Beth Tabler's Blog, page 205
December 16, 2021
Short Story Review – A Guide to Working Breeds by Vina Jie-Min Prasad



A Guide to Working Breeds by Vina Jie-Min Prasad originally found in Made to Order: Robots and Revolution edited by Jonathan Strahan
Reprint can be found here
SHORT STORY REVIEW
A GUIDE TO WORKING BREEDS by VINA JIE-MIN PRASAD December 16, 2021 2:00 pm No Comments Facebook Twitter WordPress “I talk to other beings very infrequently. / My contact with humans is usually from a distance.”The world has been a pretty intense place, well since always, but it turned the intensity up to 11 these past few years. Things got serious. And that also means stressful. In times like these, we need stories like “A Guide for Working Breeds” by Vina Jie-Min Prasad more than ever.
In this story, a grumpy and jaded curmudgeon of a robot is forced into mentoring a new hopeful. And a joyful little friendship begins to unfold. These two characters need each other. One needs a guide in how cruel the world can be and the other needs help finding the joy. In a word, it is cute… despite the assassinations.
A Guide to Working Breeds touches on serious topics with a light hand, and the outlook of both robots is very relatable. They bond over their shared frustrations and appreciations of the finer things in life, like corgis and pugs. This is the type of story where you sometimes have to read between the lines. It is presented as a series of messages, something that most people in the 21st century can probably follow with the same ease of reading a stranger’s text message conversation on the internet. This story is perfect for people that enjoy sweet, lighthearted characters, enemies to friends, breakfast foods, and cute dogs.
5/5 stars
Check Out some of our other reviewsShort Story Review – The Mermaid Astronaut by Yoon Ha Lee



SHORT STORY REVIEW
The Mermaid Astronaut by Yoon Ha Lee December 16, 2021 10:00 am No Comments Facebook Twitter WordPress “It will hurt,” the witch said. “Certain kinds of desire always do…”With simple language, Yoon Ha Lee sings a familiar song, one of a mermaid that longs to live someplace else. The prose states the story with the straightforwardness of a fairy tale where things simply are what they are because they are. But instead of this mermaid making a deal with the sea witch to walk among men, she chooses to give up something precious to walk in the stars.
Lee turns many tropes on their head, such as the evil sea witch becomes a helper and someone relatable without becoming soft or a caricature. Lee normalizes a non-binary character with they/them pronouns without making the story about gender issues and identity. He explores both the gift and the burden of knowledge as well as costs for that knowledge. With this retelling, Lee shows the struggles of getting everything that you want. He shows that even when dreams are not all fun and games, but require some work and effort, they are still worth having.
You can find the story here
Check Out some of our other reviewsDecember 15, 2021
REVIEW – Ring Shout By P. Djeli Clark


