Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Moranthology
Moranthology
Moranthology
Ebook324 pages5 hours

Moranthology

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

The follow up to her bestselling breakout hit How to Be a Woman, Moranthology is a hilarious, insightful collection of Moran’s London Times columns that confirms her status as “the UK’s answer to Tina Fey, Chelsea Handler, and Lena Dunham all rolled into one.” (Marie Claire)

Possibly the only drawback about the bestselling How to Be a Woman was that its author, Caitlin Moran, was limited to pretty much one subject: being a woman. Moranthology is proof that Caitlin can actually be “quite chatty” about many other things, including cultural, social and political issues that are usually the province of learned professors, or hot-shot wonks—and not of a woman who once, as an experiment, put a wasp in a jar, and got it stoned.

Here you’ll find Caitlin ruminating on—and sometimes interviewing—subjects as varied as caffeine, Keith Richards, Ghostbusters, Twitter, the welfare state, the royal wedding, Lady Gaga, and her own mortality, to name just a few. With her “brilliant, original voice” (Publishers Weekly), Caitlin brings insight and humor to everything she writes.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateNov 6, 2012
ISBN9780062258526
Author

Caitlin Moran

Caitlin Moran’s debut book, How to Be a Woman, was an instant New York Times bestseller, with more than one million copies distributed worldwide. Her first novel, How to Build a Girl, received widespread acclaim, and she adapted it into a major motion picture starring Beanie Feldstein and Emma Thompson. As a twice-weekly columnist at The Times of London, Moran has won Columnist of the Year seven times. She lives in London.

Read more from Caitlin Moran

Related to Moranthology

Related ebooks

Humor & Satire For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Moranthology

