<rss version="2.0">
    <channel>
        <title>
            <![CDATA[ Frontlist | All the new books dropping in February to add to your to-read list ]]>
        </title>
        <link>
            <![CDATA[ https://www.frontlist.in/%20https://www.frontlist.in/public/index.php/all-the-new-books-dropping-in-february-to-add-to-your-to-read-list ]]>
        </link>
        <description>
            <![CDATA[ There's something magical about curling up with a book while feeling cozy under a blanket or, perhaps, while indulging in a nice cup of red wine in a bathtub—which is why new book releases excite us so much.

<strong>RECOMMENDED: Spend the night inside this new 7-Eleven, eat endless snacks and play video games</strong>
<div id=inline-placement>
<div class=teads-placement></div>
</div>
From Ethan Hawke's first new novel in 20 years to a debut that focuses on the dawn of a Donald Trump presidency, February's releases are sure to delight and entertain.

Below, find the 13 titles we're most excited to read next month.
<h4><em>Milk Fed</em> by Melissa Broder (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_15c496f1-510b-ded7-8a3b-f2a0a7bd2f3d class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=15c496f1-510b-ded7-8a3b-f2a0a7bd2f3d class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741702/image.jpg alt=Milk Fed by Melissa Broder data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741702/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Scribner data-width-class= data-image-id=105741702 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Scribner</figcaption></figure>
Rachel is a 24-year-old stand-up comedian in Los Angeles dealing with an eating disorder and a not-so-great relationship with her mother. After her therapist recommends she detoxes from her mother for 90 days, Rachel falls for Miriam, a Jew whose life is very different from her own.
<h4><em>Mike Nichols: A Life</em> by Mark Harris (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_b3eb2d09-0da0-5261-2347-bdc5b95e42f9 class=picture blog non-editable post__image data-wp-editing=1><img id=b3eb2d09-0da0-5261-2347-bdc5b95e42f9 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741753/image.jpg alt=Mike Nichols: A Life by Mark Harris data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741753/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Penguin Press data-width-class= data-image-id=105741753 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Penguin Press</figcaption></figure>
This is the most exhaustive biography of the famous director, writer and improv performer to date. Harris interviews over 200 people to get to the heart of what Nichols' life is all about. Expect the likes of Tom Hanks, Elaine May, Stephen Sondheim, Meryl Streep and Glenn Close to be quoted all throughout the work of non-fiction.
<h4><em>The Three Mothers: How the Mothers of Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, and James Baldwin Shaped a Nation</em> by Anna Malaika Tubbs (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_aeafb9ae-6bfd-dcf7-a6ab-77d10a5abb0f class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=aeafb9ae-6bfd-dcf7-a6ab-77d10a5abb0f class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741751/image.jpg alt=The Three Mothers: How the Mothers of Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, and James Baldwin Shaped a Nation by Anna Malaika Tubbs data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741751/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Flatiron Books data-width-class= data-image-id=105741751 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Flatiron Books</figcaption></figure>
Celebrate Black motherhood on Black History Month by delving into the untold stories of Berdis Baldwin, Louise Little and Alberta King. How did these wonderful women raise such extraordinary sons?
<h4><em>Animal, Vegetable, Junk: A history of Food from Sustainable to Suicidal</em> by Mark Bittman (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_d36c34f7-7a0b-468d-1faf-f16ce4e34231 class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=d36c34f7-7a0b-468d-1faf-f16ce4e34231 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741752/image.jpg alt=Animal, Vegetable, Junk: A history of Food from Sustainable to Suicidal by Mark Bittman data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741752/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt data-width-class= data-image-id=105741752 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt</figcaption></figure>
Food guru Bittman delves into the social history of food, arguing that it's not yet too late for us to change our ways and mitigate the impact we've had as humans on the world as a whole.
<h4><em>My Year Abroad</em> by Chang-Rae Lee (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_de4aa4e5-3194-6275-020c-4644445d485f class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=de4aa4e5-3194-6275-020c-4644445d485f class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741705/image.jpg alt=My Year Abroad by Chang-Rae Lee data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741705/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Riverhead Books  data-width-class= data-image-id=105741705 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Riverhead Books</figcaption></figure>
This is the story of Tiller, an average American college student, and Pong Lou, an intriguing Chinese American entrepreneur. The duo travels across Asia together as Tiller learns Pong's creative and extreme ways.
<h4><em>100 Boyfriends</em> by Brontez Purnell (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_db3137ed-6ede-e8a6-a69a-44344f840045 class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=db3137ed-6ede-e8a6-a69a-44344f840045 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741708/image.jpg alt=100 Boyfriends by Brontez Purnell data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741708/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: MCD x FSG Originals data-width-class= data-image-id=105741708 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: MCD x FSG Originals</figcaption></figure>
This collection of short stories by the renowned Oakland-based writer, musician, director and dancer will have you laugh, cry and think about life all in a single sitting.
