Wonderkid: A Novel
A “hilarious” novel of a rock and roll dream gone awry (The New York Times Book Review).
 
The Wonderkids are living the dream: sold-out concerts, screaming fans, TV shows, number-one hits. Unfortunately, it’s because the lead singer, Blake Lear, made a deal—wild success in exchange for transforming the band into a children’s entertainment act. Now the seats are packed with grade schoolers instead of cool hipsters, and the television appearances happen on Saturday morning. But hey, rock and roll has always been for the kids, right?
 
The money is good, and things go very right—until they go very wrong. The temptations of the road are many, and the Wonderkids are big kids, too. Narrated by a boy whom Blake adopts on a whim, who becomes the band’s disciple, merch guy, amateur psychologist, and—eventually—damage control guru, Wonderkid is a delirious and surprisingly touching novel of the dangers of compromise, thwarted ambition, and fathers and sons, told with tremendous humor and energy.
 
“If Stace’s latest novel, his fourth, rings true, it’s because he is writing what he knows. For 25 years, he performed smart indie rock under the pseudonym John Wesley Harding . . . A great rock ’n’ roll novel.” —The Boston Globe
 
“Deliciously entertaining.” —The Wall Street Journal
 
“[Wonderkid is] sweet and funny and knowing—and this is me, holding up my lighter for more.” —Joshua Ferris, National Book Award finalist and author of Then We Came to the End
1115812780
Wonderkid: A Novel
A “hilarious” novel of a rock and roll dream gone awry (The New York Times Book Review).
 
The Wonderkids are living the dream: sold-out concerts, screaming fans, TV shows, number-one hits. Unfortunately, it’s because the lead singer, Blake Lear, made a deal—wild success in exchange for transforming the band into a children’s entertainment act. Now the seats are packed with grade schoolers instead of cool hipsters, and the television appearances happen on Saturday morning. But hey, rock and roll has always been for the kids, right?
 
The money is good, and things go very right—until they go very wrong. The temptations of the road are many, and the Wonderkids are big kids, too. Narrated by a boy whom Blake adopts on a whim, who becomes the band’s disciple, merch guy, amateur psychologist, and—eventually—damage control guru, Wonderkid is a delirious and surprisingly touching novel of the dangers of compromise, thwarted ambition, and fathers and sons, told with tremendous humor and energy.
 
“If Stace’s latest novel, his fourth, rings true, it’s because he is writing what he knows. For 25 years, he performed smart indie rock under the pseudonym John Wesley Harding . . . A great rock ’n’ roll novel.” —The Boston Globe
 
“Deliciously entertaining.” —The Wall Street Journal
 
“[Wonderkid is] sweet and funny and knowing—and this is me, holding up my lighter for more.” —Joshua Ferris, National Book Award finalist and author of Then We Came to the End
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Wonderkid: A Novel

Wonderkid: A Novel

by Wesley Stace
Wonderkid: A Novel

Wonderkid: A Novel

by Wesley Stace

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Overview

A “hilarious” novel of a rock and roll dream gone awry (The New York Times Book Review).
 
The Wonderkids are living the dream: sold-out concerts, screaming fans, TV shows, number-one hits. Unfortunately, it’s because the lead singer, Blake Lear, made a deal—wild success in exchange for transforming the band into a children’s entertainment act. Now the seats are packed with grade schoolers instead of cool hipsters, and the television appearances happen on Saturday morning. But hey, rock and roll has always been for the kids, right?
 
The money is good, and things go very right—until they go very wrong. The temptations of the road are many, and the Wonderkids are big kids, too. Narrated by a boy whom Blake adopts on a whim, who becomes the band’s disciple, merch guy, amateur psychologist, and—eventually—damage control guru, Wonderkid is a delirious and surprisingly touching novel of the dangers of compromise, thwarted ambition, and fathers and sons, told with tremendous humor and energy.
 
