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Guilty Pleasure Reading.

All the time, customers come in and want some guilty pleasure reading.  People define it in many different ways for me it is historical fiction…I love a good “bodice ripper!”  These two titles in the genre that I have read this spring aren’t as racy as some others so I think that these will appeal to a variety of you.

Madame Tussaud: A Novel of the French Revolution by Michelle Moran

Marie Grosholtz , a talented wax sculptress,  torn between two polarizing worlds, whose main goal is to make her ‘family’ business successful.  Marie is thrilled when she has finally achieved her goal of getting the royal family of Louis XVI and Marie Antionette to visit the Salon de Cire and see their wax likenesses.  She knows that with the royal ‘stamp of approval’ that she and the museum will become famous and Parisians from every walk of life will come to the Salon to receive the latest news on fashion, gossip and even politics.  The visit goes even beyond her hopes when she receives a summons to come to Versailles as the royal sculpting tutor to Princesse Elizabeth, sister of Louis XVI.  At Versailles, where candles are only lit once before they are discarded, Marie enters a world far different from her own on the Boulevard du Temple, where many people are selling their teeth to be able to feed their families.  Many of Marie’s friends, Camille Desmoulins, Jean-Paul Marat and Maximilien Robespierre, are holding meetings in cafes and salons across the city lashing out against the monarchy which is leading to talk of revolution.  This is where Marie soon finds herself trying to keep a balance between being a royalist and a revolutionary even as the  Reign of Terror becomes a force to be reckoned with.

Elizabeth I by Margaret George

This novel takes us through the last 25 years of Elizabeth Tudor’s  reign as the ‘Virgin Queen” of England.  What we learn about Elizabeth is while she was the virgin queen she did not lack for suitors, while her navy defeated the Spanish Armada she hated war, and while dressed in gorgeous gowns and dazzling jewelry she was a notorious ‘penny pincher’.  We also meet Lettice Knollys, Elizabeth’s cousin (Mary Boleyn’s granddaughter) and rival, due to Lettice’s marriage to Robert Dudley, whom the Queen always had a ‘special’ relationship with.

Lettice has been banished from court but her son, Robert the Earl of Essex, from her first marriage is gaining in popularity with Elizabeth, the courtiers (especially the ladies), and the English people.  We are also introduced to many of the strong personalities that made the Age of Elizabeth great, Shakespeare, Marlowe, Dudley, Raleigh and Drake, and understand the relationships that Elizabeth had with these men as a Queen first and a woman second.

 

I really enjoyed both of these novels being that they are both about strong women who did not let anything stand in the way of getting what they wanted.  They both had to play two sides of the coin to achieve ‘greatness’ whether it be for themselves or county.

 

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Sound Sleep Sound Mind

Most people have experienced a time in their lives when sleep was problematic. Most of us have also known someone who has a serious sleep disorder. Poor sleep affects every part of our lives, psychological, physically, emotionally, and mentally. Having a family member who has battled sleep issues for most of his life without medication, I was drawn to Sound Sleep Sound Mind because it offers a drug-free approach with mind-body techniques for getting a good night’s sleep.

Sound Sleep Sound Mind helps you to understand what quality sleep is in addition to helping understand how the mind and body can actually cause poor sleep. Krakow puts the ball in your corner by providing key questions, guidelines and step-by-step inventories to help address the psychological and physical factors that may be causing the sleep problem.

Sound Sleep might not provide everything you need to address you and your loved one’s sleep problems, but this book should not be taken lightly. I learned  some new things about sleep and was also reminded of things I already knew. The latter is particularly important because we often take sleep and rest for granted. As adults, we no longer have a mom or a dad as caretakers of our sleeping time, and much is still to be learned and remembered in the practice of getting a good night’s sleep.

Sound Sleep Sound Mind by Barry Krakow (Wiley, 2007)

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OZ First Editions Club’s Story behind the Pick: The Emerald Atlas by John Stephens

Kate, Michael, and Emma P. have lived in an orphanage for as long as they can remember. They don’t even know what their last initial, P., stands for. These siblings stick together through every orphanage, and every failed adoption attempt. In fact, they work very hard not to get adopted. They believe that their parents are still out there and that people who have a mother and a father should not be adopted.