<h4><em>Fake Accounts </em>by Lauren Oyler (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_3512432c-94ad-ff23-54a0-482a019fde39 class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=3512432c-94ad-ff23-54a0-482a019fde39 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741713/image.jpg alt=Fake Accounts by Lauren Oyler data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741713/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Catapult data-width-class= data-image-id=105741713 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Catapult</figcaption></figure>
This one might hit close to home: The debut novel tells the story of a woman who discovers that her boyfriend is a pretty famous conspiracy theorist on Instagram right at the dawn of Donald Trump presidency.
<h4><em>A Bright Ray of Darkness</em> by Ethan Hawke (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_9d211c32-104c-1549-3516-088255264797 class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=9d211c32-104c-1549-3516-088255264797 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741721/image.jpg alt=A Bright Ray of Darkness by Ethan Hawke data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741721/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Knopf data-width-class= data-image-id=105741721 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Knopf</figcaption></figure>
This is the actor's first new novel in two decades and it was certainly worth the wait. Hawke writes about a young actor who is dealing with a slew of personal crises while starring as Hotspur in a production of <em>Henry IV</em>.
<h4><em>The Removed</em> by Brandon Hobson (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_188b6a32-5909-5613-8e55-ce89b6b1b9e0 class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=188b6a32-5909-5613-8e55-ce89b6b1b9e0 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741725/image.jpg alt=The Removed by Brandon Hobson data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741725/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Ecco data-width-class= data-image-id=105741725 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Ecco</figcaption></figure>
This thrilling mystery novel focuses on the Cherokee community, specifically diving into familial trauma. Fifteen years after losing a son to police violence, a matriarch tries to pull her kin together—but unexpected events take hold.
<h4><em>Super Host</em> by Kate Russo (drops February 9)</h4>
<figure id=image_da22f51d-66d0-d4d5-decf-d0832fb77c96 class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=da22f51d-66d0-d4d5-decf-d0832fb77c96 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741755/image.jpg alt=Super Host by Kate Russo data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741755/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: G.P. Putnam's Sons data-width-class= data-image-id=105741755 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: G.P. Putnam's Sons</figcaption></figure>
This debut novel is about... Airbnb. Bennett Driscoll is an artist in his mid-50s who decides to move into the studio in the back of his house and list the rest of the property on AirBed (yes, that would be a fictional Airbnb). The guests that take up residence by him end up actually changing his life.
<h4><em>No One is Talking About This</em> by Patricia Lockwood (drops February 16)</h4>
<figure id=image_d5384178-ac0e-cde7-c0aa-8213bcb75ca8 class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=d5384178-ac0e-cde7-c0aa-8213bcb75ca8 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741718/image.jpg alt=No One is Talking About This by Patricia Lockwood data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741718/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Riverhead Books  data-width-class= data-image-id=105741718 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Riverhead Books</figcaption></figure>
Anything by the poet and critic Lockwood is worth a read, but this is her very first novel, which adds an aura of urgency to the entire endeavor. The book explores the life of a woman that catapults to fame via social media but has a hard time navigating her virtual and real-life existences.
<h4><em>The Mayor of Leipzig</em> by Rachel Kushner (drops February 23)</h4>
<figure id=image_a116b2d3-efff-c2b4-12bc-ba39245d0618 class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=a116b2d3-efff-c2b4-12bc-ba39245d0618 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741758/image.jpg alt=The Mayor of Leipzig by Rachel Kushner data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741758/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Karma Books, New York data-width-class= data-image-id=105741758 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Karma Books, New York</figcaption></figure>
In her latest, Kushner—who rose to fame following the publication of <em>The Flamethrowers</em> and <em>The Mars Room</em>—focuses on an unnamed artist who discusses her travels from New York City to Cologne and Leipzig.
<h4><em>The Blizzard Party by Jack Livings</em> (drops February 23)</h4>
<figure id=image_7532f3fe-9610-3a2a-a411-4823925e178b class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=7532f3fe-9610-3a2a-a411-4823925e178b class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741766/image.jpg alt=The Blizzard Party by Jack Livings data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741766/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Farrar, Straus and Giroux data-width-class= data-image-id=105741766 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Farrar, Straus and Giroux</figcaption></figure>
Here's the premise: on February 6, 1978, a nor'easter hits New York City and other odd events take over the town, including a pre-planned fake medical emergency that leads to a Hudson River suicide. A gripping novel indeed.

