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Do you Write Short Stories

Do you Write Short Stories

If you like me are a member of a writers group, you will probably end up with a lot of very short stories that after a few readings will sit and gather dust in a file. You know the kind of thing, one or two page short stories that are just the right length to be read and discussed in a fifteen minute slot. Even if you are not a member of a group and write on your own, if you love to write, you will produce lots of work that will never be used in the book or anthology that you intend one day to publish.

What a waste, after all, you did put time and effort into them. I know you liked the writing and enjoyed the response to them from a few others, but it seems a shame for them to sit in a file and not be read. So why not put some of them onto your own website and let people read them for free. People will read them and while they might not make you any money, you will begin to build up a following. This can benefit you in several ways. One, you will get feedback and feedback, good or bad, will help you improve you writing, Two, you will build up a regular readership that enjoys your work and hopefully a ready market for when you finally publish your book. Three, the website is a place to showcase your book. Four, now four is only a maybe. Maybe, if you are good and build enough of a following, you just might come to the attention of a publisher.

You do not need to be computer literate or a wiz kid to have and run your own website. I am the one they wrote the idiots guide for and I am unable to even read it. What I did was to look on the Internet for website hosting and I found loads There are free websites, cheap websites, reasonably priced websites and you makes your choice and takes your pick. The free sites all had banner advertising at the top and strip ads down one side of the page, but they are giving you a free website and they have to make money somewhere. The paid for sites charge you for their services because they do not sell the ad space. So once again it is your choice.

I looked for the one that in my opinion would be the easiest to use and picked, do your own site. The site is jargon free, easy to use and I can update quickly and easily at anytime. They gave me a thirty day no quibble free trial, which gave me ample time to test everything out, I had my first page up and out there in no time, and I decided to go ahead without waiting for the trial period to end. I pay £58.80 a year, which I think is a very reasonable cost for a very rewarding hobby. After all, most hobbies cost you hundred if not thousands a year.

If you are worried about your copyright to any material you place on your web pages, you have a right to be worried, for while copyright laws still applies to your material, the very nature of the internet makes it extremely difficult, if not impossible to enforce. Once you publish your page, your work it is out there in the public domain and can be downloaded or copied. Look at all the music and software that is copied.

However, what we are talking about here, is not your novel or anthology, we are talking those hundreds of short pieces that you will never publish, but others may enjoy. You can still put copyright with your name and date to claim the right to your own work. So why not take a chance, get a website put your work on and sit back while your short stories are enjoyed on the World Wide Web. You will be surprised at the number of people that will read them.

Copyright Fred Watson September 2007

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Watch Animated Short Stories From Shiva Purana – Birth Of Sati – Kids a story where Brahma meets Vishnu and tells him that he would like to see Lord Shiva, who is an ascetic, settle down. Brahma requests Goddess Uma to be reborn on earth as Shiva’s consort. So Goddess Uma is reborn as Sati, the daughter of Daksha, the chief Prajapathy, and son of Lord Brahma. Click www.rajshri.com to watch more animation Stories.

Learn To Write For Children: Should You Do A Writing Course?

Learn To Write For Children: Should You Do A Writing Course?

You have never needed a writing course to pen intelligent, interesting stories that capture the imagination with bold creativity and unexpected twists. You know the difference between “there” and “their,” and understand that “they’re” is something else entirely. Your grammar is impeccable, and you know enough about the rules to know when to break them. That is, you have all these things on your side until you attempt writing children’s books. The best thing you can do for your children’s writing career is learn to write for this specific genre of writing!

There are many very successful authors who have written lots of books for adults in a variety of genres who find themselves stumbling when it comes to writing children’s books. They have well honed writing skills that they never needed a writing course to gain and they sit down to apply those skills to writing books children will love. Yet, the story never seems quite right. Or, they send it out repeatedly and get nothing more than immediate rejection. Some editors ignore them altogether, not even humoring them with a reply.

What is happening here? How is it possible to be successful when writing for adults without any need for a writing course, but fall flat on your face when trying to write children’s books? It’s not OKay to water down an adult novel and produce a story for children.