Rating: 3.839572139037433 out of 5 stars
4/5

187 ratings13 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is what you WANT a book of newspaper column pieces to be, if you want your day brightened. If you want to laugh hollowly at the world, binge on Charlie Brooker. If you want to laugh joyfully towards the world, read this.The funny bits are really funny. The sad and poignant bits are really sad and poignant (and any writer mostly known for the funny bits has to include some sad and poignant bits as a way for them to say “Look – despite the photo on the back cover, I am not JUST a gurning clown – I can see the shit in the world and care about it too”). There's that enjoyable mixture of articles about home life that make you go, “Ah, she's just like me, really; I thought that was just me; thank goodness there's someone else like that, means it isn't weird,” and other ones that make you go, “Christ, what is she LIKE?” just to hammer home the ought-to-be-obvious-but-we-tend-to-forget point that we are all the same and we are all different and it's FINE.I do like a writer who has a way with words (after all, what are you doing being a writer if you DON'T have a way with words?), and anyone who forces you to put the book down until you have stopped laughing at a list of made-up horrible names for fish is all right by me.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Not quite as bombastic as 'How to be a Woman' (I think because this book is less a call to action than it is a picture of Moran's fuller character), but no less entertaining. The pieces range from poverty to Sherlock (lots of Sherlock) to the Royal Wedding to travel (or lack of travel). If you enjoy someone presenting you with her opinions in a conversational style, you'll probably like this book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    In the same tradition as Stephen Fry's 'Paperwieght' and dare I say it, just as utterly delightful. This is the delicious Moran, in all her colour, idealism and swashbuckling humour, served up in crisp, snacky snippets for the reader to dip into and savour whenever they please. A deeply educated soul, Caitlin Moran is an uplifting conversation and freindly leg-up for the mind. I am grateful, hooked and practically cheering with pom-poms for this gorgeous woman.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Brilliant in all possible ways! I laughed so loudly and so often that I felt compelled to turn music on so as not to alarm my landlord and his kids with my barks and snorts of uncontrollable mirth. This is a collection of some of Caitlin Moran's newspaper articles for North American readers desperate for more after reading her fabulous debut book How to Be a Woman. I can only hope, along with her legions of fans, that they publish another collection like this as soon as possible. Someone this pithy, incisive and incredibly funny should be available for everyone to read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I discovered Caitlin Moran in 2000, the year I moved to England for the first time and went a little wild with all the newspapers. She recently wrote a funny book about feminism and that was enough to get a collection of her newspaper columns published as Moranthology. It's a solid collection of her writing, although I thought it was a mistake to leave out her review of Wife Swap, and there were a few longer pieces included only because the person she interviewed and wrote about was really, really famous. Caitlin Moran is very funny. She's also opinionated, a feminist, a geek and really very funny. She writes about what she calls "the bangingness of Sherlock," her unconventional childhood as a one of eight children being home schooled by "the only hippies in Wolverhampton," and binge drinking. She gets Keith Richards to talk like a pirate and visits the set of Doctor Who.In this feature, the BBC let me go around the Doctor Who studios, where I found the Face of Boe in a warehouse and sat on him. For two years, a picture of me doing so was the screensaver on my laptop. There is no doubt in my mind that, when I'm dying, and my life flashes before my eyes, that particular picture will get a longer slot than many other pivotal life moments, with a caption saying "WINNING!" flashing over it.She also speaks seriously about the importance of libraries and what it was like being raised on benefits. These columns make for every bit as compelling reading as her account of her teenage job deliberation, which had her debating being a check-out clerk at the grocery story, a prostitute or a writer. I'm glad she chose writer, although she would have made being stuck working the late shift at the supermarket a lot of fun.