<em>Source: Timeout</em> ]]>
        </description>
        <language>en</language>
        <pubDate>Wed, 01 27, 2021 10:04 am</pubDate>
        <item>
            <title>
                <![CDATA[ Frontlist | All the new books dropping in February to add to your to-read list ]]>
            </title>
            <link><![CDATA[ https://www.frontlist.in/%20https://www.frontlist.in/public/index.php/all-the-new-books-dropping-in-february-to-add-to-your-to-read-list ]]></link>
            <description>
                <![CDATA[ There's something magical about curling up with a book while feeling cozy under a blanket or, perhaps, while indulging in a nice cup of red wine in a bathtub—which is why new book releases excite us so much.

<strong>RECOMMENDED: Spend the night inside this new 7-Eleven, eat endless snacks and play video games</strong>
<div id=inline-placement>
<div class=teads-placement></div>
</div>
From Ethan Hawke's first new novel in 20 years to a debut that focuses on the dawn of a Donald Trump presidency, February's releases are sure to delight and entertain.

Below, find the 13 titles we're most excited to read next month.
<h4><em>Milk Fed</em> by Melissa Broder (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_15c496f1-510b-ded7-8a3b-f2a0a7bd2f3d class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=15c496f1-510b-ded7-8a3b-f2a0a7bd2f3d class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741702/image.jpg alt=Milk Fed by Melissa Broder data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741702/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Scribner data-width-class= data-image-id=105741702 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Scribner</figcaption></figure>
Rachel is a 24-year-old stand-up comedian in Los Angeles dealing with an eating disorder and a not-so-great relationship with her mother. After her therapist recommends she detoxes from her mother for 90 days, Rachel falls for Miriam, a Jew whose life is very different from her own.
<h4><em>Mike Nichols: A Life</em> by Mark Harris (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_b3eb2d09-0da0-5261-2347-bdc5b95e42f9 class=picture blog non-editable post__image data-wp-editing=1><img id=b3eb2d09-0da0-5261-2347-bdc5b95e42f9 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741753/image.jpg alt=Mike Nichols: A Life by Mark Harris data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741753/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Penguin Press data-width-class= data-image-id=105741753 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Penguin Press</figcaption></figure>
This is the most exhaustive biography of the famous director, writer and improv performer to date. Harris interviews over 200 people to get to the heart of what Nichols' life is all about. Expect the likes of Tom Hanks, Elaine May, Stephen Sondheim, Meryl Streep and Glenn Close to be quoted all throughout the work of non-fiction.
<h4><em>The Three Mothers: How the Mothers of Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, and James Baldwin Shaped a Nation</em> by Anna Malaika Tubbs (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_aeafb9ae-6bfd-dcf7-a6ab-77d10a5abb0f class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=aeafb9ae-6bfd-dcf7-a6ab-77d10a5abb0f class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741751/image.jpg alt=The Three Mothers: How the Mothers of Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, and James Baldwin Shaped a Nation by Anna Malaika Tubbs data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741751/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Flatiron Books data-width-class= data-image-id=105741751 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Flatiron Books</figcaption></figure>
Celebrate Black motherhood on Black History Month by delving into the untold stories of Berdis Baldwin, Louise Little and Alberta King. How did these wonderful women raise such extraordinary sons?
<h4><em>Animal, Vegetable, Junk: A history of Food from Sustainable to Suicidal</em> by Mark Bittman (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_d36c34f7-7a0b-468d-1faf-f16ce4e34231 class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=d36c34f7-7a0b-468d-1faf-f16ce4e34231 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741752/image.jpg alt=Animal, Vegetable, Junk: A history of Food from Sustainable to Suicidal by Mark Bittman data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741752/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt data-width-class= data-image-id=105741752 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt</figcaption></figure>
Food guru Bittman delves into the social history of food, arguing that it's not yet too late for us to change our ways and mitigate the impact we've had as humans on the world as a whole.
<h4><em>My Year Abroad</em> by Chang-Rae Lee (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_de4aa4e5-3194-6275-020c-4644445d485f class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=de4aa4e5-3194-6275-020c-4644445d485f class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741705/image.jpg alt=My Year Abroad by Chang-Rae Lee data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741705/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Riverhead Books  data-width-class= data-image-id=105741705 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Riverhead Books</figcaption></figure>
This is the story of Tiller, an average American college student, and Pong Lou, an intriguing Chinese American entrepreneur. The duo travels across Asia together as Tiller learns Pong's creative and extreme ways.
<h4><em>100 Boyfriends</em> by Brontez Purnell (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_db3137ed-6ede-e8a6-a69a-44344f840045 class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=db3137ed-6ede-e8a6-a69a-44344f840045 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741708/image.jpg alt=100 Boyfriends by Brontez Purnell data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741708/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: MCD x FSG Originals data-width-class= data-image-id=105741708 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: MCD x FSG Originals</figcaption></figure>
This collection of short stories by the renowned Oakland-based writer, musician, director and dancer will have you laugh, cry and think about life all in a single sitting.