BOOK REVIEW
ring shout by p. djeli clark December 15, 2021 1:00 pm No Comments Facebook Twitter WordPress “Girl, every choice we make is a new tomorrow. Whole worlds waiting to be born.”Well, how appropriate for the tumultuous year that 2020 has been, not only in terms of the global pandemic, but also because of the notable racial unrest seen particularly in the United States, that my last book review of this unprecedented year is “Ring Shout”, by the highly decorated author (Hugo and Nebula Award Winner) P. Djèlí Clark.
I will say, foremost, that books like this are always difficult to read as a racialized Black man, reader, and author myself. I can imagine there must have been moments for the courageous Clark – never one to fear confronting the difficult subject of racial intolerance – where it was difficult to write, considering today’s context.
In “Ring Shout” Clark has written essentially a historical horror-fantasy. The genius of Clark is on full display in this novella. This cleverly-written book likely conjures up images for many of us Black people of how Blacks in Western Society have felt, while under terror and oppression of racism: like we are beset by monsters, driven by a hate that seems so unfathomable, so non-sensical, it must be alien / from another world. Still, “Ring Shout”, an extremely important book, should be read, as often the most difficult books to read are.
The novella is set in 1922, which is deep in the Jim Crow South era of the early 20th Century. In Ring Shout, the plot centres around the film “The Birth of a Nation”. You will forgive me, please, as I digress into more about this film, which has been typically acknowledged as “the most controversial film ever made in the U.S.”
Its plot, not unlike “Ring Shout” itself, could be considered part fiction and part history. The film tells of the assassination of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln by John Wilkes Booth. It also outlines the Civil War and Reconstruction eras, from a staunchly pro-Confederacy standpoint. Blacks are depicted as idiotic, buffoonish, depraved, slavering rapists of White females. Most of the blacks portrayed in the film are played by White actors in Blackface.
The Ku Klux clan in “The Birth of a Nation” are represented as akin to “Knights in Shining Armour” who preserve the virtue of White women, uphold American ideals, based on a social order of White Supremacy, by cleansing the U.S. of the Black “scourge”. The film was deemed to be responsible for the rejuvenation of the Ku Klux Klan, and thus a reign of violence against Blacks that lasted into the second half of the century.
In “Ring Shout” the reason the Ku Klux Klan can maintain its horrible rule of terror is primarily because there are inhuman, demonic members of the Klan who serve alongside the human members. The Alien Klansmen, called “Ku Kluxes”, purposely stoke the human Klansmen in their racial hatred of Blacks, perpetuating the power of the overall Klan, and their ability to terrorize Blacks. When “Ring Shout” begins, another screening of “The Birth of a Nation” will take place in Macon, Georgia, which will be a nexus for an even more sinister plan, driven by the Ku Kluxes.
The protagonist of the story is a young Black woman named Maryse, who hunts the Ku Kluxes with a magical sword. She has a band of helpers, including wonderful secondary characters such as fellow monster-hunters Sadie – a military veteran and sharpshooter – and Chef – an explosives expert. Maryse is also assisted by paternal figure, kind but capable Uncle Will, and Nana Jean, a Gullah woman and maternal figure to the orphaned Maryse. The book also features the “Aunties”, omnipotent figures who represent the magical “good” side in the fight against the Ku Kluxes.
This book is bloody, frightening, and memorable in the way a Stephen King or Dean Koontz will leave the reader haunted by the eerie images given long after they put down the book, specifically because of the monsters that haunt “Ring Shout”. But what will truly resonate with many readers is how Clark handles the subject of hate in the novel. Hate, when it comes to racism, Clark seems to remind us, is a two-sided coin. The Blacks who are being hated, can easily, and righteously, be motivated to hate the Whites who commit atrocities against them. But the message by Clark appears to be that the same hate can be a weapon used against both sides, with the most damaging of results and implications for humankind. When we forget that, in the end, people of all races are truly one unified human race, and begin to turn against each other in an endless cycle of hate, only hate emerges victorious, and we humans are merely condemned to more suffering.
“Ring Shout” is only about 180 pages, so I gobbled it up in two nights of reading. But its lack of size does not mean it does not pack a gut-punch to the senses. The fight sequences are heart-stopping, the social commentary is unflinching, and the horror element of the book, as I noted, is downright creepy. It is a masterpiece, I loved it, and it was fun, even with its serious subject matter. The characters are complex and wonderful, the setting is rich and imaginative, and Clark writes with dark humour, elegance, and ease. He is a top-tier author in any genre, and I highly recommend “Ring Shout” as a fantastic read.
I cannot think of a better way to close out 2020’s reading with this marvellous, frightening, momentous, novella, which was very appropriate for the year that was. Ultimately, Clark, in his book set in 1922, leaves us with hope for the future, which is thankfully what we also seem to have for 2021. Here’s hoping for more peace, unification and reconciliation among races, political opponents, genders / non-binary, creeds, social groups, religions and faiths, etc. across the world in 2021, and beyond.
Check Out some of our other reviewsReview – The Final Girl Support Group by Grady Hendrix
Review -The Haunting of Tram Car 015 by P. Djèlí Clark
Review – Ring Shout by P. Djèlí Clark
P.L. Stuart
I’m an experienced writer, in that I’ve been writing stories all my life, yet never thought to publish them. I’ve written informally – short stories – to entertain friends and family, for community newspapers, volunteer organization magazines, and of course formal papers for University. Now, later in life, I’ve published what I believe is a great fantasy novel, and definitely worth reading, called A Drowned Kingdom. My target audience is those who enjoy “high fantasy”. A Drowned Kingdom is not “dark fantasy”. It’s written in a more idealized and grandiose style that I hope isn’t too preachy, and not too grim. Still, I’m hoping my book has appeal to those who don’t typically read this type of work – those who don’t read fantasy of any kind – because of the “every-person” themes permeating the novel: dysfunctional familial relationships, extramarital temptation, racism, misogyny, catastrophic loss, religion, crisis of faith, elitism, self-confidence, PTSD, and more.
Many of these themes I have either personal experience with, or have friends or family who have dealt with such issues. I’ve had a long professional law enforcement career, undergone traumatic events, yet been buoyed by family, faith, and positivity. I’m a racialized middle-aged man. I’ve seen a lot of life. Ultimately I want the planned series, of which A Drowned Kingdom will be the introduction, to be one of hope, and overcoming obstacles to succeed, which I believe is my story as well. My protagonist, Othrun, will undergo a journey where he’ll evolve, change, and shape a continent. He’s not always likeable. He’s a snob, bigot, is vain, yet struggles with confidence. He’s patriarchal. Overall, he’s flawed. But even ordinary flawed people can change. We’re all redeemable.
Ordinary people can make a difference, not just fictional Princes. I want that message to shine through my work.
WHERE TO FIND HIMTwitter – @plstuartwrites
Facebook – @plstuartwrites
If You Liked This - Please Share the LoveReview – Network Effect by Martha Wells