“If Stace’s latest novel, his fourth, rings true, it’s because he is writing what he knows. For 25 years, he performed smart indie rock under the pseudonym John Wesley Harding . . . A great rock ’n’ roll novel.” —The Boston Globe
 
“Deliciously entertaining.” —The Wall Street Journal
 
“[Wonderkid is] sweet and funny and knowing—and this is me, holding up my lighter for more.” —Joshua Ferris, National Book Award finalist and author of Then We Came to the End

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781468309829
Publisher: ABRAMS, Inc.
Publication date: 05/15/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 352
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Wesley Stace is the author of three widely acclaimed novels: Misfortune, selected by the Washington Post and Amazon as one of the best novels of the year; By George, one of the New York Public Library's 2007 Books To Remember; and Charles Jessold, Considered as a Murderer, one of the Wall Street Journal's best fiction books of 2011. He has released fifteen albums under the name John Wesley Harding and has appeared on Late Night with Conan O'Brien, The Late Show with David Letterman, and The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. He is the founder of the Cabinet of Wonders variety show, which has featured appearances by Rosanne Cash, Colson Whitehead, and Joshua Ferris, among many others, and which can be heard on NPR. He contributes frequently to the New York Times and lives in Philadelphia.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

"Thank you. If you appreciate the tuning so much, I hope you will enjoy the playing more."

Blake lear knew all the guitar chords he'd ever know by the age of twelve.

He first picked up a tennis racket when he was ten. The Eureka moment: alone in the house, everyone else at church (a sore throat his excuse), listening to his sister's copy of the Beach Boys' 20 Golden Greats, on the cover of which a ghostly silver surfer danced on sparkling aquamarine waves. Admiring himself in the mirror as he mimed the words to "Surfin' U.S.A.," he spied his father's racket, picked it up, and pretended he was riding that surfboard, miraculously playing the guitar: a Donnay Allwood, the Borg model, black frame and rainbow flag stripes. People said they lip-synced on Top of the Pops anyway, so what was the difference? Was it essential to make noise? Did he actually need a real guitar? (This would remain his attitude for much of his professional career.)

As 20 Golden Greats played on — "Fun Fun Fun," "I Get Around" — Blake became a guitar player. By the stately choral fade-out of "Break Away," the last song on side two, Blake was feeling the vibrations in his ears, the sensations at his fingertips, and ... he needed a real guitar. Only a fictional sore throat and the absence of any hard cash held him back.

* * *

The next day, he walked home from school via the High Street so he could window-shop G&D Keyboards. There wasn't a dedicated guitar store in town, but G&D, despite its keyboard allegiance, had a whole wall full. On impulse, Blake popped in, ostensibly to leaf through the music books, desperate to model one of the guitars that hung like jackets, ready to try on. But he didn't find himself drawn to the gaudy electrics. He wanted an acoustic, although not one of the ones with elastic strings that you plucked in the lonely corner of a Spanish restaurant.

The owner of G&D, eagle eye trained to spot a fledgling musician, could distinguish a wannabe guitarist; keyboard players never looked that haunted. He first tried to foist an unwanted classical guitar on the boy ("easier on the fingers") but was wholly ignored. An instrument finally negotiated (a beginner's model with tortoiseshell pickguard), it became clear that Blake couldn't actually play at all, He could strum the open strings, head thrown back, and move his fingers nimbly up and down the fret-board, but not both at the same time, and to zero musical effect. Mr. G&D hovered ever closer, coaxing the guitar away after its strings were given a brutal twanging workout.

"Just seeing what it can do," Blake remarked, but what he really wanted was to see how good he looked; unfortunately G&D Keyboards didn't have a full-length mirror. All the guitars were too big, but a scale model was out of the question: Blake wanted the real one that he'd always have. He was looking for something to grow into.

"Maybe you want to bring your mum in some time." Always easier to deal with the parents, given that the kid didn't have fifty quid in his back pocket. Or a checkbook.

"My grandmother or my dad," said Blake.

"And you know we can always fix you up with lessons."

Blake's eyes fell upon a lustrous black Eko twelve-string. He had never heard of a twelve-string, never known that double the strings was an option (though the advantages were obvious), was unaware of Lead Belly and the Byrds, but felt instantaneously drawn to the massive headstock with its glittering silver tuning pegs, all twelve of them: twice what everybody else had. He was in love.

"You don't want that," said Mr. G&D, reluctantly getting it down. He didn't want the kid's fingerprints all over it either. "Very specific, a twelve-string. Not really a good starter guitar."