Writing for children is a lot different than writing for adults. There is no such thing as just sitting down and writing a children’s book without first learning a whole new set of skills. The rules are very different and if you do not understand them you will never get beyond the slush pile or will continue to collect those form letter, heartless rejection notes. But don’t worry, you can learn to write for children.

What pleases an editor looking for adult fiction is not going to be the same thing that an editor looking for children’s fiction wants. It’s much easier to write for adults because you understand the adult mindset. You are writing for people who have wit and wisdom well beyond what the children you are now writing for may possess. In order to craft wonderful children’s books, you need to tap into the mind of a child within the age group your story is intended for.

That means children’s books are not all the same! There are many different sets of rules depending on the age group being dealt with.

Further, there is a lot of insider knowledge that you need to take your children’s stories from the slush pile to the “published” pile. The industry is just not the same as the adult industry, even if you are dealing with the same publishing house you have been submitting to for years.

A great way to learn to write for children and find all of this insider information that you need and hone your skills so they are more suitable to a younger audience is to take a writing course aimed exclusively at writing children’s books. Before you start to think a writing course would be a waste of your time, consider how much time you are willing to waste submitting children’s books that completely miss the mark and never have a chance of being published from the moment you toss them out there.

You don’t have to do a long course. There are plenty of short courses around that concentrate on writing for children. Finding one can be easily found through your local library or online. Take some time to find one that suits your needs and teaching you what you don’t already know! Taking up a writing course will contribute to your success as a children’s author.

If you want the highest chance possible of writing successfully for children you will take the writing skills that you already possess and apply them to the new rules of the children’s book industry. You succeed with children’s books by combining your current skill set with an entirely new skill set. Learn to write for children by attending a professional writing course.

How To Write, Promote And Publish A Childrens Book

How To Write, Promote And Publish A Childrens Book

Writing and Publishing a Children’s Book is a dream for many people. Unfortunately, it is often a difficult dream to realize since most talented writers do not know or understand which steps to take first to begin the process of becoming known and getting published.

Do you need an agent, illustrator, assistant, consultant or book marketer? Do you know which Children’s Publishing Houses should be the first ones to submit your work to for maximum profit & the highest probability of acceptance? Have you decided on type of Children’s Book you plan on writing?

The Children’s Book Publishing business can be complicated for the ill-informed, but easy to navigate for those that understand it. For those that are knowledgeable, writing & actually introducing your work to the marketplace is clockwork.

You may have the next popular children’s book, but the fact is, if you don’t know how to introduce it to the marketplace, you’ll just keep running into walls which is what most struggling children’s writers go through and sadly, never emerge from the initial phase of the publishing process.

Consultants can be expensive, and seasoned & well known Children’s Book Publishers will rarely reveal their industry inside secrets to children’s book publishers. After all, why would they want to put themselves at literary risk, and in a position to lose their book popularity & income. Finding an honest individual to explain how the industry works as a whole will pose to be a daunting task.

Yes, you will find hundreds of publications as to how to go about writing, promoting & publishing a children’s book, but most do not make it easy for the reader to understand the publishing process. The truth is if you follow most of the Children’s Book Publishing tutorials, you will learn that they are inefficient, and could possibly cost you tremendous amounts of time.

At WriteAChildrensBookAZ.com we offer a tutorial that takes you step-by-step in an A-Z, 123 easy-to-follow format that doesn’t use complicated industry terminology. Instead, our site offers a Children’s Book Publishing guide intended for the real world, designed so that anybody can quickly and easily write, promote, sell or publish a Children’s Book without the headaches.

An auto-pilot formula that not other Children’s Book Publishing guide can match. No writer wants to sift through hundreds of pages of Children’s Book Publishing techniques & ideas. To be successful in this business, you need to get to the point, and make it happen.

Whether you are looking to write, sell, promote and/or publish your Childrens Book, regardless if it’s a picture book or regular book, you will not find a more effective formula than ours.

There are hundreds of thousands of writer’s that go unnoticed every year, with priceless Children’s Book’s eventually shelved or never sold to a publishing house because of a lack of knowledge in the business. Don’t let this be you!