It’s been ten years since Kate, the oldest, remembers her mother telling her goodbye with the promise that they will be together again someday, and this faith gives all of the children hope. After ruining their chances to get adopted again, the P. children end up on an island that isn’t on any map, at a old house that resembles no orphanage they have inhabited, with a grouchy cook, a frightened groundskeeper, and quite possibly a wizard. Upon exploring the large, musty rooms of the old house, the children stumble across a book with a green cover. Michael is sure that it is an empty photo album, but when he slips a picture inside the books pages, all three kids are immediately transported somewhere else in time and space.

And thus begins The Emerald Atlas, the first book in The Books of the Beginning trilogy. First time author John Stephens has created an authentic and colorful world where, much like the history of the Lord of the Rings world, beings with magical powers have hidden themselves from the race of man as humankind became more powerful and thirsted for the power that magic could give an ordinary man.

Many of us at Lemuria have been devouring The Emerald Atlas, and I haven’t heard so much excitement about a fantasy series since the rise of Harry Potter. When I first heard of this book last fall, I fell in love with the siblings witty banter and the time travel aspects of the book (yes time travel!).

I got to meet John Stephens when Candlewick so graciously sent me to the Winter Institute in Washington D.C. in January. You could tell he was just blown over by all the praise and attention his book was getting.

He was so humble and really just a lover of children’s literature. All this to say that when Random House offered us a chance to host a signing with John, I was ecstatic, and I knew it would be a part of our budding Oz First Editions Club. I have no doubt that as this series grows in popularity, signed firsts of this book will be treasured by those of us here at Lemuria.

The Emerald Atlas is our Oz First Editions May pick, and John will be here signing on Thursday, April 21st at 4:30, the Thursday before Easter. I really hope you will come talk to John about his new book and become a part of something that will no doubt be great.

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Bookstore Keys: Decluttering the Book Market

Independent bookstores to financial analysts have been watching Barnes & Noble’s strategy closely since the rise of the e-book. As an independent bookseller, I couldn’t be more pleased with the impending pressure on big box bookstores.

J. P. Mangalindan of CNN Money.com made the argument for “why Barnes & Noble should go from bookstore to Nookstore.” He makes these key points about the changes at Barnes & Noble:

  • B & N stock is down 80% over the last five years.
  • Since B & N went on the for-sale market last August, there has been no buyer.
  • B & N did beat Borders in branding its very own e-reader as opposed to Borders’ poorly marketed, little known Kobo reader. The B & N Nook has also beat the Sony reader in sales and remains second to Amazon’s Kindle.

Analysts like James McQuivey note B & N’s advantage with the Nook, but caution that changes to store space cannot come quickly enough. E-book sales are predicted to dominate the market within the next 24 months with B & N expected to cut retail space. However, McQuivey urges a faster and more drastic reaction:

“In a conservative market scenario, the company would shutter at least 30%, or 211, of its 705 retail locations, within the next three to five years. ‘If it were me? I’d cut deeper, faster–like two to four years,’ he says, suggesting a boutique model where B & N reduces store capacity by 50% through a combination of store closures, reduced store footprints, and decreased shelf space.'”

Meanwhile, Amazon announced this week that they will now be selling a reduced price Kindle–with ads. With ads?!?

The device is called “Kindle with Special Offers” and features ads from Proctor & Gamble, Buick–and the worst of all–Visa credit cards. If that weren’t enough, the screen saver is sponsored as well. Another layer of ads is Amazon itself–promoting their own products. Amazon assures its customers that the ads will not get in the way of reading.

One of the last questions Mangalindan asks in his article was important because he used the phrase digital company:

“Barnes & Noble has already gotten one thing right in having an ereader ready to help it do battle with Amazon. But as far as successfully transforming itself into a digital company? Well, that’s just Chapter One”

It made me ask myself: Can we say that B & N is moving out of the book business?

Thank You B & N and Amazon for focusing on a digital product and for taking much of the beauty and aesthetic enjoyment out of a book and allowing true book lovers to sell them! To me, putting ads on an e-reading device was the last straw.

