding full time job. I read at traffic lights, during lunch, first thing in the morning and last moments at night. One morning I said "I can do this" and joined Romance Writers of America, took their craft courses and have written ever since.

12. What’s your favorite Southern phrase? Ball hootin’ – that’s when you’re driving down a mountain road with black ice, the back end of the truck starts weaving and you go ball hootin’ down, almost out of control.


Posted by damesofdialogue at 3:50 PM EDT
Updated: Wednesday, 18 March 2009 4:01 PM EDT
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Wednesday, 11 March 2009
Christy Tillery French answers the Dames Dozen
Topic: Dames Dozen (interviews)
1.  Give us your "elevator" speech about your latest book, Chasing Secrets.
An ATF agent on the run from a corrupt TV evangelist, crime boss and her own agency. The only thing she can count on: her dog Zeus and just maybe Detective Garrett Somersby.
2.  What brought you to Tennessee?
I was born here and have lived in East Tennessee all my life except for a short stent in LA, where my husband is from. I couldn’t get used to the flat land and brown air and people on top of people. I missed the mountains and lakes so much, I had to come back.
3.  How did Natasha of your Bodyguard series come to you?
I was driving home from a book fair, trying to think of a protagonist for a series, and the idea popped into my head. With a bodyguard character, I have at my disposal a multitude of clients she can protect leading to a plethora of situations she can get into. I wanted her to be Southern, young (so she can mature as the series does) and kick-butt. Hence, Natasha Chamberlain was born.
4.  Tell us what you have in store for Natasha (last time she protected a rock star).
My next book, which is slated for publication this year, she’s guarding a slimy defense attorney who’s been targeted by the head of a criminal organization.
5.  Do you outline and plot ahead?  Why/why not?
I’m what is considered a “pantser”. I never outline or plot ahead. I start writing and let the characters take the story wherever it’s going to go because it’s so much more interesting that way and I’ve learned it works better for me. If I have a mental wrestling match with my protag, trying to go one way when she wants to go the other, she always wins and the only thing I’ve accomplished is loss of time and a flare-up of carpal tunnel. I never write sequentially and many times write the last chapter first and then jump around. My final steps are putting the chapters in order and doing a chapter-by-chapter outline to make sure I have the time frames, scenes, etc. where they need to be and that everything flows. I’ve tried to write chronologically, but every time I do, a wall goes up. I guess I’m not a linear thinker.
6.  What keeps you from giving up writing?
Um, pure idiocy? Kidding. It’s simply the fact that I can’t not write. When an idea starts banging around in my head, the pressure builds until I have to write it or go nuts. This field is so competitive and so tilted toward not being successful, it’s almost impossible not to get discouraged. If I didn’t love writing so much, I’m sure I would have given up a long time ago.
7. You donate proceeds from the sales of your books to a Weimaraner rescue group and offer your books at rescue fund raisers. How did you become involved in Weimaraner rescue? What do you love about this particular breed?
I joined Wolf Creek Weimaraner Rescue as a volunteer shortly after its inception because they are so committed to saving these special dogs. We’ve seen some tragic cases but it’s a beautiful thing to watch a Weim blossom under Wolf Creek’s care and subsequently be placed in a forever home. Weimaraners rate high in regards to abandonment or neglect, simply because people don’t research them before they purchase them. These are high-energy dogs that require much quality time with their families. The thought of these beautiful dogs – well, any animal – being mistreated or ending up in a kill shelter not only horrifies me but makes me very angry. I became a true dog lover when my husband gave me a Weimaraner pup for my birthday several years ago. I fell for this breed and fell hard. Weims are called Velcro dogs because they attach themselves to their families and are not happy unless they are interacting with that family. They’re affectionate, loyal, protective, and intelligent but very manipulative. We’ve since rescued five other dogs: two more Weims, two black Labs, and an Australian Blue Heeler. I encourage anyone considering adding a pet to their family to think about adopting or rescuing. Help save a life, please.

8. Who is the most interesting person you’ve met at a book signing or event?
I met the original Marlboro Man, William Thourlby, at a book festival and he is still gorgeous! By the way, he told me he was never a smoker. He writes self-help books, and when he found out I write humorous fiction, he encouraged me to continue on that path. He’s a wonderful storyteller, and I enjoyed spending time with him.

