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Criminal profiler-in-training Jessie Hunt is sure she’s finally put the darkness of her childhood behind her. She and her husband Kyle just moved from a cramped downtown Los Angeles apartment into a Westport Beach mansion. Kyle’s promotion has them swimming in money, and Jessie is on the verge of getting her Master’s degree in forensic psychology—the last step in becoming a criminal profiler. Everything looks perfect from the outside: gorgeous house, successful husband, career trajectory pointing upward. But Jessie’s studying criminal psychology for a reason, and that reason has everything to do with the childhood darkness she thinks she’s escaped. 🏖️
Soon after their arrival, Jessie begins noticing strange developments. The neighbors—and their au pairs—all seem to be hiding secrets behind their friendly waves. The mysterious yacht club Kyle is desperate to join is rife with cheating spouses and troubling rules that feel less like social guidelines and more like control mechanisms. What kind of exclusive club requires this level of secrecy? And why is Kyle so obsessed with joining? 🛥️
Then there’s the notorious serial killer at the psychiatric hospital where Jessie is completing her clinical hours. He should be just another case study, but somehow he knows more about her life than is normal—or safe. Details about her past that aren’t in any files, specifics about her childhood trauma she’s never shared with anyone including Kyle. How does a locked-up serial killer have access to Jessie’s private nightmares? 🔒
As her world unravels, Jessie begins questioning everything—including her own sanity. Has she uncovered a disturbing conspiracy buried within this sunny, wealthy beach town? Does the mass murderer she’s studying really know the origin of her private nightmares? Or has her tortured past finally come back to claim her, manifesting as paranoia that makes her see patterns where none exist? Blake Pierce delivers psychological suspense that understands the particular horror of not trusting your own perceptions when you’re trained to analyze human behavior but can’t tell if you’re uncovering truth or creating delusions. 🌊
What makes this essential: A psychological thriller launching the Jessie Hunt series where a criminal profiler-in-training discovers her perfect beach town life may be built on conspiracy, while a serial killer somehow knows her darkest secrets—forcing her to question whether she’s uncovering truth or losing her mind.
Everyone wants to give in to temptation, but no one wants to pay the price. I was a child when my father surrendered me to the Temple of All Gods—no choice, no explanation, just tossed aside like unwanted baggage. That was the day the God of Temptation claimed me as his, marking me for a future I never asked for but couldn’t escape. Now I’m studying to become the perfect priestess in a temple where embracing emotions isn’t weakness but training. Life here means learning to harness every type of desire: power, fear, lust, and rage are the most common, but they’re not the only ones. Each has power. Each has its place. I just have to figure out which kind of priestess I’ll become. 🔥
Before I decide my path, I have questions that no one seems willing to answer. Why was I given away? What does Temptation actually want from me? My only option is to leave it in my god’s hands, which my instructors think makes me a fool. But Temptation has been listening, asking, offering it all—the power I crave, the answers I need, the control I’ve never had. In exchange, he intends to use me. The transaction is clear even if the terms aren’t fully explained. Gods don’t give without taking, and Temptation deals in desire and consequence. ⚖️
But I have demands too. The priest and priestess who took me in when no one else would have become my family. The guys in the temple who taught me that love could exist even in a place dedicated to harnessing darker emotions—they matter to me. How am I supposed to give this up just because a god decides it’s time to cash in his claim? Why should I walk away from the people who made me feel wanted when my own father couldn’t? Not even a god can make me abandon them without a fight. All I have to do is stand my ground against a deity who literally embodies the concept of giving in. 💪
Auryn Hadley delivers coming-of-age fantasy that explores power dynamics between mortals and gods, examining what it means to be claimed by divinity while still wanting autonomy over your own life. This is temple training that embraces rather than suppresses emotion, where learning to channel desire is considered sacred skill rather than sinful weakness. The Path of Temptation series launches with a protagonist who refuses to be a passive vessel for divine will, even when challenging a god means risking everything she’s built in the only home she’s ever known. 🌟
What makes this essential: A coming-of-age fantasy where a girl given to the Temple of All Gods must train as a priestess of Temptation, harnessing emotions like power and lust, while refusing to abandon her found family even when the god who claimed her demands she pay the price.
