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Crime and Punishment in 1799

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 25In honor of the upcoming release of opens in a new windowHudson’s Kill, the riveting sequel to  opens in a new windowThe Devil’s Half Mile, we’re revisiting author Paddy Hirsch’s blog post about crime and punishment in 1799.

opens in a new windowHudson’s Kill hits shelves on September 17.


New York in 1799 wasn’t exactly a civilized haven: murder, corruption, gangs, and general chaos were just a part of daily life. The constitution was only twenty years old, and the Bill of Rights, including the prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment, was only ratified in 1791. So what happened if you got caught committing a crime? Some of that depended on how much money you had, or if you were unlucky enough to end up in Bridewell Prison. Of course, there was always the chance of escape…

Paddy Hirsch provides some information on what life might look like for a criminal at the end of the eighteenth century in New York City.

Written by opens in a new windowPaddy Hirsch

  • The city had three prisons. The New Gaol was reserved as a debtors’ prison, and stood just north of the Common, on the south eastern edge of what is now City Hall Park. The Bridewell Prison was located on the north west edge of the same piece of ground, along Broadway. A new State Prison, known as the Newgate, was situated up the Hudson, in Greenwich.
  • The Bridewell Prison was notorious for having no windows. Imprisonment in the Bridewell was considered tantamount to a death sentence, which is why Aaron Burr fled New York after his duel with Alexander Hamilton, fearing he might be incarcerated there.
  • The debtors’ prison was essentially self-governed. The inmates lived in wildly different conditions, depending on how much support they could expect from family and friends. Some lived in the cellars in filth and misery, while others had comfortable rooms on the upper floors, and even servants.
  • On the afternoon Thursday June 13, New York was shaken by reports of a prison break from Newgate. A group of 50 or 60 convicts employed as shoemakers “seized upon their keepers” and made “a most daring attempt” to escape from the state prison. The attempt started well, but “they were soon discovered by the guards and fired upon, wounding several, and the rest gave up.” The would-be escapees were locked up, but three or four days later, seven of them managed to get out “under the cover off the darkness and storm.” The Gazette reported, “They were naked when they left the prison walls behind them.”

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 Follow Paddy Hirsch online on opens in a new windowTwitter and opens in a new windowhis website, as well as his writing at opens in a new windowMarketplace.

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St. Patrick’s Day in Ireland and America

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By Paddy Hirsch

When I was a lad, growing up in the Republic and the North of Ireland during the 80s, St. Patrick’s Day was almost a non-event. It was a saint’s day, which meant you went to church if that was your thing, and if not, you just went about your business as usual. There were no parades, no all-day drinking, no corned beef and cabbage, no wearin’ o’ the green or any of that malarkey.

So you can imagine my surprise when I moved to New York City. I worked in a building on Madison Avenue, in an office that overlooked St. Patrick’s Cathedral, and I remember one clear, cold day in March being surprised by the sound of bagpipes. When I peered out of the window at Fifth Avenue, I saw a phalanx of police horses. Back then, mounted cops were firmly associated in my mind with soccer match crowd control, so it wasn’t until I saw a cluster of pompous-looking men in green bowler hats that I realized what day it was.

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An Irish American thriller by Paddy Hirsch

I hurried downstairs with a friend to get a proper look at this curious American ritual, and as we rounded the corner onto 52nd street, I saw two apparently naked men, both painted from head to toe in green body paint, obviously drunk and trading punches on the sidewalk.

“Plastic Oirish,” I told my companion. “Pissed as a pair of Galway priests. They’ll be down on the train from Poughkeepsie or wherever, no doubt, telling everyone how their great grandfathers were off the boat from Kerry.”
We closed in on the pair, who had preserved their modesty with a pair of New York Jets workout towels and some bits of string. They had stopped fighting and were now abusing each other, loudly. They were impossible to comprehend. At first I thought this was because they were so drunk. Then I realized it was because their accents were so thick. Irish accents. North Dublin accents, to be precise. We got talking, and it was with a very red face that I learned that these lads weren’t even immigrants. They were students, come across on a cheap Aer Lingus special to sample the delights of a real St. Patrick’s celebration, the like of which was not available in Ireland at the time. Needless to say I had to cover my embarrassment by taking us all for a pint.

That was then, and this is now, and today there’s no need for Dublin students to fly across the Atlantic for a proper saint’s day session because St. Patrick’s celebrations in Ireland knock those in America into a cocked hat. Chicago has its green river, New York has its huge parade, but in Dublin St. Patrick’s is no longer a day. It’s an entire festival, as many as five days long, with dancing, singing, art displays, hurling contests, rugby matches, road races, food stalls, cooking competitions, live music and literature.

On St. Patrick’s Day in Dublin, it can feel as though the entire population of the city is wearing green. The streets of the center of town throng with people clutching pints and clad in risqué and/or ridiculous costumes in various shades of emerald. You’ll probably find entire battalions of young lads covered in green body paint and wearing Jets towels. In 1994, though, you’d have seen nothing of the kind. Back then, the North of Ireland was still in the grip of the Troubles, the Republic was in the doldrums and Dublin wasn’t much of a place to party. Still, a few enterprising city officials who had visited America were glancing over the Atlantic and wondering whether it might be possible to replicate the massive (and massively profitable) New York or Chicago St. Patrick’s Day parades in the saint’s adoptive land (he was born in Scotland).

A campaign began and a festival was born. It was an immediate success, spurred by the end of the Troubles and a growth spurt in the Celtic Tiger economy. Today the Dublin St. Patrick’s Festival attracts more than a million people and has spawned a whole brood of mini-events throughout Ireland, with each individual town offering its own kind of saint’s day craic.