BOOK REVIEW
Network Effect by Martha wells December 15, 2021 10:00 am No Comments Facebook Twitter WordPress “Just remember you’re not alone here.” I never know what to say to that. I am actually alone in my head, and that’s where 90 plus percent of my problems are.”If there’s one thing in the world that will remain complex no matter what, it’s our identity. It can be fragmentary, just like it can be unambiguous. It can be consistent through time, just like it can evolve through experience. But what does it mean to be human? Can our identity be split between body and mind? Matter and consciousness? For one Murderbot, the question remains a mystery, a mystery that complicates its wish to live an uninterrupted and peaceful life filled with soap operas and good old quiet time.
At least with each adventure, it slowly learns the intricacies of being human and its own identity in the grand scheme of things. And so, rejoice, fellow Murderbot fans, as the fifth entry in writer Martha Wells’ franchise is the first full-length novel and, unfortunately for this sophisticated being, trouble continues to follow the humans around it and it will have to find new ways to protect them, wherever that leads it.
What is Network Effect about? Picking up where things were left off in Exit Strategy, Murderbot finally embraces peace as it’s welcomed amidst Dr. Mensah’s family and social circle, patiently waiting for its new mission. Not too long after acquainting her family, especially her daughter Amena, Murderbot is tasked to accompany a team on a survey expedition and nothing could’ve prepared them for the intergalactic kidnapping they are about to take part in.
Things couldn’t get more suspicious until they also run into an old associate of Murderbot that doesn’t seem to be responding as usual. While Murderbot would’ve loved to be spared all this trouble, it is forced to take action and to find a way to keep these silly humans alive while also lending a hand to someone from its past life, whether it wants to or not.
“I hate emotions.”
— Martha Wells
Was going full-length instead of a novella-length detrimental to this Murderbot’s legacy? Hell no. Anyone who has returned for more of its shenanigans will get just that, if not more of its snarky, cynical, and despairing self. Action-packed from start to finish, with a bit more world-building and character development, writer Martha Well fully explores her protagonist’s transformation and self-realization, allowing readers to further grasp its torment in regards to its resentment towards its ability to feel, like humans. To make matters even more terrifying for this Murderbot, its organic parts continue to irk it beyond understanding, making it want to kill itself when there’s anything remotely related to leaking and bleeding.
While this sentient murder machine initially programmed for destruction continues to discover the hidden component of its mind, and the complex nature of human beings, it is also confronted with the concept of relationship. Through its new bond with Dr. Mensah’s daughter, it uncovers the role of authority and motherhood.
Through its old bond with its past friend, they share an old couple’s dynamic, disguising their care for each other with grumpiness and constant remarks towards one another. These multiple relationships allow Murderbot to further complexify its own algorithms and better understand what it is becoming.
Of course, there’s no shortness of action to keep it engaged from start to finish. This is what allows its stories to be relentless, constantly entertaining, and engaging. Its complete thought processes are shared through its omniscient narration, spelling out all of the options at hand or the procedure that it will complete to achieve its goals.
This allows Murderbot to display its personality without any filter, sharing its despair whenever the situation derails. Whether its actions require a split second or a whole minute, it is through this intimate journaling of its adventure that readers continue to be attached to this Murderbot and its endearing yet cynical ways.
Please check Out Bookidote’s original review Here LashaanNetwork Effect is a thrilling and engaging full-length novel in the Murderbot saga that continues to explore one nonhuman’s very human experiences.