"How much?" It looked good on Blake. Even Mr. G&D could see that.

"Forty pounds. But you really don't want it."

"Why not?" It was shiny.

"Hard to play. Because of the twelve strings."

"Can't you take six of them off, and then it's like a normal one?"

"Well ..." Mr. G&D was reluctant. "The necks are somewhat wider so it would still be hard to play."

"Adaptable, though," said the ten-year-old. The guitar was as good as his.

Back home, Blake concocted a story in which he had somehow haggled the man down and the guitar represented the deal of the century: a deal that would disappear unless seized upon immediately. His grandmother gave in and bought it for him, while his father, Barry, moaned about the lack of use of the ancient upright piano; in his imagination, both sons — Blake and his brother, Jack — had shown promise. Now no more than a picture shelf, the piano had hardly been played since their mother had gone.

Blake graduated from air guitar to real guitar, via the Donnay, in a week. Jack, being two years older, also wanted a guitar and got one for his birthday: a cheaper electric, a bright red Canora, with the tiniest, tinniest amplifier in the world.

Blake wasn't Blake then. His name was James, therefore Jimmy, but only Jack and his father called him Jimmy. They never graduated to Blake, even after he changed it. And Jack's name wasn't actually Jack; it was Jeremy, but no one ever called him Jeremy except his father. Jack was short for Ejaculation, a name given to him as a pubert by (of course) Blake.

At school, the brothers kept their distance. They walked there separately; never acknowledged each other on the playground; showed no outward signs of being related. Inasmuch as they behaved fraternally at home, they did so mainly to please their parent and their bedridden grandmother. But the sudden appearance of these two guitars brought them together and led them to discover music, rather than the other way round.

Blake was slight for his age and full of quirks: he was given to bursting into song, making up gibberish, and even, in moments that initially caused his father some worry, exclaiming exuberantly in a manner suggestive of Tourette's. It wasn't. It wasn't even a tic. He was just the oddball who occasionally yelled "Quack!"

One of his favorite pastimes was to conduct, which he did at the top of the grass verge behind the cafeteria during break. The massed ranks of the orchestra waited for him to tap his music stand and raise his hand; they then played extremely beautifully under his direction, as any passerby could judge from the pained facial expressions of their conductor and the exquisitely felt movements of his baton. There was no orchestra, but Blake did carry an actual baton in his top blazer pocket.

More than once, Blake's unconsciously brazen parading of his rich fantasy life caused the baton to be stolen, lobbed beyond his flailing grasp. One morning, Jack stepped in; the talisman and its owner were never parted again. This was shortly after the guitars arrived — as if, by their purchase alone, the brothers had formed a band. And you didn't let outsiders mess with your bandmates. They were brothers-in-arms.

Blake didn't want formal musical lessons, particularly at school. Besides, when he was fronting the band, would he actually need a guitar at all? Wouldn't he just strut around? Swing his microphone? Set his hat on fire? Or wear one covered with mirrors? He'd seen it all on Top of the Pops — surely being a lead singer was the best job in the world. He bought songbooks with picture chords, often ineptly transcribed, though the Gs and the Cs, the Ds and the E minors were generally in the right place. Those were the only chords he ever learned, and one of them fit more or less anything, particularly when, under Jack's guidance, he started attempting to annex the neck of his guitar with a capo. And he played a lot of chords he didn't need to know the names for, because he only hit a couple of the strings. When there finally was a band, he left them to work out the details. He brought the words, sometimes the tunes. Jack was in charge of the rest.

Jack, on the other hand, was a natural student, a born sideman. He took lessons with a Mr. Stagg, whose qualification was that he had once been, and may still have been, in a band. Stagg had some outré theories about the connection between scales (what he called "the five-chord cycle") and man's emergence from the slime, which if made public might have earned him a severe reprimand from the headmaster. Though he taught Jack nothing musical whatsoever, he helped him master the fingering of every scale — that was all Jack needed, at least according to Stagg. The rest came from within.