What do you think?

The Bookstore Key Series on Changes in the Book Industry

Decluttering the Book Market: Ads on the latest Kindle (April 14) Independents on the Exposed End of the Titantic? (April 6th) Border’s Bonuses (March 30) The Experience of Holding a Book (March15) Finding “Deep Time” in a Bookstore (March 8th) Reading The New Rules of Retail by Lewis & Dart (March 3) The Future Price of the Physical Book (Feb 18) Borders Declares Bankruptcy (Feb 16) How Great Things Happen at Lemuria (Feb 8th) The Jackson Area Book Market (Jan 25) What’s in Store for Local Bookselling Markets? (Jan 18) Selling Books Is a People Business (Jan 14) A Shift in Southern Bookselling? (Jan 13) The Changing Book Industry (Jan 11)

<a href=”http://blog.lemuriabooks.com/2011/04/bookstore-keys-decluttering-the-book-market/”>Decluttering the Book Market: Ads on the latest Kindle</a> (April 14)<a href=”http://blog.lemuriabooks.com/2011/04/bookstore-keys-independents-on-the-exposed-end-of-the-titanic/”> Independents on the Exposed End of the Titantic?</a> (April 6th) <a href=”http://blog.lemuriabooks.com/2011/03/bookstore-keys-borders-bonuses/”>Border’s Bonuses</a> (March 30) <a href=”http://blog.lemuriabooks.com/2011/03/bookstore-keys-finding-deep-time-in-a-bookstore/”>The Experience of Holding a Book</a> (March15) <a href=”http://blog.lemuriabooks.com/2011/03/bookstore-keys-finding-deep-time-in-a-bookstore/”>Finding “Deep Time” in a Bookstore</a> (March 8th) <a href=”http://blog.lemuriabooks.com/2011/03/bookstore-keys-reading-the-new-rules-of-retail-by-robin-lewis-michael-dart/”>Reading The New Rules of Retail by Lewis &amp; Dart</a> (March 3)<a href=”http://blog.lemuriabooks.com/2011/02/bookstore-keys-the-future-price-of-physical-books/”> The Future Price of the Physical Book</a> (Feb 18)<a href=”http://blog.lemuriabooks.com/2011/02/borders-declares-bankruptcy/”> Borders Declares Bankruptcy</a> (Feb 16)<a href=”http://blog.lemuriabooks.com/2011/02/bookstore-keys-how-great-things-happen-at-lemuria/”> How Great Things Happen at Lemuria</a> (Feb 8th)<a href=”http://blog.lemuriabooks.com/2011/01/bookstore-keys-the-jackson-book-market/”> The Jackson Area Book Market</a> (Jan 25)<a href=”http://blog.lemuriabooks.com/2011/01/bookstore-keys-whats-in-store-for-local-bookselling-markets/”> What’s in Store for Local Bookselling Markets?</a> (Jan 18)<a href=”http://blog.lemuriabooks.com/2011/01/bookstore-keys-selling-books-is-a-people-business/”> Selling Books Is a People Business</a> (Jan 14)<a href=”http://blog.lemuriabooks.com/2011/01/bookstore-keys-a-shift-in-southern-bookselling/”> A Shift in Southern Bookselling?</a> (Jan 13)<a href=”http://blog.lemuriabooks.com/2011/01/bookstore-keys-the-changing-book-industry/”> The Changing Book Industry</a> (Jan 11)
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What’s the best book you ever read on vacation?

Hopefully, you are able to get away for some type of vacation this summer–whether it be some place exotic or your backyard. I am leaving for vacation next week and was wondering what the great Lemuria readers would recommend.

What is the best book you ever read on vacation?

Put your title and author in the comments section below.

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A Change of Pace

I’ve moved to the children’s room! When I first began working at Lemuria over three years ago, I started out in the fiction room. A bit later, I was moved into the main room where I have stayed for quite some time. Now, I am beginning an entirely new journey into the children’s department, known as Oz, and I am loving it! I really enjoy getting to know this last frontier and I am amazed at how much the world of children’s books has changed since I was reading to my own children.