They call him Lashaan. A reader. A reviewer. A researcher. He’s a Ph.D. candidate in criminology and works full-time in a North American police organization. He has an eclectic reading taste but primarily focuses on science-fiction, fantasy, and graphic novels. He might seem busy by day, but he chases after stories, whatever form they are in, by night.
Check Out some of our other reviewsDecember 14, 2021
Review – Come Tumbling Down by Seanan McGuire



BOOK REVIEW
come tumbing down by Seanan McGuire December 14, 2021 10:00 am No Comments Facebook Twitter WordPressCome Tumbling Down, Seanan Mcguire’s fifth installment in the Wayward Children series, follows the adventures of the delightfully macabre and grisly Wolcott twins. Jack, the mad scientist, sufferer of OCD, and generally quirky misanthrope, and Jill, Jack’s twin, is cruel, beautiful, and wants nothing more than becoming a vampire. Jack returns to the school via a door made of lightning, literally carrying her love in her arms.
Jack is trapped in the body of Jill, and although Jill is virtually identical to Jack physically, Jill has done horrible things that have soiled her very essence. Jack is a sufferer of OCD and desperately needs her body back to salvage her sanity. She requests the aid of former classmates in a quest, disobeying the no quest rule, to get something of great her body back from Jill and save Jill, even if it means saving her from herself.
The Moors, the twin’s world they have come to love, is a place of darkness, monsters, mad science, and unforgiving fierce creatures. It is a place where gods are drowned, the moon has power, and lightning fuels the world, and it is a place where Jack feels most like herself and a home where she wants to stay.
But first, Jack and friends Kade, Sumi, Cristopher, and Cora must help Jack stay sane and save this dark and macabre world. But, who knows who the monsters are? The line between good and evil or Monster and savior can be blurry. It depends entirely on which side you are standing on.
“The world doesn’t stop spinning because you’re sad, and that’s good; if it did, people would go around breaking hearts like they were sheets of maple sugar, just to keep the world exactly where it is. They’d make it out like it was a good thing, a few crying children in exchange for a peace that never falters or fades. We can be sad and we can be hurt and we can even be killed, but the world keeps turning, and the things we’re supposed to do keep needing to be done.”
― Seanan McGuire, Come Tumbling Down
Again, McGuire delights and intrigues with the darkly rich world she has created in the Wayward Children series. Each installment has a message or idea that can be gleaned from the pages without preaching.
In this installment, McGuire touches on the sense of self and not being at home in one’s own body. Your body on the outside does not necessarily match who you are on the inside. It is an important message, and McGuire treats the subject delicately and with immense care.
McGuire has written another beautiful and meaningful story with Come Tumbling Down. It will delight and maybe shock a bit. And, when you get done reading it, you might think twice about who is a monster and who is not.
Check Out some of our other reviewsReview – The Final Girl Support Group by Grady Hendrix
December 13, 2021
2021 Hugo Art Review – Tommy Arnold











tommyarnoldinfo(at)gmail.com *
*Please note: Continuing to bring you the best work I’m capable of is my highest priority, and requires a lot of focused time in the studio. For that reason, I check email only once per week. I respond to all work inquiries, but unfortunately outside of that I have to respond rather selectively, if at all.
For the same reasons, I’m currently unable to sign Magic cards, remarque books, or do anything else through the mail. Thank you for your understanding!
About /Artist | science-fiction + fantasy.
Selected Clients /Ace Books · Del Rey Books · Grim Oak Press · Illumicrate · Orbit Books · Saga Press · Subterranean Press · Tor Books · Tor.com · Tor.com Publishing · Valve Software · Wizards of the Coast
Selected Press + Recognition /Communication Arts 8-Page Feature – July/August 2018
Juried Annuals
Illustrators – 57, 60, 62, 64
Spectrum – 23, 24, 25, 26, 27
Awards
Hugo Nominee, Best Professional Artist – 2020, 2021
Chesley Award Nominee – 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021
The Jack Gaughan Award from NESFA – 2016
Social Media /To make sure you stay informed of time-limited print releases, I suggest my Mailing List.
To access behind-the-scenes illustration content (my sketches, drawings, step-by-step process tutorials, and full-size PSDs of my artwork) visit me on Patreon.
For more information please visit Tommy Arnold’s website. All images are the property of Tommy Arnold.
Check Out Some of Our Other ArticlesReview -; Piranesi by Susanna Clarke
2021 Hugo Art Review – Rovina Cai
Review – Piranesi by Susanna Clarke