Jack and Blake watched Top of the Pops together, but they were seeing two different shows. Blake watched the singer. Jack's eyes were on the guy with the big gear, who could blend into the background for a breather, then dart out at an opportune moment, and, while the front man was otherwise occupied delivering the song, play to the girls in the front row, occasionally singing a harmony to remind them all that it was, in fact, mostly his band; that true authority was quiet authority; that, unlike someone else, he didn't need to be front and center all the time. Learning the guitar was easy for Jack: he couldn't do it, he couldn't do it ... then he could. At which point he'd pick another thing he couldn't do.

As the school year went on, imaginary orchestra was suspended, and the brothers were regularly having "rehearsals" at break in the cricket pavilion (unless Judo kept them out, in which case they'd climb a tree; unless it was raining, in which case they'd stay in the classroom). They didn't really play music, except inasmuch as Jack practiced scales. What they did was make plans. As a result, two became four, and they had a nameless band. Pete and Steven were drafted: neither could play an instrument, but both had access to one — Pete knew "Chopsticks" on the piano and Steven's older brother was a drummer. They all liked the Beatles — everyone liked the Beatles — so they decided on some songs they could introduce into their repertoire. "Lovely Rita" was at the top of the list. Very little music was made, but a name was finally decided upon: the Meetles, whose first album would be called Beat the Meetles. A singable manifesto was produced, ratified by the four members: "We will never play sport again / Unless we are coerced / Band practice comes first." Their time was mostly consumed with the design of "In Concert" posters, which, advertising notional rather than actual events, lacked dates and venues. One surviving example simply says "The Meetles In Concert," and boasts an eye-catchingly Russian constructivist design, duplicated on the old machine in the school attic, then hand-colored.

Eventually, music was made. The count-ins sounded authentic and promised much, but things got weird after 1,2,3,4. This was a new band — same members, but all options for the graphic design of the word Meetles having been exhausted, they were now the Brutles, a tribute to their two greatest musical influences: the Beatles, and Beatles parody band, the Rutles. Jack had picked up a copy of the Rutles' soundtrack, All You Need Is Cash, at a market, and, though the whole thing was obviously a joke, the songs were in no way inferior to the Beatles' blueprints, and had the distinct advantage of being funnier. The Beatles were odd, in part because (according to Blake's father) they were "druggy," but they weren't actually funny like the Rutles or goofy like the Monkees. The brothers didn't get all the Rutles jokes, but at least they knew when to laugh.

And so the Brutles were born. Although there was still no specific repertoire, plans for a concert (involving the school tennis court and some lights from the drama department) were at an advanced stage. The poster for this gig in the sky surpassed even the Meetles' most ambitious promotional campaigns.

The Brutles needed a project. They also needed to learn to play together. Jack was getting good, and Blake had mastered the capo, which no longer flipped off like a tiddlywink, but Pete and Steven were lagging. There was no strife within the Brutles' camp, however — the production of the occasional poster made everything official. It was now unavoidably time for songwriting, so Blake decided to write a modest rock opera. The obvious influences were Jesus Christ Superstar, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, and the spate of shorter song cycles (Holy Moses,Captain Noah and His Floating Zoo) that were choir practice staples. The recipe was straightforward: first, a biblical story — literally anything would do. Look up the best known, avoid Jesus, Joseph, Moses, and Noah, and you were made; amplify to include colorful extra characters; and then give each a number in the style of a well-loved musical genre. At the tender age of eleven, Blake had cracked the code.

And — hey presto! — The Prodigal. Details remain sketchy. Jack remembers a song called "Pistol," Pete can still play one called "With You" (I remember him plunking it out on a piano backstage somewhere) and Blake is convinced he shoehorned "I Know She'd Leave Me," the very first song he ever wrote, in there as well: "Not I knew," he always said, "but I know." As though this mild temporal confusion had been the secret of its success.

So there was an unperformed rock opera based on a parable, a repertoire of potential cover versions for a nonexistent concert, a series of limited edition posters, and some unoriginal originals. Not bad for a boy just about to turn twelve.

Public school beckoned: common entrance, scholarships, the absence of girls, the advent of masturbation. It was 1977, the dawn of slogans on T-shirts, and while the front pages of the music papers heralded the onslaught of punk, the back still contained advertisements for comical posters (one buzzard says to another "Patience, my ass! I'm gonna kill something!"), Oxford Bags (for the complete David Bowie look), offers of complete sets of live photos from Kiss concerts, and spoof adverts ("guy with quarter-inch prick seeks nasal sex"). Schoolboys everywhere, Blake among them, opened wide, bracing themselves for punk's astringent. Death to Emerson, Lake & Palmer!