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I loved this book...found it so hard to put down, really intelligent and funny with a nice dose of feminism. Great stories I just had to read aloud to my husband. Lots of great Britcom in its subtleties. Really liked this book.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    After her tremendously successful book How To Be a Woman, Caitlin Moran is back with a collection of columns she's written for The Times Magazine in her appropriately named anthology Moranthology. Wading through a mishmash of different topics, mostly in the realms of popular culture, she also broaches more serious topics, such as living on benefits, or, my personal favorites, allows up-close-and-personal insights into her life, including how she got her trademark grey hair strand. Topics may vary, some columns being more poignant than others, ranging from grave to funny, and always with a tendency of bordering on the vulgar, Moran's witty and eloquent writing style is definitely the red thread in this book.Little did I know this is a collection of older work and the only new additions are the short introductions to each column. Of course this presented the perfect opportunity to simply get to know her work better. Unfortunately though this book shares the fate of many anthologies - the likelihood that you will end up loving a handful of articles while the rest is just average padding between the covers, a padding that, in my case, consisted of an abundance of pieces about British TV series.Seeing how my expectations were high after her previous book, this collection was admittedly a bit of a let-down for me. However, this is simply a matter of personal preferences and should not discourage anyone giving this book a try.In short: A mildly entertaining anthology in typical Moran-style!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    (8 March 2014, charity shop)A collection of Moran’s newspaper columns which was clearly put out to build on the success of her “How to be a Woman” but was to me actually a more enjoyable and engaging read. When I reviewed the earlier book back in 2011, I wasn’t sure what I thought of it, and I’m left with a memory of lots of rude bits (or reclaiming of woman’s right to talk about whatever she wants to talk about) and a bit of missing out on the idea that other people of the same age could have similar ideas. This one is more inclusive, more conspiratorial, even, and more enjoyable for that.There’s a good mix of the silly (and very funny), the (very) serious (and on occasion tear-inducing), the very perceptive but not nasty (for example on the Royal Wedding and the tweets around it) and, probably her best pieces, those that draw on her childhood experiences of poverty and draw parallels with events, policies and perceptions that are happening right now. Those are the most powerful pieces in the book, and really have something important to say.With additional framing comments which fill in the context and in particular delightfully describe her early attempts at journalism, all is well-written and highly competent, with probably just the appropriate amount of the read-out-loud hilarious.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Let’s let my new BFF Caitlin Moran describe what this book is about for you:In HOW TO BE A WOMAN, I was limited to a single topic: women. Their hair, their shoes and their crushes on Aslan from The Lion, The Witch & The Wardrobe (which I KNOW to be universal). However! In my new book MORANTHOLOGY – as the title suggests – I am set free to tackle THE REST OF THE WORLD: Ghostbusters, Twitter, caffeine, panic attacks, Michael Jackson’s memorial service, being a middle-class marijuana addict, Doctor Who, binge-drinking, Downton Abbey, pandas, my own tragically early death, and my repeated failure to get anyone to adopt the nickname I have chosen for myself: ‘Puffin’. I go to a sex-club with Lady Gaga, cry on Paul McCartney’s guitar, get drunk with Kylie, appear on Richard & Judy as a gnome, climb into the TARDIS, sniff Sherlock Holmes’s pillows at 221b Baker Street, write Amy Winehouse’s obituary, turn up late to Downing Street for Gordon Brown, and am rudely snubbed at a garden party by David Cameron –although that’s probably because I called him ‘A C3PO made of ham’. Fair enough. And, in my spare time – between hangovers – I rant about the welfare state, library closures and poverty; like a shit Dickens or Orwell, but with tits.I think that is enough to let you decide if this book is for you. It was for me. My only complaint is that she must be limited in how much she can write in her columns because I wanted MORE MORE MORE!