With our featured tutorial, you will learn how to target your age group, brainstorm story ideas, develop your characters, make a story line, introduce your characters with descriptions of physical and personality traits, create a problem or a conflict, and learn how to set the state for a climax. Character development, plots, conflict, and resolution, to marketing & publishing, you will everything you need to know in our A-Z Children’s Book Publishing Guide.

The Story of Fred Atkins? How a ?Baldheaded Old Grandpa? Came to Write a Children?s Book

The Story of Fred Atkins? How a ?Baldheaded Old Grandpa? Came to Write a Children?s Book

Fred Atkins is a retired small-business owner living in Cary, North Carolina. He and his wife, Lynda, were living a quiet, peaceful well-deserved retired life until one day, at his invitation, his daughter, son-in-law, and two grandchildren came to live with them! During their seven month stay, Fred came to love the challenge and happy chaos that comes with a pair of toddlers present in his home 24/7. He especially grew to love sitting down with the little ones and reading them their favorite books and stories.

After awhile, Fred decided that he’d like to find a book that would be his favorite book to read to the kids. He wasn’t sure of exactly what he had in mind, but he knew he wanted it to be about something that was near and dear to him. After much fruitless searching and complaining, his daughter sarcastically told him, “Well, Dad, why don’t you write your own book?!”

Well, Fred is not a writer and didn’t do well in English composition classes, but he decided, “Why not? I’ll give it a try.” The first thing he did was to think about some of the kids’ favorite books, the real long-standing classics, such as, “The Little Engine That Could,” “The Three Little Pigs,” and “Green Eggs and Ham.” He realized that all those classic books have a message. And all their messages are aimed at building in a child certain attitudes or mind-sets that will become their core values later in life. For example, the book “The Little Engine That Could;” that book was copyrighted in 1930, it’s been around a LONG time! The reason it has endured for so long is that it carries a timeless and very important message to children—that is, if you work hard, if you believe in yourself, if you try your best, if you have a goal, you can do anything. And then you’ve got, “I do not like green eggs and ham—I do not like them Sam-I-am.” That silly little rhyming book also teaches children something very important: Keep an open mind, don’t be afraid to try new things, don’t judge things just by the way they look.

And then Fred realized that he knew of no books that teach our children one of the most important messages of all—that they live in the most wonderful place, they live in the Greatest Country on earth. As hard as he looked, he could find no books that teach children about their rights and freedoms and responsibilities as Americans. There are none that teach kids to LOVE AMERICA. And that’s when the idea hit him—write a children’s book about America! Tell children why their country is so unique and why they should love it and protect it and defend it—why it is, truly, the GREATEST COUNTRY. Fill the book with simple rhymes that are fun to read and with classic American pictures that are fun to look at and talk about. Make the book bright and colorful and inexpensive, and the result will be children learning about their country from the people nearest and dearest to them—their parents and grandparents.

It took him a year, but he came up with a flashy little book that children love to listen to and adults love to read. “I Live in the Greatest Country” helps parents and grandparents do what our schools are no longer doing–teach our children what it means to live in the United States and encourage them to be proud to be Americans.

Fred decided to eschew the traditional book publishing business model, which takes both control and profit away from the author, and print and market the book himself. He has started a website (www.patriotkidsUSA.com), which will be his primary method of marketing the book, and is pursuing other methods of selling on the internet.

It’s been a fun and rewarding experience for this “bald-headed old grandpa,” as he calls himself. And it is now becoming a learning experience as he is forging ahead into that strange new land called, “The Internet.”

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Learn To Write Children’s Books That Shine!

Learn To Write Children’s Books That Shine!

Are you someone who loves the idea of telling stories to children? Stories are important part of the way that we teach the children around us and writing a children’s book is one way to do it! The truth of the matter is that while writing a children’s book might be tougher than it looks at first glance, it is actually easier than many people make it out to be and if you learn to write children’s books the right way you will be way ahead of those who don’t. You need to make sure that you are taking the steps that allow to book to shine, and taking a look at some of the tips below will help you.

The first thing that you need to remember when you learn to write for children is that you need to keep the pace up. A book’s pacing refers to how it flows and you need to find the pace that suits you. For instance, a book about trying to find a lost puppy might involve a lot of fast pacing and short phrasing, while a book about a lazy Saturday afternoon might have a more slow and soothing pace. Take some time and think about the book that you want to write and make sure that you have chosen the appropriate pace that is good for the story and for the reader, for that story you are trying to tell.