Emily has created a wonderful atmosphere in Oz and I am drop-jawed at all she has going on in this one fairly small room. She has truly ushered in a new era and if it has been awhile since you visited Oz, come on in and we can learn it together.

We have a signing coming up with a special children’s author and artist, Alex Beard. Emily sent me home with his books so I could study up. First off, he and Emily were made for each other. He exudes energy and a grand love and enjoyment of children and loves hands on interaction. In addition to his reading and signing at Lemuria, she is taking him to several schools in Jackson for a wonderful time of “playing.”

His first book came out in 2009 and is entitled The Jungle Grapevine. It is a great take on that old game, “Gossip” where someone whispers a phrase into another ear and it is then passed all around the circle until it comes back to the beginning and said out loud to see how close it remained to the original phrase! In this book, all sorts of things get misheard and miscommunicated much to the dismay and delight of all involved.

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In his latest book, Monkey See Monkey Draw the charming story is filled with monkeys and elephants etc all playing quite happily until a ball rolls into a dark cave that the monkeys have always been too afraid to enter. Elephant isn’t afraid so he walks right in and discovers all sorts of wonderful pictures of animals drawn on the walls, all made from footprints and handprints!” It’s a great story about fear and exploration.

Both of these books are based in Africa where Beard himself has been a frequent traveler. His many journeys there have obviously affected his work both as a writer and as an artist. In reading up on him, I found this:

“Beard was born in 1970. His father was a philanthropist. His mother, Patricia Beard, was an author and former editor for Town & Country, Elle, and Mirabella magazines. He is the nephew of photographer Peter Beard. As a teenager, he was able to travel parts of the world like Panama, Africa, China, India, and Belize. Alex grew up among some of the world’s most interesting and influential people — Andy Warhol, Truman Capote, and their Pop World cohorts were familiar faces in the Beard household.”

Beard divides his time between New York and New Orleans where he has a gallery in the French Quarter. He is married with two children.

He is a part of a new breed of children’s writer–young, talented and with a huge respect for children but a desire to also broaden and educate through his writings and art. He sounds like so much fun, I can’t wait to meet him!

Alex Beard will be at Lemuria on Tuesday, April 12th. Bring your little ones! The reading for young and old will begin shortly after 4:oo with a book signing to follow.

Monkey See Monkey Draw is our April Oz First Editions Club Selection. (Read more about OZ FEC here.)

Click here if you would like to reserve a signed first edition of Monkey See Monkey Draw.

We also have a small number of first editions of The Jungle Grapevine. Click here if you would like to reserve a copy.

More of Alex Beard’s paintings can be viewed at The Alex Beard Studio.

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Lemuria’s book club: “Atlantis” update

This afternoon Lemuria’s book club “Atlantis” will meet at 5 p.m. in our dot.com building which is just outside of Broadstreet Bakery’s north door. We will be having a long awaited discussion of Cutting for Stone, the very popular novel released a couple of years ago which is set in Ethiopia and New York.

The story, which has received international recognition, involves the lives of twin brothers whose mother dies in childbirth and whose father flees the country. The many plot twists and turns take the reader on a roller coaster ride and explore the personal lives of the brilliant twins, who both turn to medicine, just as their father, and adopted mother and father have. Cutting for Stone also examines the political and social unrest in Ethiopia. A very lengthy and provocative novel, Cutting for Stone, is well worth the time spent in reading its over 600 pages. Powerful and persuasive, the novel is filled with all types of love and loss and redemption.

On the first Thursday in May,the 5th, we will be talking about Nicole Krauss’s History of Love and on June 2, we will discuss Colum McCann’s Let the Great World Spin. We read novels which have already been released in paperback. If you join our book club, please tell the person at the cash register that you are a member, so that you will receive the book club’s discount.

We always have enthusiastic and delightful discussions, so come join us. If you want more information, email me at nan@lemuriabooks.com or call Lemuria and ask for me at 601.366.7619. If I am not in, I will be glad to return your call later. If you would like to be on our book club email list, please let me know.  -Nan

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Bookstore Keys: Independents on the Exposed End of the Titanic?