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Pop culture has never been a strong suit for me so perhaps it isn't surprising that I hadn't heard of British columnist Caitlin Moran aside from as the author of the successful How to Be a Woman. I haven't read her first, much-lauded collection but was still interested in reading this second collection of her previously published columns covering a wide variety of topics from pop culture to current events to politics. Tying each of the columns together, Moran has added brief introductory blurbs before each of them ranging from personal tidbits about herself and her relationship with her husband to reactions to the pieces to why she's chosen and arranged the pieces the way she has.Moran is opinionated, funny, and snarky and her views are on full display in these pieces. There are interviews with famous musicians, her take on current television shows, her obsession with certain stars and her disinterest in others, columns on her own childhood growing up poor and on her own children, social ills, and so much more. While even I, under my pop culture free rock, recognize some of what she writes about, there are at least an equal number of topics with which I am unfamiliar and that certainly made the reading about Moran's take on those topics less interesting than I imagine it is when you are au fait with the topics. The writing itself is generally good even though the essays themselves are a tad patchy in terms of depth, humor, and interest. UK pop culture fans will probably delight in the entire collection and others can appreciate the occasional earned laughs.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The Good Stuff Call me Caitlin we would sooo get along - even better I say we do a Girls Night Out with Mindy Kaling, Tina Fey, Jenny Lawson, you and me. It would be - to quotes m 4 yr old - EPIC! Laugh out loud funny yet touching and honest Vicki told me I would love it and she was right -- thanks for the chat about this author that night at Lemony Snickett The night time conversations between Caitlin and her hubby are hilarious The MTV Hoes piece is right on - nicely written Caitlin The girl is real people - she says it like it is The women has mad love for Libraries - that is all you need to know - anyone who loves libraries this much has to be truly awesome That's it I have to watch Doctor Who and Sherlock Self deprecating - you know I love that in a personThe Not So Good Stuff Do you know how hard it was to choose only 3 quotes It ended Dammit I have enough books to read, now I have to buy "How to be a Woman"Favorite Quotes/Passages"However many terrible, rankling, peeve-inducing things may occur, there are always libraries.""But one of the things I most love about this country is that we do not, will not, stare at each other. The British will not spend all day gawking at each other in the drizzle, however odd we may look. The entire cast of Priscilla, Queen of the Dessert could roll into Starbucks, with candy-colored cockatiels flying out of their hair, and -after a brief glance upwards- everyone would studiously go back to reading their papers, as if the door had merely been blown open by the wind. In a cramped, crowded nation, we know the essence of politeness is ignoring pretty much everyone around us.""A library in the middle of a community is a cross between an emergency exit, a life raft and a festival. They are cathedrals of the mind; hospitals of the soul; theme parks of the imagination. On a cold, rainy island, they are the only sheltered public spaces where you are not a consumer, but a citizen instead. A human with a brain and a heart and a desire to be uplifted, rather than a consumer with a credit card and an inchoate "need" for "stuff""Who Should/Shouldn't Read If you don't like this I don't think we could be friends It's on my staff picks people - you know you have to read it4.5 Dewey'sI received from HarperCollins Canada in exchange for an honest review - thanks Shannon!!!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Caitlin Moran had a bestselling book, How To Be A Woman, a book that humorously and honestly celebrates being a woman and a feminist. That book's success led to another book, Moranthology, a compilation of Moran's columns from the Times of London.I have not yet read How To Be A Woman, but it is on my TBR list. As someone who used to write a weekly column on food and family, (and a feminist), I was really looking forward to this new book.Moran writes mostly about entertainment, and anyone who is a big fan of the British TV shows Dr. Who and Sherlock will surely enjoy her many columns on these iconic shows. She even gets a backstage visit to Dr. Who, and her analysis of this show has made me put the show in my NetFlix queue.She is not such a fan of Downton Abbey, which has become an American sensation. She has however become friendly with Dan Stevens, who plays handsome heir Matthew Crawley on Downton, and tells a very funny story about being with him at a bar in New York City. (Stevens is appearing on Broadway in The Heiress, and he is wonderful in it; if you get a chance to see that show, I recommend it.)My favorite entertainment story is her interview with Sir Paul McCartney. She missed her flight to his concert in Milan, but managed to salvage the interview. She thought she had asked him a brilliant question- "If you had a terrible accident and your face got all smashed up-heaven forbid, obviously- would you rebuild it to look like yourself, or would you change it, so you could finally be anonymous again?"She thought it was good question, touching "on fame, beauty, identity, ego and the idea of living two lives in one lifetime." He thought it was a terrible question.Moran shares some stories about her life, and the way she tortures her poor husband by waking him in the middle of the night to ask such questions as "what is the first thing you think of when you think of me?" is hilariously egotistical. One time he finally explodes at her, telling her that she is a slob (he is neat) and sharing a list of things that she has done to prove his point. (Some of them are kinda gross, I'll give him that.)If you liked How To Be A Woman, you will enjoy reading more of Moran's writings in this book. She is a very good writer, and like any good columnist (she won Columnist of the Year from the British Press) she is is economic with her words, cutting to the chase whilst getting to the (often funny) point.A quote from Marie Claire on the cover of the book compares her to "Tina Fey, Chelsea Handler, and Lena Dunham, all rolled into one", and I think that aptly describes Caitlin Moran. Humorous Anglophile feminists, this book is for you.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    As far as I'm concerned, Caitlin Moran is a genius. Her style is chaotic and chatty on the surface, and she seems to have real problems understanding the semicolon, but under the bonnet every sentence is assembled with such beautiful precision. Her phrases are spring-loaded to take you by surprise. And I suppose, because I also grew up in 80s-90s Britain, there is also something incredibly appealing about her shared pool of references.‘She has no identity, save that which advertisers sell her,’ I continue, piously, castigating the whole advertising industry; wholly ignoring the fact that I love the song from the Bran Flakes advert (‘They're tasty / Tasty / Very very tasty / They're very tasty!’) and am quite emotionally invested in the romantic plotline of the Gold Blend couple.One way of reviewing the book would be simply to quote an endless succession of gorgeous lines like this. An X-Factor contestant is described as having ‘a voice like a goose being kicked down a slide’. A hilarious discussion of why fish are so disgusting leads her to remark, ‘There's things down there that make Picasso look like a photo-realist, trying to cheer up a sad child.’ (Most writers would have stopped at ‘photo-realist’. But it's that extra push that turns the grin into a giggle.) Her ability to craft a phrase made me think about Charlie Brooker, whose lines are cleverer that Caitlin's, but also meaner – and at the end of the day, though her prose style seems more naïve, she's the one that gives me the most out-loud laughs.A very welcome collection for anyone like me that can't quite justify subscribing to The Times just to keep up with her columns.