Another thing that you need to do is to learn to write a story that your audience can relate to. Children like to read about children as do adults about adults. Can your audience put itself in the place of your main character, and are the things that your main character is doing something that the audience might do? For this to work, you need to think about how logic works and what other people might do. There are many different ways for you to take your children’s book, but at the end of the day, you will find that finding the right path means finding the logical one.

When you are researching about writing a children’s book, specifically making your writing shine, remember that you should never talk down to the audience. There have been many authors that do this, and it is a sure sign that children are going to get irritated with the book. Put your trust in your audience to be able to understand what is going on, and don’t feel as if you need to explain everything to them. Similarly, do not assume that some things are over their heads. Children are very familiar with negative emotions like anger or jealousy, so if your story calls for them, think seriously about how you are going to present them.

Finally, when you to learn to write a children’s book, remember that showing something happening is more important than telling it and you will get a better response if you do. The younger your audience, the more you need to show things happening so they can feel the emotion in the words. The truth is that writing a children’s book is something that takes time, effort and dedication. You need to read other authors’ books and look at the style of writing they use and you should look into the wealth of information out there. The more you know about children’s books, the better off you are going to be, so take some time and really consider what your resources are.

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Learn To Write A Children’s Book: Capture The Audience From Page One!

Learn To Write A Children’s Book: Capture The Audience From Page One!

Learn to write children’s books and your in for a fun and exciting endeavor! It’s also extremely rewarding-not only when you see your book in print, but also when you watch the faces of children as you read them your story aloud or they read your story for the first time. As anyone who knows or loves children will tell you, however, children notoriously have a very short attention span, so it’s really important to start your children’s story with a big bang and get them engaged in the story immediately!

Sadly enough, if you want to sell your children’s book, you’ll soon learn that publishers and editors don’t have a much longer attention span than children when they’re reviewing submissions. So just as it is important to start your story out with a big bang to engage children, it is also critical to your ability to sell your story and get it published in the first place. Editors and publishers only look at the first few pages of your story before they reject the vast majority of submissions. But if you can capture their attention right away, you can keep them reading longer and improve your chances that they might publish your story!

Most children’s books really aren’t that long. Essentially that means that you really need to grab their attention in the first few words. The first few sentences or paragraphs can make or break the success of your story. That’s why when you learn to write children’s books you really need to focuses on developing a strong start to your story.

A great way to engage children’s attention immediately is to start out with action and/or dialogue. And if your dialogue creates a sense of action or excitement, as well, your story will be even more engaging! With children’s stories, you definitely want to jump right in without setting up the story with a lot of background information.

Beginning writers often make the mistake of providing way too much explanation at the start of their stories. A good writing teacher or editor will often shock the writer when they redline the entire first few pages of the manuscript, crossing it out entirely and advising the writer to “start here” several pages into the text. But this isn’t always a bad thing. Sometimes new writers simply need to write all that background text out to work through their own story development process and be sure they have a clear understanding of the story they are creating. The thing is, that is a part of the writer’s development process, but it doesn’t necessarily have to be a part of the final story or manuscript.

“Ouch! That hurt!” Melody cried. This is a great opening line for a children’s story because it really packs a punch. It captures the child’s interest, draws out the child’s curiosity, and makes the child want to keep reading or hearing the story. The child wants to know what happened and what will happen next. The opening line should successfully introduce the stories main character and establish the problem. You want to do this in as few words as possible in a short children’s story, as soon as possible. This is another reason this works so well as an opening line. This is what your opening line, paragraph, or page needs to do to be an opening “with a big bang!” This is one of the key factors of writing successful children’s books.

Of course, a great opening-even one with a really big bang-is only the beginning. You also need to craft a compelling middle and ending for the story to write successful, satisfying children’s books. Learn to write great opening lines that have a powerful start and as your story progresses, you may need to provide additional information to fill in any gaps in the story or plot. You will need to ensure your story stays just as strong from beginning to end. Learning to write children’s books can be challenging and it’s an ongoing process as your writing skills develop. But it is also one of the most rewarding and fun things you may ever do!