Observing the enthusiasm with which the Irish turn out (and turn up) for their saint’s day today, it’s hard to believe that they didn’t celebrate it much before 1994. The truth is that there have been St. Patrick’s Day parades and such in the past in Ireland, but they started late and were muted by religion, the law and sectarian tensions. The city of Waterford held Ireland’s first St. Patrick’s Day parade in 1903, after the 17th of March was designated a national holiday. Dublin didn’t follow suit until it held its first parade in 1931. And these were generally short, sober affairs. The church preferred people to celebrate their patron saint on their knees at mass, and lawmakers appeared to concur: pubs were closed by law on March 17th until the 1970s, and stores were banned from selling alcohol of any kind on the day between 1927 and 1961.

America is often unfairly thought of as a young country without much history, that borrows its traditions from its forebears. In the case of St. Patrick’s Day, the reverse is true. The first recorded St. Patrick’s Day parade took place not in Ireland but in America, 300 years before the burghers of Waterford got their act together. The year was 1601, and the marchers were Irish members of the Spanish colony in St. Augustine, Florida. The man who organized the celebration and the march was the Irish vicar of the colony. It was the start of a tradition that has lasted more than four centuries: Irish immigrants to America, rallying on their saint’s day as a way to build community.

Unlike in Ireland, these observances have not been spoiled by tension between Catholics and protestants over the years. New York’s first St. Patrick’s Day celebration was held in 1762 in the home of John Marshall, an Irish protestant. The first recorded parade in New York was a British Army affair, held in 1766 by Irish soldiers who would have been both protestant and Catholic. The men and women who came over from Ireland in the mid-to-late 1800s were overwhelmingly Catholic, but they were happy enough to march alongside their protestant countryfolk – in reassuringly large numbers, of course.

St. Patrick’s Day parades started as a way for the Irish-Americans to build community, but they eventually became a way for them to show their political muscle. When the Irish first started coming across the Atlantic after the Revolutionary war, they were vilified and spurned. But demographics worked in their favour, and within a century, the Irish had come to dominate the big industrial cities of Boston, New York and Chicago. The size of the parades in those cities reflected the extent of Irish political and economic power, culminating in the decision in 1961 – unimaginable a century before – to dye the Chicago River emerald green.

Small wonder that these great St. Patrick’s Day parades inspired those Dublin City officials in 1994. All of which goes to say that if you’re an American in Ireland on the day itself, you’re well within your rights to suggest that the fella at the bar there stand you a pint. After all, were it not for you Yanks Ireland wouldn’t have a St. Patrick’s Festival in the first place: it was your lot showed the rest of us the way.

 

Order a Copy of The Devil’s Half Mile by Paddy Hirsch:

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On the Road: Tor/Forge Author Events in October

opens in a new windowYour favorite Tor/Forge authors are hitting the road in October! See who’s coming to a city near you this month.

Mary Robinette Kowal, opens in a new windowThe Fated Sky

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Tuesday, October 2
opens in a new windowMurder by the Book
Houston, TX
6:30 PM

V. E. Schwab, opens in a new windowShades of Magic Trilogy / opens in a new window Vengeful

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Friday, October 5

opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center Booth #2136
New York, NY
3: 00 PM

opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center Room 1A18
New York, NY
5:15 PM

Saturday, October 6
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center Room 1B03
New York, NY
12:15 PM

opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center Room 1B03
New York, NY
4:00 – 5:00 PM

V. E. Schwab, opens in a new windowVengeful

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Monday, October 1
opens in a new windowAnderson’s Bookshop
La Grange, IL
7:00 PM

Tuesday, October 2
opens in a new windowBarnes & Noble
Roseville, MN
7:00 PM

Wednesday, October 3
opens in a new windowCoolidge Corner Theater
Brookline, MA
6:00 PM

Sunday, October 7
opens in a new windowArlington Central Library
Arlington, VA
4:00 PM

Monday, October 8
opens in a new windowStrand Books
New York, NY
7:00 PM

Marie Miranda Cruz,  opens in a new windowEverlasting Nora

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Tuesday, October 2
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
San Diego, CA
7:00 PM

Thursday, October 4
opens in a new windowBooks of Wonder
New York, NY
6:30 PM

Friday, October 5
opens in a new windowRJ Julia Booksellers
Madison, CT
6:30 PM

Saturday, October 6
opens in a new windowJoseph-Beth Booksellers
Cincinnati, OH
2:00 PM

Sunday, October 7
opens in a new windowKids Ink
Indianapolis, IN
2:00 PM

Wednesday, October 10
opens in a new windowAnderson’s Bookshop
La Grange, IL
7:00 PM

Thursday, October 11
opens in a new windowLemuria Books
Jackson, MS
5:00 PM

Thursday, October 18
opens in a new windowVroman’s Bookstore
Pasadena, CA
7:00 PM

David Hagberg, opens in a new windowFace Off

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Thursday, October 11
opens in a new windowBookstore 1
Sarasota, FL
6:00 PM

Mark Oshiro, opens in a new windowAnger Is a Gift

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Friday, October 5
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
11:00 AM

opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center Room 1B03
New York, NY
2:45 PM

Malka Older, opens in a new windowState Tectonics

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Thursday, October 18
opens in a new windowFountain Bookstore
Richmond, VA
6:30 PM

Matt Goldman, opens in a new windowBroken Ice

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Friday, October 5
opens in a new windowThe Bookstore at Fitger’s 
Duluth, MN
7:00 PM