In 1975, Lemuria was born as an independent bookstore. It was a brain-germ product of the counter culture movement that started in the 60s. Middle America was a little later in the culture realization of those times. I remember that independents were approximately 50% of trade sales for publishers. We were also in the middle of the “malling of America” retail growth stage and the mall chain bookstores were the primary competition for independents.

Above: The original Lemuria sign used at The Quarter.

As the “malling” strength took effect, a parade of cattle-like customers looking to consume enhanced the growth of chain bookstores. Somewhere in the 80s, I remember independents strength of sales declining to 40%, then 33%, thus decreasing the importance of independent book selling in the marketplace.

Left: Lemuria was actually a converted apartment and held a modest $8,000 in books.

In the 90s, independents were challenged by the development of the big box stores, and their strategy branding (B&N, Borders and in the South, Books-A-Million). Wholesale Clubs, Wal-Mart, etc. began to erode small store sales using heavy loss leader discounting. Independent market share continued to drop 25% to 20% and so on.

Amazon was also birthed in the 90s, and the loss leader book price was exaggerated to its height of influence and product devaluation as the new century began. Airports became the new malls as bookstores prospered from the busy traveler. Independent market share dropped like a sunk boat to around 10%. Product printed price seemed to have little meaning as independents struggled to add customer value from their reading skills, inventory editing using their buying skills, and loyal author/publisher support with bookstore signings and readings.

In the 2000s, box stores boomed, Amazon sales exploded and price clubs continue to devalue our market place and product. Now 2011, Borders appears busted, B&N seems on the run, though end of year sales figures don’t prove that fact. Amazon’s Kindle is in a beast-like growth cycle and seems to be the lead market dictator followed by the nook and iPad. (See previous Bookstore Key: The New Rules of Retail)

Please note, these exact sales figures are not my point, for I am reflecting basically from memory. However, 3 1/2% of market share is where independents stand today according to a recent Publisher’s Weekly article.

Market Share of Major Outlets for Trade Books, 2009–2010

(based on dollars)

Outlet 2009 2010
Barnes & Noble 22.5% 23.0%
Amazon.com 12.5 15.1
Borders 14.0 13.1
Wal-Mart 7.0 5.8
Warehouse clubs 3.6 4.0
Independents 3.4 3.5
Books-A-Million 2.8 2.7
Target 2.0 1.9
Supermarket/grocery 2.0 1.7

(See full article in Publisher’s Weekly here.)

You may ask why I write this as it appears that the independents industry strength is at the exposed end of the Titanic about to sink with the band playing a swan song: I disagree.

Our time for redefinition is now. We can be vital again, and if we made it through the Great Recession, we’ve done a few things right. As we’ve flattened out, it’s now time to bust a gut and grow, utilizing what we do right. We need to keep refining our bookstores to our community. Do we have the energy left and can we muster up the juice it takes to grow again?

So much depends on our publishers and their desire or need for our good work and services. Three and a half percent of trade sales is so little, however, can our influence be 10% or more in 2 years? I’m not so sure it can’t, and who knows if that can happen. We need help from the publishers that care about our work, helping us to make our presence more felt in our communities to enhance good books, good authors and good writing.

And once again, I ask: Can the publishers lower retail prices to give us a chance? Please help us stop the prostitution of our product and so much hard work by the authors. Good readers and good booksellers want the care and good help of publishers.

See previous blog on The Future Price of the Physical Book

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Lincoln’s Dreams: Exploring the Civil War Through Science Fiction

As a newbie to the Jackson area, I’ve been reading my way through a self-taught course on southern culture. I started with Welty and Foote, and visited Vicksburg to get a sense of what things would have actually looked like during the Civil War. I had a mild obsession with the Civil War; I wanted to understand the sacrifices that people made, where they made them, and what it must have felt like.

I came back to this feeling recently reading Lincoln’s Dreams by Connie Willis. The book is technically science fiction, but it’s the quiet kind of science fiction that is more grounded in science and history than anything else. On a dark and stormy night, Jeff meets Annie at a book release party. Jeff is a research assistant to a famous Civil War novelist, and Annie is his old college roommate’s sleep study patient (and undercover girlfriend). Whenever Annie sleeps, she finds herself tortured by vivid Civil War dreams. Upon further investigation, Jeff determines that all the dreams must come from the perspective of General Lee.