You know how sometimes your high school crush grows up to become an insanely famous movie star? Okay, probably not. But I do. Although, I guess I’m getting ahead of myself. Trip wasn’t always the gorgeous Hollywood A-lister you see these days on the big screen. Back in 1990 he was just the “new kid” who sat behind me in fifth period English class. He was always gorgeous, however. I mean, he was That Guy—you know the one who could raise your blood pressure just by passing you in the hall, who could melt you with a single look aimed in your general direction. 🎬
So bust out your stretch pants and tease out those mall bangs, ladies, because we’re going back in time. Back to the days of keg parties, making out in cars, and big fricking hair. Back to a time when almost every girl in town found themselves drooling over a guy named Trip. I should know—I was one of them. And my life hasn’t been the same since. What starts as a nostalgic trip down memory lane becomes something more complicated when the past refuses to stay buried and that high school connection echoes into the present in unexpected ways. 💕
T. Torrest delivers romantic comedy that captures authentic 1990s teenage culture—the music, the fashion disasters, the social hierarchies of high school—while exploring what happens when your first love becomes someone the whole world wants. This isn’t just “girl meets famous guy” romance; it’s about the connection that existed before the fame, before the billboards and red carpets, when he was just Trip sitting behind you in English class. The Remember Trilogy launches with a story that asks whether teenage chemistry can survive when one person becomes a household name and the other stays beautifully, impossibly normal. 🌟
What makes this essential: A 1990s romantic comedy where the narrator’s high school crush Trip becomes a famous Hollywood A-lister, exploring the connection they had before the fame through authentic period detail, keg parties, and mall bangs—launching a trilogy about first love and what happens when your crush goes global.
What happens when you wake up in a hotel suite next to a gorgeous naked man with absolutely no memory of the past twelve hours? I guess it’s true what they say: what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. Or at least I hope it stays here. The Romantic Style Book convention was meant to be a weekend of raucous fun with friends, sun, and enough poolside margaritas to forget about my ex. But now, instead of meeting my fans and signing books, I’m stuck with cocky divorce lawyer Nate Wexler. He’s arrogant, infuriating—and I can’t keep my hands off him. 🎰
Judging by the state of our hotel room, last night was wild. I just wish I could remember it. A pair of matching tattoos that we definitely didn’t have yesterday. A half-empty box of glow-in-the-dark condoms suggesting we were very busy and possibly very creative. And a wedding veil that raises questions neither of us is ready to answer. What the hell just happened? Did we actually get married in Vegas, or is this just the world’s most elaborate hangover? 💍
Lila Monroe delivers romantic comedy that embraces the absurdity of Vegas consequences while building genuine chemistry between two people who should probably hate each other but can’t stop touching. The mystery of what happened during the blackout becomes secondary to the question of what happens now—do they annul whatever this is and go back to their separate lives, or do they explore whether the connection they apparently felt while drunk might be real when sober? This is billionaire romance that doesn’t take itself too seriously, featuring mismatched tattoos, compromising positions, and the slow realization that your drunken Vegas mistake might be the best decision you never consciously made. 🍸
What makes this essential: A Vegas romantic comedy where a romance author wakes up next to cocky divorce lawyer Nate Wexler with no memory of the night, matching tattoos, glow-in-the-dark condoms, and a wedding veil—launching a billionaire romance series about whether their blackout decision was actually perfect.