Saturday, October 20
opens in a new windowCorona Public Library
Corona, CA
12:00 PM

Paddy Hirsch, opens in a new windowThe Devil’s Half Mile

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Saturday, October 20
opens in a new windowCorona Public Library
Corona, CA
12:00 PM

William Martin, opens in a new windowBound for Gold

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Wednesday, October 24
opens in a new windowBurlington Public Library
Burlington, MA
7:00 PM

John Scalzi, T opens in a new windowhe Consuming Fire

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Tuesday, October 16
opens in a new windowUniversity Bookstore
Seattle, WA
7:00 PM

Wednesday, October 17
opens in a new windowBarnes & Noble
Portland, OR
7:00 PM

Thursday, October 18
opens in a new windowThe Last Bookstore
Los Angeles, CA
7:00 PM

Friday, October 19
opens in a new windowBorderlands Books
San Francisco, CA
6:00 PM

Saturday, October 20
opens in a new windowWeller Book Works
Salt Lake City, UT
2:00 PM

Monday, October 22
opens in a new windowAmerican Writers Museum
Chicago, IL
6:30 PM

Tuesday, October 23
opens in a new windowFlyleaf Books
Chapel Hill, NC
7:00 PM

Wednesday, October 24
opens in a new windowQuail Ridge Books & Music
Raleigh, NC
7:00 PM

Thursday, October 25
opens in a new windowAvid Bookshop
Athens, GA
6:00 PM

Charlie Jane Anders, opens in a new windowThe City in the Middle of the Night

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Thursday, October 4
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Room 1A18
New York, NY
12:15 – 1:15 PM

Friday, October 5
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
1:00 PM

opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Room 1A18
New York, NY
5:15 PM

Sunday, October 7
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Room 1A18
New York, NY
12:15 – 1:15 PM

S.L. Huang, opens in a new windowZero Sum Game

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Thursday, October 4
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
2:00 PM

K Arsenault Rivera, opens in a new windowThe Phoenix Empress

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Thursday, October 4
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
4:00 PM

Friday, October 5
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Room 1A18
New York, NY
5:15 – 6:15 PM

Mark A. Altman & Edward Gross,  opens in a new windowSo Say We All

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Thursday, October 4
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Shop Studies
New York, NY
8:30 – 10:00 PM

Friday, October 5
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Shop Studies
New York, NY
3:30 – 5:00 PM

Sherrilyn Kenyon, opens in a new windowStygian

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Friday, October 5
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
5:00 PM

Arkady Martine, opens in a new windowA Memory Called Empire

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Saturday, October 6
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
11:00 AM

Annalee Newitz, opens in a new windowAutonomous

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Saturday, October 6
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
2:00 PM

opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Hall 1A Author Autographing Area
New York, NY
5:15 PM

opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Room 1B03
New York, NY
6:30 PM

Seanan McGuire, opens in a new windowWayward Children Series

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Saturday, October 6
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
5:00 PM

Myke Cole, opens in a new window The Queen of Crows

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Saturday, October 6
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
12:00 PM

David Mack, opens in a new windowThe Iron Codex

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Saturday, October 6
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
12:00 PM

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5 Mysteries to Take You Back in Time This Summer

Whether you’re enjoying the summer heat or hiding indoors with the air conditioning on, it’s the perfect season to catch up on your reading. We love both historical fiction and pulse-pounding thrillers – so here are some books that perfectly combine the two, from the end of the 18th century to the tumultuous days of World War II.

opens in a new windowBound for Gold by William Martin

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of - 23 Rare-book dealer Peter Fallon and his girlfriend, Evangeline Carrington, are headed to California in search of a lost journal. The journal follows young James Spencer, of the Sagamore Mining Company, on a spectacular journey from staid Boston, up the Sacramento River to the Mother Lode, searching for a “lost river of gold.”

Peter and Evangeline quickly discover that there’s something much bigger and more dangerous going on, and Peter’s son is in the middle of it. Turns out, that lost river of gold may be more than a myth.

opens in a new windowThe Dante Club by Matthew Pearl

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of - 93 In 1865 Boston, the literary geniuses of the Dante Club—poets and Harvard professors Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, and James Russell Lowell, along with publisher J. T. Fields—are finishing America’s first translation of The Divine Comedy and preparing to unveil Dante’s remarkable visions to the New World.

The members of the Dante Club fight to keep a sacred literary cause alive, but their plans fall apart when a series of murders erupts through Boston and Cambridge. Only this small group of scholars realizes that the gruesome killings are modeled on the descriptions of Hell’s punishments from Dante’s Inferno. With the lives of the Boston elite and Dante’s literary future in America at stake, the Dante Club members must find the killer before the authorities discover their secret.

opens in a new windowThe Devil’s Half Mile by Paddy Hirsch

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 19 Seven years after a financial crisis nearly toppled America, traders chafe at government regulations, racial tensions are rising, gangs roam the streets and corrupt financiers make back-door deals with politicians… 1799 was a hell of a year.

Thanks to Alexander Hamilton, America has recovered from the panic on the Devil’s Half Mile (aka Wall Street), but the young country is still finding its way. When young lawyer Justy Flanagan returns to solve his father’s murder, he exposes a massive fraud that has already claimed lives, and one the perpetrators are determined to keep secret at any cost. The body count is rising, and the looming crisis could topple the nation.

opens in a new windowThe One Man by Andrew Gross

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of  -18 Bursting with compelling characters and tense story lines, this historical thriller is a deeply affecting, unputdownable series of twists and turns through a landscape at times horrifyingly familiar but still completely new and compelling.