BOOK REVIEW
piranesi by Susanna Clarke December 13, 2021 10:00 am No Comments Facebook Twitter WordPress “The Beauty of the House is immeasurable; its Kindness infinite.”Bizarre and beautiful, Piranesi is unlike anything I’ve ever read. Author Susana Clarke crafts an unforgettable tale of solitude, loss, and finding oneself in unexpected ways. While it was difficult to predict where the story was going (or indeed, where it started), I was swept away by it, and happily wandered the corridors of this labyrinthine book.
Piranesi has always lived in the House. At least, he thinks so. In a flooded place filled with statues, birds, and the ever-present tides, he is mostly content. However, he is alone, aside from the Other. The Other is a mysterious figure whom Piranesi has agreed to look for a Great Knowledge with. What follows this simple premise is something new and entirely unique.
I can’t tell you much about the plot because I’m honestly still going through things in my mind. I would say that it’s convoluted, but the opposite is true. There are very few answers given throughout the book, making my imagination work overtime to fill in gaps in the narrative. Who is Piranesi? Who is the Other? What and where is the House?
As with the rest of Piranesi, the people are intentionally vague. A picture unfolds slowly, and little details are fleshed out, revealing amazingly deep characters. I honestly have no idea how Susanna Clarke was able to bring so much to life with so few words. The book is told almost entirely through journal entries, so physical descriptions of the characters were understandably few and far between. Normally that would really irk me, but I found that a character’s physical description matters much less in Piranesi than in other books I’ve read.
In a complete turnabout from the characters, there was plethora of descriptions surrounding the House. It was done so well that I’m still half-convinced I’ve been there. I could hear the birds’ wings. I could smell the salt water. I could feel bits of seaweed in between my toes. It was astounding. To read this book is to become fully immersed in a different, introspective world.
It is absolutely impossible for me to compare this book to any other, including the author’s previous book. It sands alone and, while it won’t be everyone’s cup of tea, I’m planning to revisit it soon. I highly recommend Piranesi to to readers who appreciate beautiful prose, who like open-ended books, and who want to be swept away.
Check Out some of our other reviewsReview – The Final Girl Support Group by Grady Hendrix
Jodie Crump
Jodie Crump is the creator of the Witty and Sarcastic Bookclub blog. She either lives in Florida with her husband and sons, or in a fantasy book-she’ll never tell which.
When she’s not reading, Jodie balances her time between homeschooling her hooligans, playing Dungeons and Dragons, and lamenting her inability to pronounce “lozenge”. Find her online at Witty and Sarcastic Book Club or Twitter
December 12, 2021
Review – Upright Women Wanted by Sarah Gailey