9.  Tell us about your favorite southern food.
Oh, shoot, that’s hard. Banana pudding. No, maybe it’s peach cobbler..
10.  Where's the spot in your home or nearby you run to when you want a moment alone?
My office. The door locks.
11.  How did you meet your husband? (We love a romance!)
Okay, this is going to sound weird, but it’s not illegal. Honest! My husband is my stepmother’s nephew, so let me clarify, this is our only familial relationship and we are not related by blood. Steve came to Tennessee from California to visit his aunt (my stepmother), we met, and that was it for me. I was the quintessential goody two-shoes, raised by Southern Baptist parents, and he was the complete opposite, a real wild guy. He sported long hair, tattoos, rode a motorcycle, and smoked more than cigarettes if you get my gist. Needless to say, my mom and dad just about died when I started dating him. Now he’s morphed into a good ole Southern boy and both my parents adore him. Go figure.
12.  What advice do you have for new writers?
Persevere. Never give up. Keep pushing forward, keep learning the craft, keep writing, but most of all, enjoy the journey and have fun.

Posted by damesofdialogue at 6:24 AM EDT
Updated: Wednesday, 11 March 2009 7:23 AM EDT
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Tuesday, 10 March 2009
Peter May interviews Maggie Bishop
Mood:  celebratory
Now Playing: Suite 101
Topic: Dames Dozen (interviews)

Peter May interviewed Maggie Bishop on Suite 101.  Read about writing rituals and other tips from the author.

http://research-writing-techniques.suite101.com/article.cfm/writers_rituals_maggie_bishop

 


Posted by damesofdialogue at 7:28 AM EDT
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Wednesday, 4 March 2009
Caitlyn Hunter
Mood:  special
Now Playing: Dames of Dialogue Interview
Topic: Dames Dozen (interviews)
1. Give us your "elevator speech" about your latest novel, Snow Shadows.

Oh, lord, this is always so hard for me, but here goes...Average, ordinary Betty Sue Corn goes to Eternity Mountain after being suspended from her job. While there, she meets Marcus Tassel, a man who's anything but ordinary. She's smitten, but Marc does his best to resist her advances. He's a shape shifter with psychic powers and he's been having visions about her for a long time, visions that always end with his death. Betty Sue isn't willing to let him get away just because of a dream that may or may not come true. She wants her happily-ever-after and she's willing to do whatever it takes to get it, even risk her own life.

2. How did you end up in the North Carolina mountains?

I’m originally from East Tennessee but spent quite a bit time in the North Carolina mountains as a child because my dad’s family is from this area. In 1999, my husband and I moved from Knoxville to Maine where we lived for almost 8 years. When we decided to move back to the South to be closer to our families, we settled on western North Carolina because I always loved it here and as a child, that’s where I wanted to live. So he concentrated his job search in the Asheville area and we moved into an apartment in Arden while we looked for a house. Asheville, like Knoxville, was a little too "big city" for us and my dad suggested we look in Hendersonville. We did and ended up finding the perfect house for us.

3. Tell us about your experience with e-books.

When I finished my first "grown-up" novel, a sensual romantic suspense, I sent it to my sister who read it and urged me to submit it. Being something of an introvert, I resisted until she suggested I try some of the e-publishers that were popping up on the Internet back then. I submitted Death by Indifference to five e-publishers and got offers from two of them, the first from a company just starting up and the other from the prime of the e-publishing world at the time. I decided to go with the new one, StarDust Press, thinking I could grow with them. Unfortunately, they didn’t make it and closed their doors less than a year after my book came out. They were, luckily for me, very professional about the closing, letting the authors know as soon as they could and sending out rights reversion letters for each of the works they’d contracted for—I had signed another contract with them for my first paranormal romance, Snow Shadows, shortly after my romantic suspense was released.  When I got the rights to my work back, I submitted the paranormal to a small press, L&L Dreamspell, it was accepted and released in both print and ebook last September.

During that time, I had also entered a novella, Unwilling Angel, in a writing contest with another new e-publisher. I won the contest but by the time my book was released, it was obvious there were problems and they weren't wasn’t going to make it. Unlike my first publisher, this one wasn’t very professional about closing their doors. It took a while, but I did finally get my rights to the book back and once I had that, I submitted it to another e-publisher, Red Rose Publishing. It was accepted and re-released this past December.

So, I’ve had my share of successes with e-publishers and a few failures too. If someone asked, I would still recommend going with e-publishing if, and this is a huge if, the author carefully researches them first and looks for the red flags that usually indicate problems. Read everything you can find about the publisher and the owner(s), email a few of their authors to ask how they feel about the publisher, and most important, pay attention to all the author warning sites and blogs out there.