Book preview

Moranthology - Caitlin Moran

͖bbook_preview_excerpt.html|˒F寀&e-ܦdHQ,5IqDiZF ZGhqzd>d9 TߙըۤL<"<܏D|{ѷvCl?b.bŕ/~*l=ݣwҭ/]ԷXp{_] vS8pEmMWu -OxULJ?wx!6~(1־*vӻ߆8 x/N9hcJW& cڅqzCq9狹fcqөpb0!5 䇕5\Gq$RB f sE XOM]ľNq<L{5?TU=qm1Szvj)!yonk+i-nk / x"^ʛ6a{)F~ͥd6"obKE1l̘.8 T꼟 7mk8RJh=I8AI>T#tCA xʝ x?>6ΕzJ>b`M<#kWUx lr}Q.1_~GYoFq\#@ 0c2@]=zӭ`}=DIhX&U,~~yM5^̒Wa(D*'N{o"Y[re-t$!/\YQDp]qUC-g`˛Yو{XweH@(;;nf\ѷzHIź >G32jO'_~z`zp=Ȏ^`P]oN #7<@'X~$-{=9[]K 0>輰+jiS iis`̿pyp C=S="o:WJkA.ﴖ%9B/X.MoiؗpaU[`N 0 Ě u5`2T -ᾼ0n¿m se$ zaM &"jXK@?x!k`mf%5 ^El+̀0 ˃0±[90EO2Ud$qnxT譡ݰQR`~!1eVmQÐ@%gsO!_F 9c̈́yMN 3ZC)دӚghBPb9Yʍ~-xr( 0\3;a `~45)^Q\.̘b~Q~PK))W;q1Fr+1R|}_6d RBhW'p3mD;=/A\̤Z2.E ; mAN3k xML,pdQ'lՓ $t!wj醊EFi6 <]_>QiO\ 1 \hz&Kڃ \ck}Yő/oW2?Qu*^>S,ANnֆNOK:9H4-z˕%b N<<ɇF2'<ˇ$n;8МxQ`ezwt@ X4i L*FKGG *ojFӊd @M~!@`@$ٸzbB)<>=OiTIkj|I X8?8r{p-{w Sl aw tᅬ0DٵI&`MR4y]i}9"J6ܿqx8;Jsjab)l! KgƫdY /@arIwp- V~{Sohb B?TKSʻɐ\ߟ>[YI =:?]kښrkC OC B*7JW[!n+ ` Nh_<\TM>Կ{ÕR3wU|X#9o!m##VO"}K0ҩ~\M% a 7&2tQЌ9t4m`mҤ[I^x t+L?-bbn[b,ܜ A`ksGž"䛅1Dwca a 7fBRpE4ikboUCVСtWBaWi<ƛ³[ihZH4ٟ5*]='>:YbL cc^KFvP39bwA&V*@ _{OY_Y|gc!poBuXqUGbV:z30?RV.>lm(,]吒#4!\`ₓڇ^@A鐬8{g&Ōw&:Jd3ؙhqh)H3>"Wn7FՐg ᚛qEt%EU&VYD5̴9Kw{y8qVa73<>}| Β=scqjUJHH)&E윎Z-'WLNFOwF +ʥw ҴRtcQ g no3\'R%gf*4גV)_0ʶWXrr;=́yYi$*#3fw.^,gϊ/ юqei%_$Ws|=K UΧɲwcx ̊5HrI xAdSS{s_>,X>M{?p ]?>ɯ)e\E4J@bCq ÒicCLpMF!ۃ& f^*^Y [०sC;M|Pbכ@2'eJG&yEO9 ߭=Ss)xDx2qZeOu}<[`,l%$ZNyBx9V99$OefIb,+RK8yt@.:&v)1@ c9nz H-& /:(5JO% ?7m_.T YpgaBant9NOsrdOeK?s[oXv;tp2A:eT "m<>\9wY1?R)O2if= ;ͳ T$_aBƤ4#)G[Ƙ+AkLYhV1Uۙ苉eJY>"yZ>4T13R%c#BЏ*ߦhQѣ @] ¸,#8c>D0?AV\)K\zkJpgE EP=lV|LyZ)L* cBU]NRLN79DV8u KWWseH[}8j6 <-(1ŋlgiZ҉*E=I#PKRw /YҒRlo`lIoo8G~ofkgv?v@;*FKNnSǤ0-jÇ:ĥ@C@"=P SXΈe Y>^uWKb!0?`ޅ5L >SV4A2gH"'2]l);,]ge[,#yyv| VX\? -ׯ]u2C!