Poland. 1944. Alfred Mendl and his family are brought on a crowded train to a Nazi concentration camp after being caught trying to flee Paris with forged papers. His family is torn away from him on arrival, his life’s work burned before his eyes. To the guards, he is just another prisoner, but in fact Mendl—a renowned physicist—holds knowledge that only two people in the world possess.

opens in a new windowSpeakeasy by Alisa Smith

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 38 Thirty-year-old Lena Stillman is living a perfectly respectable life when a shocking newspaper headline calls up her past: it concerns her former lover, charismatic bank robber Bill Bagley. A romantic and charming figure, Lena had tried to forget him by resuming her linguistic studies, which led to her recruitment as a Navy code-breaker intercepting Japanese messages during World War II.

But can Lena keep her own secrets? Threatening notes and the appearance of an old diary that recalls her gangster days are poised to upset her new life.

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New Releases: 6/5/18

Happy New Release Day! Here’s what went on sale today.

opens in a new windowThe Delirium Brief by Charles Stross

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of - 80 The Laundry is the secret British government agency dedicated to protecting the world from unspeakable horrors from beyond spacetime. Now, following the invasion of Yorkshire by the Host of Air and Darkness, the Laundry’s existence has become public, and Bob Howard is being trotted out on TV to answer pointed questions about elven asylum seekers. What neither Bob nor his managers have foreseen is that their organization has earned the attention of a horror far more terrifying than any demon: a British government looking for public services to privatize.

opens in a new windowThe Devil’s Half Mile by Paddy Hirsch

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 35 Seven years after a financial crisis nearly toppled America, traders chafe at government regulations, racial tensions are rising, gangs roam the streets and corrupt financiers make back-door deals with politicians… 1799 was a hell of a year.

When young lawyer Justy Flanagan returns to solve his father’s murder, he exposes a massive fraud that has already claimed lives, and one the perpetrators are determined to keep secret at any cost. The body count is rising, and the looming crisis could topple the nation.

opens in a new windowRoar by Cora Carmack

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of  -84 Legend says that Aurora Pavan’s ancestors first gained their magic by facing a storm and stealing part of its essence. Aurora has been groomed to be the perfect queen…but she’s yet to show any trace of the magic she’ll need to protect her people. But when a handsome young storm hunter reveals he was born without magic, but possesses it now, Aurora realizes there’s a third option for her future besides ruin or marriage…

opens in a new windowSide By Side by Jenni L. Walsh

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of - 19 Texas: 1931. It’s the height of the Great Depression, and Bonnie is miles from Clyde. He’s locked up, and she’s left waiting, their dreams of a life together dwindling every day.

When Clyde returns from prison damaged and distant, unable to keep a job, and dogged by the cops, Bonnie knows the law will soon come for him. But there’s only one road forward for her.

If the world won’t give them their American Dream, they’ll just have to take it.

NEW FROM TOR.COM

opens in a new windowOutbreak by Melissa F. Olsen

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 40 The Chicago field office of the Bureau of Preternatural Investigation is facing its deadliest challenge, yet—internal investigation! Alex and Lindy are on the hook, and on the run.

But when all of the BPI’s captive vampires are broken free from their maximum security prison, and Hector finally steps out of the shadows, Alex must use every trick to stay ahead of both the BPI and the world’s most dangerous shade.

NEW IN MANGA

My Solo Exchange Diary Vol. 1 Story and art by Nagata Kabi

Satan’s Secretary Vol. 1 Story and art by Kamotsu Kamonabe

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On the Road: Tor/Forge Author Events in June

opens in a new windowTor/Forge authors are on the road in June! See who is coming to a city near you this month.

Demetra Brodsky,  opens in a new windowDive Smack

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Saturday, June 23rd
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
San Diego, CA
2:00 PM

Sue Burke,  opens in a new windowSemiosis

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Saturday, June 16th
opens in a new windowMilwaukee Public Library
Milwaukee, WI
2:00 PM

W. Bruce Cameron,  opens in a new windowA Dog’s Way Home

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Saturday, June 9th
Barnes & Noble
Honolulu, HI
1:00 PM

Jacqueline Carey,  opens in a new windowStarless

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Tuesday, June 12th
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
San Diego, CA
7:30 PM

Wednesday, June 13th
opens in a new windowBorderlands Books
San Francisco, CA
6:00 PM

Thursday, June 14th
opens in a new windowThe Printed Garden
Sandy, UT
7:00 PM

Saturday, June 30th
opens in a new windowKazoo Books
Kalamazoo, MI
2:00 PM

Spencer Ellsworth,  opens in a new windowStarfire: Memory’s Blade

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Saturday, June 16th
opens in a new windowUniversity Bookstore
Seattle, WA
5:30 PM
Also with Joseph Brassey.

Candice Fox,  opens in a new windowCrimson Lake

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Friday, June 8th
opens in a new windowHuntington Beach Library
Huntington Beach, CA
12:00 PM

Matt Goldman,  opens in a new windowBroken Ice

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Tuesday, June 12th
opens in a new windowOnce Upon A Crime
Minneapolis, MN
7:00 PM

Sunday, June 24th
opens in a new windowPoisoned Pen
Scottsdale, AZ
2:00 PM

Tuesday, June 26th
opens in a new windowBook Carnival
Orange, CA
7:30 PM
Also with Paddy Hirsch.