Sarah Gailey, Upright Women Wanted About
“Not the question Cye had asked—do you believe everything you read?—
but the question they hadn’t asked: why do you believe everything you read?”―
In Upright Women Wanted, award-winning author Sarah Gailey reinvents the pulp Western with an explicitly antifascist, near-future story of queer identity.
“That girl’s got more wrong notions than a barn owl’s got mean looks.”
Esther is a stowaway. She’s hidden herself away in the Librarian’s book wagon in an attempt to escape the marriage her father has arranged for her–a marriage to the man who was previously engaged to her best friend. Her best friend who she was in love with. Her best friend who was just executed for possession of resistance propaganda.
The future American Southwest is full of bandits, fascists, and queer librarian spies on horseback trying to do the right thing.
Upright Women Wanted by Sarah Gailey is a queer western with dystopian roots and a whole lot of moxie.
“She wanted that satisfaction. She wanted it for herself wanted it like a half-starved alley-rat watching that table through a window on a bellyaching night. She didn’t know how to get it—but she had a feeling that if she stuck with the Librarians for long enough, she might be able to figure it out.
How to feast instead of starving. How to like the person who she was instead of fighting it.”
In this future, the State, in combination with religious fanaticism, controls everything you listen to, what you eat, and who you love. Our protagonist, Esther, is the daughter of a high-ranking official who is fleeing her home. Esther’s life was thrown into turmoil when her best friend and lover was hung in front of the town for owning unapproved reading materials. She hides in the back of a wagon of a Librarian with hopes of joining their group. A Librarian travels and provides approved reading materials to the townsfolk of the various frontier communities in their area. Esther hopes for a better life and to be cured of her’ wrongness.”
What Esther finds is a group of people who are accepting and very much themselves. They are people who have to hide from the State but in secret live in queer relationships or live as non-binary individuals. Things that Esther did not think even possible.
“When there’s people around that we don’t trust, we let them think we’re the kinds of people who are allowed to exist. And the only kind of Librarian that’s allowed to exist is one who answers to she.”
Upright Women Wanted is a novella-length story, so author Sarah Gailey had to condense a lot of story, nuance, and world-building into few pages. For the most part, Gailey is very successful. They created an engaging story, highlighting critical societal problems that play a pivotal role in the plot and character development.
The story is too short to provide you with a backstory on the librarians, though, which I badly wanted considering the depth of character their few lines had and how impactful they are.
Bet and Leda are a queer couple in a solid long-term relationship, Cye is non-binary, and Amity rounds out the group but remains a mystery. Gailey could write a full-length novel in this world, and I am here for it. Esther is a good character also and is the most developed, but the other librarians stole the show.
The conflict of the story, aside from Esther’s initial reason for running, is the Damocles hovering over the group from being discovered. If they are found, the consequences will be dire. Instead, the group of librarians works to subvert the system from the inside. From there, the narrative plays out a bit with the Librarians dealing with skirmishes and problems in their line of work.
Upright Women Wanted is a clever book. Clever in wordplay, as in “what is an upright woman? But also creative in style and characterization. Gailey gets what it takes to create an engaging novella, just enough of a story bite that gets the readers hooked, and just enough back story and world-building to understand the setting. It is well done. I loved the characters, and it allows me to use the underutilized word like moxie. Them folks are full of all sorts of moxie, and I loved reading it.
Check Out My Other ReviewsReview – Battle Ground by Jim Butcher (Dresden Files #17)
Review – The Ikessar Falcon by K.S Villoso
If You Liked This - Please Share the Love Beth Tabler
Elizabeth Tabler runs Beforewegoblog and is constantly immersed in fantasy stories. She was at one time an architect but divides her time now between her family in Portland, Oregon, and as many book worlds as she can get her hands on. She is also a huge fan of Self Published fantasy and is on Team Qwillery as a judge for SPFBO5. You will find her with a coffee in one hand and her iPad in the other. Find her on: Goodreads / Instagram / Pinterest / Twitter
2021 Hugo Art Review – Rovina Cai

Rovina Cai is a freelance illustrator from Australia. “I love creating haunting, poetic imagery, and believe that one of the most valuable things an illustrator can offer is their unique and personal perspective. I have meticulously crafted my distinctive style to reflect this.
Clients I’ve had the pleasure of working with include; Tor.com, The Folio Society, DC Comics, Hasbro, and many more publishers. My work has been recognised by organisations like the Society of Illustrators, Spectrum Fantastic Art, and the Children’s Book Council of Australia.
I’m always up for a challenge, and enjoy collaborating on interesting projects no matter the application, so please do get in touch!(link)”







For more information please visit Rovina Cai’s website. All images are the property of Rovina Cai.
© 2021 All Rights Reserved.
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2021 Hugo Art Review – Galen Dara

Galen Dara Likes Monsters, mystics, and dead things and extremely ripe apricots. She won the 2016 World Fantasy Award for best Artist and has been nominated for aHugo Award, the Lotus award and the Chelsey Award.
Contact her at galendara@gmail.com
Please check out her website and find out more about them.









For more information please visit Galen Dara’s website. All images are the property of Galen Dara.
Check Out Some of Our other PagesReview of;Blue Is the Warmest by Julie Maroh, Ivanka Hahnenberger (Translator)
Hugo Art Review – Alyssa Winans
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