4. When's your best writing time of day and year and why?

I don’t have a best time of year, but the time of day that works best for me is late morning to early afternoon, after I’ve been sufficiently caffeinated for the day. Oh, and it helps if the sun’s shining too—rainy days bring out my lazy side.

5. How did you get started writing?

I’ve always wanted to write but never was quite serious enough about it to sit down and write an actual book. When I finally did get serious, I wrote mainly poetry and books for younger audiences, but I never thought any of them were good enough to actually get published so I just left them on my computer and played around with them every once in a while. Then in 2005, I was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis and that was the kick in the pants I needed to finally make me take writing seriously. Well, that and my sister, Christy, who was my lifeline during that time. Like most people who are diagnosed with MS, I went through a period of depression and Christy told me to sit down and write about what I was feeling. I wrote a lot of poetry during that time and then one day while I was waiting to see my neurologist I found a quote from Anais Nin in a magazine, "I believe one writes because one has to create a world in which one can live." So, long story short—I know, I know, too late for that!—I sat down at the computer and took Christy’s and Ms. Nin’s advice, I wrote about a character who was dissatisfied with her life and I created a world in which she and I both could live. I ended up with my first romantic suspense novel, a slew of not-very-good poems, and thanks to my dad, who sent me a book about Cherokee history, an idea for my first paranormal romance series. And if you’ll pardon the cliché, the rest is history.

6. What's your favorite southern word or phrase?

I actually wrote a blog entry about this a while back while I was doing research on southern sayings because my sister and I are writing a book about our great-aunt’s life growing up here in the North Carolina mountains. I have a lot of favorites, but the one I like the best is, "That girl’s just naturally horizontal."

7. Of the minor characters you've created, who's your favorite and why?

Oooh, tough question! It changes with each book, so right now I’d have to go with Candice Corn, the sister of the heroine in Storm Shadows, the book I just finished. Candice is the direct opposite of the heroine, Betty Sue, and is, as my favorite southern saying goes, naturally horizontal. I’m having a lot of fun with the differences in the two sisters and Candice, needless to say, causes problems for Betty Sue in the book, but she does the right thing in the end.

8. Other than writing, what do you enjoy doing?

I love to garden and am so happy that my husband and I finally found a house with a big backyard so I can have a vegetable garden and multiple flower gardens this year. I like to can the vegetables I grow and make jams and jellies when the local fruits come into season. I’m really looking forward to apple season this year! I knit, crochet, do counted cross-stitch, and have even tried my hand at quilting. And of course, being a writer, I love to read; mostly fiction, but recently I’ve found myself doing a lot of non-fiction reading for research, and surprisingly enough, I’m enjoying it. Other than that, I’m an avid baseball fan and boy, do I miss living in Maine during the season. There always seemed to be a Red Sox game on NESN, and since the Red Sox are my team of choice, I loved being able to watch their games.

9. Does music play a part in your life? If you were Karaoke Queen, what song would you sing?

Oh, definitely, music is a big part of my life…except when I’m writing. If there’s music playing while I’m writing, I find myself getting lost in the song, singing along, or sometimes even typing the words to whatever’s playing at the time. If I were Karaoke Queen—and believe me no one wants that to happen because I’m the worst singer ever!—the song I would choose to sing would change depending on the day because my favorite song changes from day to day, as does my favorite artist. But I have to say, it would probably be something by John Mellencamp or maybe Bob Seger. Then again, I could go with Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers or Van Morrison or early Elton John. Anything, as long as it’s not country!

10. If you could travel anywhere, where would you go and why?

I’m a homebody so I’m not much into traveling, but I’ve always wanted to go to Ireland…or maybe Italy…or maybe Alaska…or maybe I could just stay right here at home and read a book about those places.

11. Is there anything you struggle with when you’re writing?

Head-hopping, I have a really bad tendency to switch POVs numerous times in one scene. That’s a big no-no for authors—or it is for newer authors. I’ve seen some of the better known authors do it and get away with it, but if you’re just starting out, like I am, you have to mind your p’s and q’s. Plus, the authors who do that successfully are much more skilled than I am. Hopefully, I’ll reach that point one day and be able to seamlessly switch POVs within a scene without jerking the reader out of the story.

12. What is the hardest part of writing your books?

I don’t know why, but I always hit a slump when I get to the middle of the story. The beginning usually flows really fast for me then at the mid-point, it slows down. Once I work my way through the middle, everything picks up and starts to flow again. Wish I could figure out why that happens so I could fix it!

http://www.caitlynhunter.com/


Posted by damesofdialogue at 5:01 AM EST
Updated: Wednesday, 4 March 2009 5:37 PM EST
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