Wednesday, June 27th
opens in a new windowBook Soup
West Hollywood, CA
7:00 PM

Thursday, June 28th
opens in a new windowBookshop West Portal
San Francisco, CA
7:00 PM

Tessa Gratton,  opens in a new windowThe Queens of Innis Lear

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Friday, June 15th
opens in a new windowBlue Valley Library
Overland Park, KS
5:30 PM
Also with Dhonielle Clayton, Zoraida Cordova, and Justina Ireland.

Paddy Hirsch,  opens in a new windowThe Devil’s Half Mile

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Tuesday, June 6th
Solid State Books
Washington, D.C.
7:00 PM

Wednesday, June 6th
opens in a new windowMysterious Bookshop
New York, NY
6:30 PM

Thursday, June 7th
opens in a new windowThe Harvard Coop
Cambridge, MA
7:00 PM

Wednesday, June 13th
opens in a new windowSouthshore Center
Excelsior, MN
7:00 PM
Literature Lovers’ Night Out – also with Liam Callahan, J. Courtney Sullivan, and Sarah Healy, hosted by Excelsior Bay Books.

Thursday, June 14th
opens in a new windowThe Grand Banquet Center
Stillwater, MN
7:00 PM
Literature Lovers’ Night Out – also with Liam Callahan, J. Courtney Sullivan, and Sarah Healy, hosted by Valley Bookseller.

Thursday, June 21st
Copperfield’s Books
Heraldsburg, CA
6:00 PM

Tuesday, June 26th
Book Carnival
Orange, CA

Friday, June 29th
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
San Diego, CA
7:30 PM

Saturday, June 30th
opens in a new windowSkylight Books
Los Angeles, CA
5:00 PM

Michael Moreci,  opens in a new windowThe Throwaway

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Wednesday, June 20th
opens in a new windowThe Book Cellar
Chicago, IL
7:00 PM
Also with Greg Hickey, Paula Carter, and Kirk Landers.

C. L. Polk,  opens in a new windowWitchmark

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Tuesday, June 26th
opens in a new windowMagers & Quinn
Minneapolis, MN
7:00 PM

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Discover New York in the Era of The Devil’s Half Mile

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 45It’s 1799 – welcome to the greatest city in the world. New York at the turn of the 18th century looked just a bit different than it does today, though. Sections of Manhattan were still underwater, revolutionary legends like Alexander Hamilton still roamed the streets, and plumbing for the city’s growing population remained an unaddressed problem. Paddy Hirsch, author of The Devil’s Half Mile (May 2018)gives us just a glimpse of what life was like in the Big Apple in a time before the Statue of Liberty, the subway, fire departments, and the stock exchange.

Written by opens in a new windowPaddy Hirsch

  • The population was exploding. 60,000 people lived in the city, and that number doubled in just 20 years, to 123,000, then doubled again to 202,000 in 1830. New York’s population hit a million just after 1870.
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A view of Collect Pond and its vicinity in the City of New York.
  • Canal Street was a muddy tidal stream, surrounded by marshland. The area south of Canal Street and east of Broadway was a large freshwater pond, called the Collect. A few hundred yards north, where Mott and Grand Streets meet today, was a small hill named Bayard’s Mount. You can guess the rest: as New York began to expand, starting around 1802, Bayard’s Mount was leveled, and much of the hill ended up filling in the pond. The stream was dug out and extended into a canal that helped drain the water, which by this time had been horribly polluted by the abattoirs and breweries around the shores of the Collect.
  • People did their grocery shopping in five markets around the city: the Fly, Catherine, Exchange and Oswego. And the Bear Market, which got its name in 1771, when a young butcher named Jacob Fincke trapped, killed and dressed a bear that had swum across the Hudson from New Jersey. People came from all over the town to see the bear’s pelt—and buy its meat—and the name stuck.
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A painting of the Tontine Coffee House by Francis Guy.
  • Coffee was every bit as popular a drink as it is today. Business was conducted in coffee houses all around the city, and stalls lined the streets down by the waterfronts, slaking the thirst and staunching the hunger of market traders and stevedores. “Four cents a pint for coffee and two for a muffin” was the going rate for “the salutary beverage so much appreciated for its vivifying efficacy.”
  • Most of the buildings in the city were made of wood, and fire was a constant threat. The city had a handful of fire engines “of a very inferior quality” and the onus was on citizens to take care of themselves in the event of a blaze. There were wooden stand-pumps at every street corner, and every household was required by the City Corporation to keep fire-buckets on the premises, one “for every fire-place in the house, or back kitchen; these buckets held three gallons, made of sole leather; they were hung in the passage near the front door. When the bell rang for fire, the watchmen firemen and boys, while running to the fire, sung out, ‘Throw out your buckets.’ The citizens would form lines, fill buckets and do their best to put out the fire themselves.
  • Fresh water was had to come by. Most of the water pumped out of the ground was not clean enough to drink or wash clothes in, so every house had a cistern in its back yard to catch rainwater. Hawkers went door to door selling casks of ‘tea-water’, for brewing tea and coffee and mixing with liquor. But the year before, the Manhattan Company had connected a steam-powered pump to extract water from the Collect pond, and had made a start on the construction of a system of wooden water pipes to carry fresh water around the city.

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Excerpt: The Devil’s Half Mile by Paddy Hirsch

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opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of - 72 Seven years after a financial crisis nearly toppled America, traders chafe at government regulations, racial tensions are rising, gangs roam the streets and corrupt financiers make back-door deals with politicians… 1799 was a hell of a year.