As Lee’s soldiers march through Annie’s head, she and Jeff take off to try and find the cause before the doctors can lock her away or Jeff’s boss can try and use her as a human research experiment. When Jeff isn’t guarding Annie from her own subconscious, he spends his time desperately trying to figure out the cause of Annie’s dreams before it is too late. The science of dreams is also addressed: Are Annie’s dreams the result of some terrible metaphysical mix-up, or just a result of some dangerous drug cocktail?

While well researched, the strength of the book is really in the emotional punch of Jeff and Annie’s journey. As they become more sleep deprived and malnourished, they find themselves reluctantly recreating the journey that Lee and his men also took all those years ago.

If you’ve never tried the science fiction genre (or just didn’t think it was for you), this book is a great starting point. It’s a beautiful and moving look at southern culture and duty in the modern age. -HJ

Lincoln’s Dreams by Connie Wilson (Bantam, 1992)

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Got Books Will Travel….

As I had mentioned in my previous post, Lemuria…Out and About, I have been having a grand and glorious time going around the metro meeting people in the community and letting them know what is going on at Lemuria Bookstore.  I have been lucky enough to hear some great speakers and talking to “book people” and learning just what people are reading out there in the real world.  I thought I might let you know what I have been up to these past two months.

You will usually find me at the Mississippi Department of Archives—History at Lunch program and at the Eudora Welty Library for their Applause program.  These two programs are great especially if you are interested in Mississippi history and Mississippi authors and are both a wonderful way to spend your lunch hour. I hope that you will click on the above links and I will see you at one or both in the next few months. I was also lucky enough to be invited by the Daughters of the King at Chapel Cross to a lovely dinner and talk by Neil White, author of In the Sanctuary of Outcasts and editor of Mississippians. Neil laughs that the only other person who has heard his story more than me is his wife!  I really continue to enjoy his redemptive tale every time I hear it.

Did you know that there was a devastating flood in Paris in 1910?  Well neither did I until the Alliance Francaise deJackson invited Jeffery Jackson to speak to them about his book Paris Under Water and I was there to help him have a book signing.  It is really an amazing story and the comparisons to Katrina in New Orleans and even the Easter ’79 Flood in Jackson were interesting.  One of the things that I really thought was amazing were the raised wood walkways that were built so that the people could still get around the city.

Let me tell you something, Peggy Brent and the folks out at Hinds Community College  did a wonderful job last week with the Mississippi and the Arts Week.  I was out there helping put on the book signings for Neil White, Culpepper Webb, Benjamin Cloyd and Curtis Wilkie.  It was great to see all the students so excited to have these authors right there to listen to and then able to ask them questions about their various experiences and their writing process.


Many of you probably saw me at the CrossRoads Film Festival this past weekend.  I was there with Mary Murphy, author of Scout, Atticus and Boo and film maker of Hey, Boo. I was so pleased to meet Mary who was celebrating the 50th anniversary of Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird which happens to be one of my all time favorite books.  I saw many people there who must agree with me because they all came out of the film with huge smiles on there faces!

My favorite thing I did, because you all know I love talking about books, was speaking to the Elisnore Garden Club.  We met in the DotCom building and had a fantastic time talking about books that would make great spring and summer reading and ate some great food while we were at it.  I thought I might share a few of the titles that we talked about:

The Tiger’s Wife by Tea Obreht

Georgia Bottoms by Mark Childress

What There Is to Say We Have Said: The Correspondence of Eudora Welty and William Maxwell by Suzanne Marrs

The Weird Sisters by Eleanor Brown

In the Garden of Beasts by Erik Larson

These are just a few of the titles so I guess you will just have to swing by the bookstore and see me to get the rest of the list. If you would like me to speak to a group whether it be a luncheon club or just a group of friends getting together, shoot me an email at maggiel@lemuriabooks.com or a call 601.366.7619.

Ask for Maggie ’cause I got books and will travel….

 

http://lemuriabooks.com/index.php?show=book&isbn=9780307408846
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