Charlie Priest isn’t your typical angst-ridden detective with a drink problem. He gets on well with his constables, has an actual sense of humor, and approaches Yorkshire crime with refreshing competence rather than tortured brooding. But Yorkshire isn’t just picturesque villages and sheep stealing—Detective Priest is about to face international art scammers who’ve brought their criminal enterprise to his territory. An exhibition featuring ten famous paintings, including a Picasso, is touring England. The problem? Four of the artworks have been secretly switched with fakes, forged by Priest’s old art teacher Rudi Truscott. Crime doesn’t take a day off, but neither does Priest. 🎨
Before Priest can dig deeper into the forgery operation, Truscott dies in a suspicious fire that leaves nothing but a pile of ash where the poor sod used to be. With his only lead literally up in smoke, Priest needs to find the crooks behind the scam before they strike again. The art world forgery ring isn’t just about fake Picassos—it’s about international criminals using touring exhibitions to launder fakes into legitimate collections, and they’ve proven they’ll kill to protect their operation. 🔥
Stuart Pawson launches the Detective Charlie Priest series with a protagonist who breaks the mold of damaged, alcoholic detectives stumbling through cases despite their personal demons. Priest is competent, likable, gets along with his team, and solves crimes through actual detective work rather than tortured genius or lucky breaks. The Yorkshire setting provides both charm and substance—this isn’t just backdrop but a fully realized community where Priest knows the locals and understands the territory. The Picasso scam combines art world intrigue with murder investigation, proving that even peaceful Yorkshire can harbor sophisticated international crime. 🕵️
What makes this essential: A Yorkshire crime thriller launching the Detective Charlie Priest series, featuring a refreshingly non-angsty detective investigating art forgery when his old teacher dies suspiciously after creating fake masterpieces for an international scam—combining Picasso forgeries with murder in the English countryside.
Tampa Detective Kate Alexander gets the call every cop dreads: a teenage girl has been kidnapped, and the clock is already ticking on her survival. The case rips at Kate’s heart—not just because of the victim’s age, but because she knows exactly how this story could end. The justice system has already failed this girl once: the judge who set her kidnapper free is now the killer’s next target. What should be straightforward revenge becomes something far more complex when a seemingly isolated double homicide at a cheap motel enters the picture. How does a random killing at a budget roadside establishment connect to a teenage kidnapping and judicial revenge? Kate’s investigation reveals the threads tying these crimes together lead to someone psychotic, deranged, and operating with terrifying purpose. 🔍
The revengeful hunter becomes the hunted in a cat-and-mouse game where Kate pursues a suspect who’s always one step ahead, seeking revenge against the judge who wronged him while leaving a trail of bodies in his wake. This isn’t a disorganized killer making mistakes—this is someone methodical, cunning, and deeply committed to his mission of retribution. Kate faces the particular challenge of chasing someone who believes his violence is justified, who sees himself as an agent of correction rather than a criminal. These are the most dangerous killers: the ones who think they’re right. ⚖️
But Kate Alexander is facing her own demons while pursuing this case, and Mike Roche doesn’t let his protagonist off easy. The pressure of the investigation bleeds into Kate’s personal life with devastating consequences—she places her own family in peril as she tracks the cunning criminal in a race against time. The professional becomes intensely personal when the people you love become collateral damage in your pursuit of justice. Kate must bring justice to the murder victim while protecting her family from a killer who’s proven he’ll target anyone connected to the case. The tension escalates as Kate realizes that catching this killer might cost her everything she’s trying to protect. 👨👩👧
Mike Roche, a former Secret Service agent, brings authentic law enforcement experience to this debut thriller that launches the Detective Kate Alexander series. The procedural elements feel genuine—the frustration of connecting disparate crimes, the politics of working with judges and prosecutors, the impossible balance between professional duty and personal safety. Roche delivers a heart-pumping emotional thrill ride where evil attempts to evade justice while Kate fights not just to catch the killer but to prevent him from destroying everyone in his path. This is traditional detective mystery with high stakes, a flawed but determined protagonist, and the understanding that sometimes pursuing justice means risking the very things that make life worth living. 🚨
What makes this essential: A Tampa detective thriller featuring a kidnapped teen, judicial revenge, connected murders at cheap motels, and a psychotic killer forcing Detective Kate Alexander to risk her family while racing to stop him—launching a series grounded in authentic law enforcement experience.