Thanks to Alexander Hamilton, America has recovered from the panic on the Devil’s Half Mile (aka Wall Street), but the young country is still finding its way. When young lawyer Justy Flanagan returns to solve his father’s murder, he exposes a massive fraud that has already claimed lives, and one the perpetrators are determined to keep secret at any cost. The body count is rising, and the looming crisis could topple the nation.

opens in a new windowThe Devil’s Half Mile will be released on June 5th. A free download of the first five chapters is also available here

ONE

Justy Flanagan leaned on the gunwale of the Netherleigh and watched two big men square up to each other on the wharf below. They were like a pair of cart horses, one black, the other white, their fellows in a half circle behind them, grim looks on their faces.

“How goes the negotiations?” Lars Hokkanssen leaned on the rail. He was a giant of a man, with a shaved head and a ragged red beard. Justy was six feet tall, which meant he saw over the heads of most men, but the Netherleigh’s first mate was nearly a foot taller, and wider. His build and his name came from his Norwegian father. His red hair, his Galway accent and his politics were all courtesy of his mother.

“Negotiations?” Justy asked.

Lars gave him an amused look. “How long is it you’ve been away?”

“Four years.”

“A lot’s changed in that time. This isn’t the town you grew up in, I’ll tell you that. There’s a lot more free Negroes here, for one thing, and they want to work. They’re forming gangs and taking work, either by force or by selling their labor cheap. The Irish aren’t happy about it. There’s been a few small riots. Men killed, even.” He nodded at the two men, who were now circling each other, ready to come to blows. “This here’s the way they usually decide who gets to unload a ship.”

A shout went up from the other side of the wharf. The two fighters dropped their fists, and the crowd broke up as men rushed to the water’s edge.

One man called for a gaff. Then the crowd went quiet, and Justy knew it was a body. They pulled it up onto the huge granite blocks, and when they all stood still for a moment, their heads down and their caps off, he knew it was a woman.

Four men picked her up. Justy saw the head roll backwards as though it had detached from the body. One of the Negro longshoremen vomited, and there was a ripple through the small crowd as the men in front stepped back.

Two men carried the body to a cart beside the Netherleigh’s gangway. They heaved the corpse up and pulled a tarpaulin over it, but as they walked away the wind gusted and pulled the canvas loose, showing the dead woman’s legs, her dark skin turned gray by the seawater.

The Negro workers were arguing, and one of them, a short, wiry man in a peaked cap, climbed onto a crate and started haranguing his fellows. Justy couldn’t hear the words, but the white longshoremen began edging closer to one another, the gang closing in tight and facing outwards, like a squad of soldiers caught in an open field.

Stung by the words of the small man in the peaked cap, the black workers turned and started shouting at their rivals. The white workers shouted back, stoking themselves and their mates towards the point where they would hurl themselves across the narrowing gap between the two gangs.

“I’m glad I’m up here and not down there,” Lars muttered.

Business on the wharf had stopped. People knew the difference between a labor dispute and a fight. Shoppers were hurrying up the streets, away from the docks. Stall owners were hastily packing boxes and stowing their goods away. And the open space of the emptying wharf was filling with a trickle of men, both black and white, coming to join their fellows on the dock.

A long whistle blast made Justy look up towards the Broad Way. Another whistle, and then a half-dozen watchmen, dressed in their long dark coats and leather firemen’s hats, were pushing through the crowd of shoppers. The watchmen forced their way onto the dock and ran down between the two groups of men. They made a wall, some facing the Irish stevedores, the others facing their black rivals. The watchmen stood firm, slapping their long billy clubs into their palms, their eyes steady as the workers screamed abuse and spat.

A man in a red coat was pushing his way through the gang of white workers. The men parted way, until he was face-to-face with a white-haired man with a ruddy face and a knit cap perched on the back of his head. They spoke for a moment, and then the white-haired man nodded and shouted something to his fellows.

For a moment, nothing happened, and then the Irish gang began to move slowly away from the water. It was clear some men weren’t happy about leaving, but the white-haired man shouted again, and the protestors fell into line, unwilling to be left alone on the dock without their fellows. The black workers fell silent and watched as the Irish withdrew, followed by the watchmen.

When they reached the street, the white-haired man spoke a few words to his men. He took off his cap, and those who were wearing hats followed his lead. He turned towards the docks and nodded at the small, dark, wiry man who was still standing on the crate. And then he turned away and led his men into the town.

The wiry man stepped off the crate. The black crew went to work.

Lars exhaled loudly. He winked at Justy. “So, welcome back to New York, a chara. You glad to be home?”

Justy shrugged, and Lars laughed. “Glad to be three thousand miles away from the bloody English, though, eh?”

“There are plenty of English here.”

“Aye, but they don’t have bayonets fixed and artillery support.”

Justy said nothing.

“Jesus, look at the face on you!” Lars said. “You look like you’re about to stab someone. And speaking of which . . .”

He dug in his pocket and held out a small bundle of filthy linen. Justy unwrapped it carefully. It was a folding knife, a six-inch length of steel tucked into a handle made of a single piece of carved teak. Justy smiled at the weight and the feel of it, the warm, smooth wood and the cool, polished metal bands under his thumb. “You oiled it.”

“Only a couple of times. I was worried about rust.” Lars grinned. “Plus a good piece of steel needs to see the light of day every now and again.”

“So long as you didn’t shave with it. That beard of yours would blunt an executioner’s axe.” Justy tucked the knife into his boot. “And the other thing?”

Lars fumbled in the band of his breeches with both hands and pulled out a thick canvas belt. It was gray with dirt and sweat. He handed it over. “I stashed it in the galley, behind the hardtack. No one wants to steal that stuff, let alone eat it, so I figured it’d be safe there.”