From cbiclubhouse.com, an answer to a common question from new children’s book writers Do I Need an Illustrator for My Picture Book manuscript? This is the first of a series of answers to frequently asked questions, hosted by Jon Bard, Managing Editor, Children’s Book Insider, the Newsletter for Children’s Writers.
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Learn to Write: Children’s Books-Self Publishing vs Traditional Publishing!

Learn to Write: Children’s Books-Self Publishing vs Traditional Publishing!

Around twenty years ago the publishing houses started cutting down their losses by narrowing the stables of authors to the few they knew could produce blockbuster books. Anyone who tried to learn to write in order to break into that rarefied world was in for a long, hard slog. And it looked like the trend would only become more pronounced. It actually has, but another funny thing has happened to the publishing world: the internet.

Publishing, whether it be books, periodicals, music, or films, is a very different concept today than it used to be. Consumers have grown tired of a shrinking handful of big publishers determining what they can find to read in a given year. And enterprising writers have entered the world of self publishing in droves. Some have succeeded, and some have not, just like in traditional publishing. If you’re a writer, what should you do: try to get a deal with a traditional publisher, or strike out into self-publishing territory? There are definitely arguments for and against both.

If you’re like most people, money is a consideration. Say you’re interested in publishing a children’s book. With traditional publishing, a promising author will be paid in advance against future sales of his or her book. When the book comes out, the author has to sell enough books to make up for the advance and then sell more for further profit. That’s what book tours are for.

With self publishing, the author does it everything: edits, proofreads, gets it in final format, and has to have it printed. To make a profit from the book, the printing expenses must be made up in sales. This is hardly an issue with many self publishers nowadays, however. Print-on-demand services ensure that the only books that get printed are the ones requested. Thus, no piles of unsold books languish in a storage shed or basement. The fact remains, however, that if you don’t learn to write, your books will go unread.

Next to money, control is probably the next most important consideration for most people. With traditional publishing, the publishing house controls just about everything: the edits you have to make as well as typeface, design, cover art, list price, and even the author photo. They’re also the ones that market the book, arrange for reviews, and plan book tours. For some people, this is an immense relief. They would much rather have seasoned professionals deciding these things while they concentrate on writing.

Other people know what they want the cover to look like, how much they want to sell the book for, and whether they want their photo on the dust jacket. These are the people who may be happier and more successful with self publishing. They will, however, be in charge of marketing the book, and sales will be directly related to marketing efforts.

Everyone knew that the publishing industry would go through changes as the end of the 20th century neared, but few could have predicted just how that would happen. Traditional publishing is no longer the sole maker of reputations and fortunes, and self publishing is no longer the vanity vehicle for sub-par writers who can’t get work into print otherwise.

Both approaches have advantages and disadvantages. You will have to balance your financial needs and obligations with your need for control and ability to market yourself. Either way is respectable these days. But one thing hasn’t changed: and that is the obligation to learn to write well. That’s because, books with good quality content – traditionally or self published – are the ones that people actually buy.

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Write a Children’s Book – Turn your Idea’s into Gold!

Write a Children’s Book – Turn your Idea’s into Gold!

To write a children’s book and make any money from it can sound quite scary at first, but if you write, then a good idea may just be to have a go and write books for children. This is a really good niche for some very successful people. There are some really good resources online to help you get started, but it may be a really good idea to learn from people who have been doing this for awhile and have gained first- hand knowledge about the ins and outs of this field.

If you are interested in learning from a source like this, then here are some tips you can use to help you get the most out of your experiences. The first thing to be taken into consideration is your audience. There are many different age levels, and this is something you should be researching in detail. Smaller children won’t be able to understand the same events and situations that an older child will.

How you present the story is probably equally as important. Will you be speaking in first person terms, or in the third person? Sometimes you will find that speaking in third person descriptions is hard at first since you can’t use me or us. Switching back and forth is often confusing for the audience, especially when you write a children’s book.

What the subjects will be about is an important part of writing also. If they are too simple then older children will easily become disinterested, too complicated and smaller kids will have a hard time understanding and they will quickly become distracted. While a story that is descriptive will keep a child’s attention, too much detail about unimportant things has the opposite effect.