<h4><em>Fake Accounts </em>by Lauren Oyler (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_3512432c-94ad-ff23-54a0-482a019fde39 class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=3512432c-94ad-ff23-54a0-482a019fde39 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741713/image.jpg alt=Fake Accounts by Lauren Oyler data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741713/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Catapult data-width-class= data-image-id=105741713 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Catapult</figcaption></figure>
This one might hit close to home: The debut novel tells the story of a woman who discovers that her boyfriend is a pretty famous conspiracy theorist on Instagram right at the dawn of Donald Trump presidency.
<h4><em>A Bright Ray of Darkness</em> by Ethan Hawke (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_9d211c32-104c-1549-3516-088255264797 class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=9d211c32-104c-1549-3516-088255264797 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741721/image.jpg alt=A Bright Ray of Darkness by Ethan Hawke data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741721/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Knopf data-width-class= data-image-id=105741721 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Knopf</figcaption></figure>
This is the actor's first new novel in two decades and it was certainly worth the wait. Hawke writes about a young actor who is dealing with a slew of personal crises while starring as Hotspur in a production of <em>Henry IV</em>.
<h4><em>The Removed</em> by Brandon Hobson (drops February 2)</h4>
<figure id=image_188b6a32-5909-5613-8e55-ce89b6b1b9e0 class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=188b6a32-5909-5613-8e55-ce89b6b1b9e0 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741725/image.jpg alt=The Removed by Brandon Hobson data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741725/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Ecco data-width-class= data-image-id=105741725 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Ecco</figcaption></figure>
This thrilling mystery novel focuses on the Cherokee community, specifically diving into familial trauma. Fifteen years after losing a son to police violence, a matriarch tries to pull her kin together—but unexpected events take hold.
<h4><em>Super Host</em> by Kate Russo (drops February 9)</h4>
<figure id=image_da22f51d-66d0-d4d5-decf-d0832fb77c96 class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=da22f51d-66d0-d4d5-decf-d0832fb77c96 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741755/image.jpg alt=Super Host by Kate Russo data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741755/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: G.P. Putnam's Sons data-width-class= data-image-id=105741755 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: G.P. Putnam's Sons</figcaption></figure>
This debut novel is about... Airbnb. Bennett Driscoll is an artist in his mid-50s who decides to move into the studio in the back of his house and list the rest of the property on AirBed (yes, that would be a fictional Airbnb). The guests that take up residence by him end up actually changing his life.
<h4><em>No One is Talking About This</em> by Patricia Lockwood (drops February 16)</h4>
<figure id=image_d5384178-ac0e-cde7-c0aa-8213bcb75ca8 class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=d5384178-ac0e-cde7-c0aa-8213bcb75ca8 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741718/image.jpg alt=No One is Talking About This by Patricia Lockwood data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741718/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Riverhead Books  data-width-class= data-image-id=105741718 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Riverhead Books</figcaption></figure>
Anything by the poet and critic Lockwood is worth a read, but this is her very first novel, which adds an aura of urgency to the entire endeavor. The book explores the life of a woman that catapults to fame via social media but has a hard time navigating her virtual and real-life existences.
<h4><em>The Mayor of Leipzig</em> by Rachel Kushner (drops February 23)</h4>
<figure id=image_a116b2d3-efff-c2b4-12bc-ba39245d0618 class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=a116b2d3-efff-c2b4-12bc-ba39245d0618 class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741758/image.jpg alt=The Mayor of Leipzig by Rachel Kushner data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741758/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Karma Books, New York data-width-class= data-image-id=105741758 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Karma Books, New York</figcaption></figure>
In her latest, Kushner—who rose to fame following the publication of <em>The Flamethrowers</em> and <em>The Mars Room</em>—focuses on an unnamed artist who discusses her travels from New York City to Cologne and Leipzig.
<h4><em>The Blizzard Party by Jack Livings</em> (drops February 23)</h4>
<figure id=image_7532f3fe-9610-3a2a-a411-4823925e178b class=picture blog non-editable post__image><img id=7532f3fe-9610-3a2a-a411-4823925e178b class=photo inline lazyloaded src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741766/image.jpg alt=The Blizzard Party by Jack Livings data-src=https://media.timeout.com/images/105741766/image.jpg data-caption= data-credit=Photograph: Farrar, Straus and Giroux data-width-class= data-image-id=105741766 /><figcaption class=image__caption>Photograph: Farrar, Straus and Giroux</figcaption></figure>
Here's the premise: on February 6, 1978, a nor'easter hits New York City and other odd events take over the town, including a pre-planned fake medical emergency that leads to a Hudson River suicide. A gripping novel indeed.

<em>Source: Timeout</em> ]]>
            </description>
            <category>Book of the Week</category>
            <author>
                <![CDATA[ Frontlist ]]>
            </author>
            <guid>2</guid>
            <pubDate>Wed, 01 27, 2021 10:04 am</pubDate>
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