Justy quickly strapped the money belt around his waist. “I hope you took a few coins for yourself.”

“The pleasure of being of service is payment enough.”

“Jesus, you took that much?” Justy smiled at his friend. “Don’t spend it all in the one tavern, will you?”

The big sailor frowned. “That’s a terrible thing to say.”

“The truth cuts like a sharp blade, a mhac,” Justy said.

Shaking hands with Lars Hokkanssen was like getting to grips with a bear. They stood for a moment, hands clasped, not saying any of the things they were thinking.

Justy was the first to let go. “Thanks for finding a place for me.”

“A small thing, after what you did.”

“You don’t owe me.”

“You’ll let me be the judge of that.”

Justy nodded farewell to his friend and went to the top of the Netherleigh’s gangway. He pushed his face into the gust of wind that carried the smell of the city down the hill to the docks. Woodsmoke from a thousand hearth fires, urine from the tanners’ shops, horse shit from the streets, sewage from the septic tanks, fresh blood from the abattoirs, rotting meat and produce from the tips. Bad breath, sour beer, raw spirits, stale sweat. It was like a pungent cloud rolling down the Broad Way to the docks, a slap in the face of every newcomer who arrived in the city.

Justy smiled. It was the smell of home.

And then he remembered why he had made the long trip back from Ireland. He thought about what he had to do and his mouth set into a thin line.

The cart that held the woman’s body was at the bottom of the gangplank. Her head was wedged against a pile of sacks, so that her chin was touching her right shoulder, but as Justy came down the gangplank he could still see the ragged purple wound in her neck. Close up, her skin looked darker, and there was a cut on her right cheek. She looked as though she was barely thirteen years old.

A man wearing the gorget of an accountant of the harbormaster’s office pushed past to look at the corpse. The man was bald, with skin the milky color of a dead fish. He sniggered and wiped his nose. “I’d say she was a pretty one, for a Negro bobtail.”

“She wasn’t a whore.”

“She was surely,” the man said. “Look at the mark on her face.”

“That cut’s fresh. Someone did that to make fools like you think she was a whore. Or they did it for spite.”

The accountant leaned over to peer at her face. “Maybe,” he said. He reached for the tarpaulin. “I wonder if he cut her up some more.”

“Leave her.”

The man shrank back. “I was only going to cover her up.”

“She doesn’t need help from the likes of you. Get away from here.”

The man ducked his head and slunk away.

Justy took one more look at the dead girl and turned away. A young man was leaning against a stack of crates, watching him. He was dressed in a black coat and breeches, with cheap peg-soled shoes and a white shirt that was grubby at the collar. He looked like any apprentice, but his dark green caubeen hat was unusual. The caubeen was a kind of oversized beret, popular with the old-timers who came over on the boats from Ireland but rarely worn by anyone so young.

The man grinned. His teeth were white in his tanned face, and Justy felt a prickle of recognition.

“He was only wondering what the rest of us are wanting to know,” the young man said.

“What’s that?”

“Why, whether it’s the same man going about killing Negro girls. That’s the third in less than a week.”

Justy looked back at the body. He felt the skin prickle at the back of his neck.

“Were they all killed the same way?”

“What do you mean?”

“I mean did they all have their throats cut like this? And were they marked like that? The cut on the cheek?”

The man looked at Justy thoughtfully. “New in town, are you?”

“I’ve been away.”

“I’d say you have, indeed.” The grin flashed.

Justy looked down at his stained breeches and threadbare coat. He had worn the same clothes for nearly a month. His spares had been chewed to ribbons by rats on the voyage, and he had thrown them over the side. At least his boots looked like the sort of thing a gentleman might wear.

The man held up his hands. “No offense.” He tapped two fingers to the brim of his hat.

“I’ll see you,” he said, and slipped into the crowd of tradesmen and shoppers. Justy stood for a moment, watching him go, struck by the feeling that he knew the man from somewhere.

He shook his head. He had traveled for months, and now that he had arrived, back in New York, he wasn’t about to dawdle. There was work to do, and still a full half day to do it in. He would not waste the time searching his memory for half-forgotten faces.

He set off up the hill.

The sun was high in the sky, and the streets were crowded with gigs and horses. Coachmen and riders cursed and shouted as they tried to navigate around one another. The air was heavy with the smell of horse manure, and the cobbled streets were slippery with it, despite the piles of straw thrown onto the ground.

The sidewalks were equally busy. Shoppers and passersby competed for space with a crush of handsellers and their carts: chive fencers selling cutlery, swell fencers touting the sharpness of their sewing needles, flying stationers flogging their penny ballads and histories, crack fencers offering bags of nuts, and everywhere the cakey pannam fencers, whose trolleys were piled with pies, sweet bowlas tarts and savory chonkeys, the minced-meat pasties that no true New Yorker could resist.

Justy was at the top of the hill, crossing Wall Street across from Trinity Church, when he saw the young man in the green hat again. He was striding across the Broad Way, dodging carriages and carts, but as he stepped up onto the sidewalk he stumbled, staggering into a man dressed in ivory breeches, an immaculately cut sky-blue coat and an old-fashioned powdered wig that slipped over his forehead.

“God damn it, you fool!” the bewigged man shouted, groping at the horsehair.

“Sorry, sir!” The young man bowed. “I slipped in some horse shit. There’s just too many carriages on the road. My apologies.”

The gentleman brushed him aside. “Out of my way!”

Clutching his wig to his head, he puffed past Justy, clearing a way through the crowd with his cane. Justy turned to watch him go, and when he looked back up the hill the young man had disappeared again.