When writing children’s books, keep in mind your target audience and write books that they can relate too. For example, if your story is aimed at teenagers, there will be many social and physical obstacles to overcome on the way to adulthood. You could choose to write about peer pressure in schools and from influences around them, the risk of teen pregnancy and other experiences faced at this age group. You could write about how a young girl may have gotten pregnant, how she felt about things at that time, and what steps she will decide to take. You could write the same book from either a male’s or female’s point of view, as well.

You need to know how publishing works, especially publishers who publish books for kids, since this is a lot different from regular publishing houses. Make sure you find out about the many little details each company is looking for. You will need to know these things so your writings aren’t rejected. There are content questions, editing, paragraph placements as well as many others.

When coming accross programs and classes that you are interested online, or in local retailers, make sure you are getting the complete course. Don’t be afraid to ask questions. They should cover all the interests above as well as simple to follow instructions and examples of work. It should also cover all aspects of the publishing business, and what steps you should take to ensure your success. With guidance, practice, and perseverance, you will soon be on your way to starting your own career as a published author. Take the time to learn all that you can, and continue to update yourself as much as possible to ensure that you up to speed on all the latest interests.

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How to write children’s books – The best place to start!

How to write children’s books – The best place to start!

Learning how to write for children shouldn’t be as daunting as you first imagine.

When you love the idea of writing and entertaining children, you will find that one great outlet for your skills might be in writing children’s books. Many people think about writing children’s books but so few actually get up the determination to do so. Remember that while writing a good children’s book is far from simple, you will find that it can still be a rewarding thing to do. Telling stories is one of the most important ways that we teach our children and even when they don’t know that they are learning a lesson, they will hold it with them. If you want to write children’s books, there are several things that you should keep in mind.

If you are interested in writing, the first thing that will help you is to read! No matter what kind of book you want to write for children, head to the bookstore and look at what is being offered. You will find that through reading other people’s books you are going to be able to learn a lot about writing, what you can do and what has been done before. You need to make sure that you aren’t going over ground that hasn’t been gone over before or at least that you have a new take on it, and at the end of the day, you may even find that reading about other people’s work will give you a lot of terrific ideas. Take some time to research what other people are doing.

When you get started on writing children’s books, do some plotting and planning. Even though children’s books are relatively simple, remember that there is still a point to it, and a plot. What is the problem in your story and what can you do to make sure that it gets across? Depending on the book that you are writing, it might be anything from finding the right pair of socks to dealing with a traumatic issue. Sit down and outline the action of your story and how it goes together. This can help you decide on a lot of things and at the end of the day, it can make sure that you don’t go astray with your narrative.

Set aside some time every day to write. For instance, how much time do you have and what can you do to make sure that you are going to be getting the right kind of work put in? Everyone is different when it comes to the time they like to write, some prefer to write late at night at the dinning room table, while others might squeeze in twenty minutes during their morning commute. The thing about writing is that everyone means to do it, but so few people get around to it. The issue is that inertia can be something that is very great, and at the end of the day, it can really make you forget all about your project. Dedication and determination are the key skills involved when you want to write children’s books.

Think about your main character. Who are you talking to, and what kind of experience are you trying to convey? There are many children’s book authors who are now trying to create realistic characters that relate to their readers. It is worth asking what kind of school your protagonist might go to, or what kind of experiences he or she might have. While the issue or the problem that you are dealing with is something that is important, so are the background details that you throw in. The better you can put your children’s book into a particular place, the more it is going to appeal. Take a moment to imagine and sort out the area and world your story takes place in.

Something to consider when you have written your book, or are thinking of getting it published, is get other people to read it. Having a reader’s group is ideal, but anyone who reads your book can help give you some important insight into it. Take a moment to make sure that your book gets read and you get useful feedback from the people who are around you. If you have some readers around who are the right ages see what they have to say about it.

Take a moment to consider how to write children’s books. If you have a great story to tell, make sure you jot it down on paper! You never know it might just be a best seller!

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LeapFrog Scribble and Write

LeapFrog Scribble and Write

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