|\3ыVK S[>ȞB,0}r{UmQ2᳍k"}5KKiL,˩M_ׇzɤ#l J@ϛirWBuVgm.n>=CX% : x:6O{Is,7, %}?k<2!:!;hI`IGŏD)I`ʘ _!jྜ^a5&/o~~pe媸6P+JUsID'<;L>u9Rje;͝G^Q;U+}J*ܚ7<5ㄣ<,nJk"g8](Dݽ:7jCrOwo#_ae] zp%`7ъ;A)s) U D) U{/}=LUSHU|mH ZBYRNTFߏ@z/&-ii;U)U\0ufgD+s躂T\ s#CWIXzז$aW=4 vfIAlVJxhUDENj lEj<Y5HQLJ)ܜsP9e9d68Wl\jG1{A8ћ]?-1WoTz?| Fҧ>NYq]d?WR7Ra AҚB53B X xdr/5ik6DzednY\yos8 եM͆]Y#f~}3j=QKw@c`ZJ 0z [=m캳OZǂ4*wY\M?}󟏒ERI@:tݹ ,2d?3'1 [o]z4ʪ݇Q9j50ZgԶ)$Ms#ge^%3(in@}s,BL|بf.ҰsQ7,2j:9^ z?~T=5'#NK;ЋɒV%3u$[.X}B&UvӅͽҊ1eyx¬5&7jp*Yn6ל*%UImGuDOLo?ۓSQޞ8sX[̡y,;ZY6Sq*f*0w1ŹnRsf౸ddVeWlX-k l"AKTFkRC AM:S`5S뗋@0^a&㚴q?Du.ټ^K~mz,bҹg8'VYo֌䅛z٫`R+rF!zs^"zjO뤽R9>gtdBIqv)ՠ,uiSqH!vyg 6.aÏSaN]s#7qS=GPNG[.u(=.A%4 3C;WcmZ)ƩYUG@h@FsA1niS 2qD`e`MwT=llgAԖWv~b?r%O %|jQ!҆֟ V[Ljys;_:5rU>bɜkhR6Uz4 ꇹc lThܮ Lcj"ϢY-s+%F}1)37^5E0r7YWr!Q.qwKr+lpKC~ u} fa8T=<4* Aa(D-P9_0%֯[Ǔ mk: s=bw$`^DE?9:];jn);G$Ǽ#o?3ǨyS N1W|*Mդ\N8n.ԝ~ zß0,1,ғ6=Hf.,SCcz,cNU2QnRg NF gTpPW?T<~Y\Ǭf-^e?Q2I>6@ik|!} )}hb2OLrQv9SO{s}{duH3]hz'Z7E'\UAcS>)"pi!c2K֖ ԆNfYLZ y] | on]dOZ(W'xkyȥ9SփOB:QR =Uc҄LH;̉\?ݘ+asFqse#3bkzZgHv^?}V;cf)5`[}GZ8,aa:۪UH6uG8r|3_~rI)Tn,?n,12rVاF0Yn7sju #>oّg5#x3 5 a2vPXf9C\W :,$ SA(m\g flGU.FԼ {4owɏҳ6&u4vOSjjWÞ0!Y qk7N)-Uc'|dKZ_񑛱:X5+%4;bf[hsw.'CM;.d"#6s{Hq OR2>Q|OshDd=>`X PRqݫ/97~޶:,d/vӶ^CIk3/~tWC:!`oMwR7~F˜01V%3,wRa)tvj9C#gx%Uo=VNN[iBFXL?;fN} j >򟱨Bw̽?_rrfJo+*Wn9Dn?=Le,yj @8UU{' r_0hCnvS*8;~xK%F:Dt# -׷yrRi)9MvsY{>iMhlRX8}!ȡLS܆ &%T<Ր0?mP;.\,+̍O%ZX!ZJѓ#n*S)c*]Bo#@vr_4maqvBmWNUmO}=) Ϩ8$sdbiK(@LI&MSMAK lKUgʃT3q0N}ɴej 9#已Nx{ f|,m&ϘI7r+ӭ$u"9e#9ࠨ5Ѯ"yFS dm%bZlVP66v{ۑ#jJ <`iR٭Դ1vrrRU%+%MSKtC)摔ArM`W&eb_<]7w.msUY`F`Wq̆| F5YR﬚ZXtot eaL7iCQ0g:흱lE] _:qfjɢ]u&mF;JqSzv^h{Qk˛"`b]Ftno,>53K2|ҏ@oK>`0x̭@g'S.r :՘dm„gFy޼}brn;i:-6vp&c0/rE(6-9;c$~]Z2m&eHw1+Gݤ\DBF;'nQ2 ث!Bj\;9g>G[YvF[Ru*zF(r@@֪%}XZVb\lRa2XCbV&{#^Ycj2Ή,wkG.'L`i鬩Yם˓?={ȟǯO :V`N0!.0b'o,IaS$4 ek^3'[*'^Yr?֤fyvZ`D(BN6?9ֲ|-sv|$"am,:1!T:kҶu I>êexH'r~fQ.X>qru4F(Šv`v+8+nŢL,.O2rnvMdn T5nt3?f͑`aٙU?sJsXG,;sWL{tb-x<1;;T
Enjoying the preview?
Page 1 of 1