But not long after composing The Prodigal — a few months into his thirteenth year — Blake happened to see a TV show, So It Goes, at which point everything changed. So It Goes was the talk of the playground: one of the few shows that let punk bands actually play — national exposure that was often the occasion for newsworthy behavior, the reason Blake was watching in the first place. So, this one episode: Tony Wilson interviewing Jonathan Richman about his music. Wilson says that when he hears Richman accused of simplicity and naivety, his reaction is: "What about William Blake?" And Richman, referring to Blake's poem "The Lamb," which has aired earlier on the show, replies: "You know what? I just started crying. I've been crying for the last five minutes, listening to that thing at the beginning by William Blake. It's so funny that you would mention that right now, because if that makes me simplistic, liking stuff like that, then I'm one, 'cause that little thing 'Little lamb who made thee' that just wet me up."

"In the nineteenth century," continues Tony, approaching peak smarm, "they said Blake was simplistic, that he was an idiot ..." Then he deadpans: "And now he's dead popular." And when the camera pans back to Jonathan Richman, he's in tears, barely able to respond.

In tears!

In 1977, crying on TV was out there. Displaying any overt emotion besides anger, producing any bodily fluid besides snot, phlegm, bile, and piss — particularly in response to a poem about a lamb — was severely antithetical to those unsentimental times. Richman's tears were a formative event in Blake Lear's life.

The young Blake found a used copy of the poems and engravings of William Blake, who reminded him of Lewis Carroll and Edward Lear, both of whom he'd been introduced to by his mother. She'd read him so much Lear in bed — "The Dong with a Luminous Nose," "Calico Pie," "The Jumblies" — that, though Blake understood that Lear was the author, he had been under the mistaken impression that the word Lear was itself a synonym for poem, like ballad or verse: lear. And when Junior Choice, for which he was now too old, intruded on Radio One on Saturday morning, Blake still sang along to Elton Hayes's sweet version of "The Owl and the Pussycat." He was beginning to put two and two together.

From then on, he lost faith in his religious musical. Indeed, he no longer wanted to make any sense at all. He would write in a state of complete innocence, summon up that little lamb or the elegant foul in verse; he wanted to write about sweet things, to make nonsense. He didn't like the aggression in the air, the kids who'd stolen his baton, their scruffy seven-inch singles, their Xeroxed fanzines, their lapels full of safety pins and badges for bands whose art direction never deviated from the ransom note font. It must have felt like punk was going to go on forever. So he decided that he would be a man out of time, that he would opt out altogether. That was when he wrote his first poetry, and the first lyric that is recognizably Blake-ian, if not Blakeian. It appeared in the school magazine and won a prize. A sample:

The shiny-coats are coming!
The Hummingbirds aren't humming.
They're flittering and anxious, asking why:
Why, I cry —
Why, I cry

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Wonderkid"
by .
Copyright © 2014 Wesley Stace.
Excerpted by permission of Abrams Books.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"Wonderkid is Stace's fourth novel, and its subject - an English rock band storming (and then foundering upon) the shores of America - brings his musical and literary careers together for a lighthearted look at an education formed on the road." —SF Chronicle
 
"Wonderkid is good fun and deliciously entertaining, a light-hearted story about a band that never was—but I kind of wish had been" —Wall Street Journal

Hilarious . . . Winningly dry . . . Marvelously drawn . . . The Wonderkids’ increasingly unhinged antics and eventual . . . flameout, which culminate in Blake’s seeming to expose himself onstage at the “Pack ’n’ Play Festival” (Stace has a marvelous time with names), are entertaining. And there are some absolute gems in the final chapters.” --The New York Times Book Review

"Fast-paced and full of details only a music insider would know, novelist and musician Stace’s latest is a funny, untamed, highly pleasurable read, a wise and witty visit to a world few of us have experienced"—Booklist 

"Stace has a great eye and a lifetime of inside knowledge that he deploys to comic, touching effect."—Portland Oregonian
 