Copyright © 2018 by Paddy Hirsch

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Download a Free Digital Preview of The Devil’s Half Mile by Paddy Hirsch

Image Place holder  of - 19 Can’t wait to read Paddy Hirsch’s new historical thriller  opens in a new windowThe Devil’s Half Mileset in the chaotic New York of 1799? Download a free digital preview from your favorite retailer now. The Devil’s Half Mile will officially hit shelves on June 5th.

About The Devil’s Half Mile: Seven years after a financial crisis nearly toppled America, traders chafe at government regulations, racial tensions are rising, gangs roam the streets and corrupt financiers make back-door deals with politicians… 1799 was a hell of a year.

Thanks to Alexander Hamilton, America has recovered from the panic on the Devil’s Half Mile (aka Wall Street), but the young country is still finding its way. When young lawyer Justy Flanagan returns to solve his father’s murder, he exposes a massive fraud that has already claimed lives, and one the perpetrators are determined to keep secret at any cost. The body count is rising, and the looming crisis could topple the nation.

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8 Books for Fans of The Alienist

We love the moody and atmospheric murder mystery of The Alienist, the new TV show based on the novel by Caleb Carr. Set in 1896, it delves deep into the corruption and decadence of the nineteenth century, when the science of crime was just beginning to flourish.

Here are eight books that show the seedy underbelly of the modern world beginning to come into its own.

The Devil’s Half Mile by Paddy Hirsch

Image Placeholder of - 75 Seven years after a financial crisis nearly toppled America, traders chafe at government regulations, racial tensions are rising, gangs roam the streets and corrupt financiers make back-door deals with politicians…1799 was a hell of a year. Young lawyer Justy Flanagan returns to New York to solve his father’s murder, and uncovers a looming crisis that could topple the nation – and a group of conspirators who’ll kill to keep their secret.

The Alchemy of Murder by Carol McCleary

Image Place holder  of - 92 The world’s most famous reporter, the intrepid Nellie Bly, teams up with science fiction genius Jules Verne, the notorious wit and outrageous rogue Oscar Wilde, and the greatest microbe-hunter in history, Louis Pasteur. Together, they must solve the crime of the century. Set during the 1899 World’s Fair, they hunt an enigmatic killer who stalks the streets as a plague rages in Paris.

The Gangs of New York by Herbert Asbury

Place holder  of - 46 Published in 1927, Herbert Asbury’s account of the gangs in 19th century New York prior to the rise of the Mafia is a classic of urban history. The Gangs of New York dramatically evokes the destitution and shocking violence of a turbulent era, when colorfully named criminals like Dandy John Dolan, Bill the Butcher, and Hell-Cat Maggie lurked in the shadows, and infamous gangs like the Plug Uglies, the Dead Rabbits, and the Bowery Boys ruled the streets.

The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson

Poster Placeholder of - 84 A work of nonfiction that reads like fiction, Erik Larson narrates the history of a master builder, a killer, and the great fair that obsessed them both. Interweaving the story of architect Daniel Hudson Burnham, designer of the Chicago World’s Fair of 1893, and serial murderer H.H. Holmes. In this book the smoke, romance, and mystery of the Gilded Age come alive as never before.

Alias Grace by Margaret Atwood

Placeholder of  -57 By the author of A Handmaid’s Tale (and recently adapted into a Netflix series), Alias Grace takes the reader back to the 1840s, to the story of Grace Marks, convicted of murdering her employer, his housekeeper, and his mistress. She claims to have no memory of the murders.

An up-and-coming expert in the burgeoning field of mental illness is engaged by a group of reformers and spiritualists who seek a pardon for Grace. He listens to her story while bringing her closer and closer to the day she cannot remember. What will he find in attempting to unlock her memories?

By Gaslight by Steven Price

William Pinkerton is already famous, the son of the most notorious detective of all time, when he descends into the underworld of Victorian London in pursuit of a new lead on the fabled con Edward Shade. Adam Foole is a gentleman without a past, haunted by a love affair ten years gone. When they join forces, a fog-enshrouded hunt through sewers, opium dens, drawing rooms, and séance halls ensues, creating the most unlikely of bonds: between Pinkerton, the great detective, and Foole, the one man who may hold the key to finding Edward Shade.

A June of Ordinary Murders by Conor Brady

Dublin, June 1887: The city swelters in a long summer heat wave, the criminal underworld simmers, and with it, the threat of nationalist violence is growing. When the mutilated bodies of a man and a child are discovered in Phoenix Park and Detective Sergeant Joe Swallow steps up to investigate. With the Land War at its height, the priority is to contain political crimes, and these murders appear to be ordinary—and thus of lesser priority. But when the evidence suggests high-level involvement, and the body count increases, Swallow must navigate the treacherous waters of foolish superiors, political directives, and frayed tempers to solve the case, find the true murderer, and deliver justice.

The Italian Secretary by Caleb Carr

Caleb Carr, author of The Alienist, reaches back to the age of opium dens and Jack the Ripper, when fictional detective Sherlock Holmes made murder a science.

Mycroft Holmes’s encoded message to his brother, Sherlock, is unsubtle enough even for Dr. Watson to decipher: a matter concerning the safety of Queen Victoria herself calls them to Edinburgh’s Holyroodhouse to investigate the confounding and gruesome deaths of two young men—horrific incidents that took place with Her Highness in residence. And while recent attempts on Her Majesty’s life raise a number of possibilities, these intrigues also seem strangely connected to an act of evil that took place centuries earlier…

Feature image courtesy of TNT

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