"In all, Wonderkid is a work of both great wit and deep tenderness. It’s a tale of raucous lost boys written by an author with an exacting eye, but who also truly feels for these misfits."—Philadelphia City Paper

“Wesley Stace has always been the only genuinely gifted fiction writer who also happens to be a rock star, but Wonderkid is the book he was born to write. And if you prefer your novels brazen, poignant and hilarious, as I do, you were born to read it. Like a great show, this will stay with you long after the last cymbal crash and power strum.” —Sam Lipsyte, author of The Fun Parts
 
“Wesley Stace has written one of the very few novels about rock bands and the music business that doesn’t have a single false note or outsider-wannabe pretensions. It’s a relief—and a joy—to read about the weird particularities of the lives of musicians by someone who knows the world so intimately. He deconstructs, with an elegant and sharp eye, the heightened sense of the unreality of fame, the relentless grind of touring, and the Ego and the Id made deliciously manifest in the Wonderkids (my favorite new band). He is both ruthless and compassionate, but never cynical. I thought about these characters even when I wasn’t reading the book, and the story will stay with me for a very long time. Wonderkid has both enormous entertainment value and serious literary worth, a very hard trick to pull off.” —Rosanne Cash, author of Composed
 
Highly pleasurable. And unusual, not least because this is a rock ’n’ roll novel written by someone who actually knows what he’s talking about.” —Peter Carey, author of The Chemistry of Tears
 
“Rock ’n’ roll is an infantile business, but never more so than in the hands of the Wonderkids, a group of post-teens, playing music for pre-teens, whilst living chaotic adult lives. In Wonderkid, Wesley Stace absolutely captures the band experience: the triumphs, the letdowns, the sell-outs, the success, and the scandal, with an extra helping of absurdity. There were times reading this book that I could actually smell the dank dressing rooms, or feel the bus rolling down the highway to the next gig.” —Peter Buck
 
“Finally, a sex, drugs and rock ’n’ roll book for Dan Zanes fans! Wonderkid also happens to be one of the best books about fathers and sons since Turgenev.” —Gary Shteyngart, author of Little Failure
 
“I can’t believe that this amazing book exists. Wonderkid is by far the best music novel I’ve ever read, and the most unexpectedly wild ride I’ve ever been on. Every detail is perfect. Do you want to read about the music business? Family dynamics? Children’s entertainment? The often uneasy relationship between the US and the UK? The creative process? This book lays it all out with love and wild imagination. Wonderkid is uplifting, inspiring, unhinged, and unpredictable, just like rock ’n’ roll itself.” —Dan Zanes
 
“Wesley Stace’s Wonderkid is a marvelous satiric mashup of rock ’n’ roll and pack ’n’ plays. It’s sweet and funny and knowing—and this is me, holding up my lighter for more.” —Joshua Ferris, author of The Unnamed
 
“At turns illuminating and heartbreaking—but always funny—Wonderkid is A Visit from the Goon Squad for the kiddie music world. A pitch-perfect excavation into the lighter heart of the music industry.” —Colin Meloy
 
Wonderkid is a gem, a rock ’n’ roll novel written from the inside, with an insider’s knowledge of music and the music business, and all the exhilaration and indignities that come with the territory. Wesley Stace is a wise and witty guide to the career of Blake Lear and the Wonderkids, a fictional band that becomes so real over the course of the novel that you’ll think you heard them on the radio.” —Tom Perrotta, author of Nine Inches
 
“Wesley Stace writes with verve, pace, and great good humor. Wonderkid is a flamboyant novel about rock ’n’ roll, sex and drugs, broken dreams, and Brits on tour in America. Buy it at once.” —Patrick McGrath, author of Constance

"A perfectly pitched coming-of-age novel that’s as playful and provocative as rock music itself. . . Stace brings the road alive with exquisitely authentic details. . . The familiarity is entirely engaging, and it’s likely that you’ll worry about the band’s trajectory, the looming loss of innocence, and probably the fate of rock music. Stace doesn’t take things in the usual direction, though, so don’t give up on these guys. In the end, they prove that the spirit of rock and roll might grow up a bit, but, indeed, it never dies. –ForeWord Reviews

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