Charlotte de la Cour returns to France in late spring 1940 knowing exactly what’s coming: Nazi Germany’s occupation of Paris is inevitable, imminent, and will transform her beloved city into enemy territory. She’s been recruited as an SOE agent—Special Operations Executive, Churchill’s “Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare”—and her mission is to be embedded in Paris before the jackboots arrive. This isn’t a rescue operation or an extraction. Charlotte is being inserted into the heart of occupied France to gather intelligence, build networks, and survive long enough to be useful when the real resistance work begins. The timeline is brutally tight: get in position, establish cover, and pray the Nazi advance gives her enough time to disappear into Parisian life before the city falls. 🗼
Her cover job as a waitress at the Hotel Metropole is perfect in its ordinariness—invisible service staff blend into the background while powerful men conduct business and let their guards down. Charlotte brings her face-to-face with senior German officers who treat French waitresses as furniture, speaking freely in front of her about operations, logistics, movements. Her lip-reading and language skills transform casual dining room conversations into actionable intelligence. She watches, she listens, she remembers everything. The officers never suspect that the quiet French girl refilling their wine glasses understands every word of their unguarded loose talk, that she’s cataloging names, ranks, and operational details to pass along to London. 🎭
But intelligence gathering from a safe distance isn’t enough—Charlotte gets drawn deeper into the growing French resistance movement, where the work becomes exponentially more dangerous. This is where Michael Parker’s thriller shifts from espionage procedural to survival story. Charlotte learns what living on the edge truly means when you’re operating in occupied territory: every conversation is a potential trap, every new contact could be a collaborator or Gestapo plant, every mission could be your last. The resistance isn’t a romantic underground army—it’s desperate people taking horrific risks with inadequate resources against an enemy that responds to partisan activity with mass executions. 🔥
The price Charlotte will pay if she fails isn’t just her own death—it’s the torture that precedes it, the networks she’ll expose under interrogation, the people who trusted her who’ll die because she broke. Parker captures the psychological weight of being an SOE agent in occupied France, where courage isn’t the absence of fear but functioning despite knowing exactly what the Gestapo does to captured spies. Shadow Over Paris delivers historical thriller tension grounded in the authentic terror of resistance work: no backup, no extraction plan, no guarantee anyone will even know what happened to you if you disappear into a Gestapo cell. This is espionage without the glamour, resistance without the certainty of survival. ⚡
What makes this essential: A World War II espionage thriller following an SOE agent embedded in Paris before Nazi occupation, using her waitress cover at Hotel Metropole to gather intelligence from German officers while being pulled deeper into dangerous resistance work where failure means torture and death.
Blackmail makes strange bedfellows when Mrs. Bennet makes Elizabeth an offer Mr. Darcy cannot refuse. The premise alone is delicious: take Austen’s most meddling mother and give her actual leverage over the proudest man in England. When Georgiana Darcy is spotted at a tea establishment known for attracting military officers—the kind of place respectable young ladies definitely shouldn’t frequent—accompanied by the infamous Bennet sisters, gossip spreads like wildfire through Regency society. Georgiana’s reputation hangs by a thread. Enter Mrs. Bennet, social opportunist extraordinaire, who sees opportunity where others see scandal. She offers Darcy a simple bargain: her testimony that Georgiana remained properly chaperoned throughout in exchange for Mr. Darcy courting her daughter Elizabeth. 💍
Elizabeth Bennet is horrified by her mother’s scheme—being bartered like livestock to save Georgiana’s reputation is humiliating and completely undermines any genuine connection. Darcy is appalled at being blackmailed into courtship by a woman he considers beneath his notice. But the deal is struck anyway, because Darcy will do anything to protect his sister and Mrs. Bennet knows it. What begins as the season’s most reluctant charade—two people forced into performing affection they don’t feel—evolves into something dangerously genuine as proximity does its inevitable work. Between cliff-edge carriage rides where Elizabeth literally falls into Darcy’s arms and a bathing machine disaster that further entangles their fates, their performance becomes increasingly convincing even to themselves. 🎭
She’s not supposed to notice how his eyes soften when he watches her read, how he remembers her every clever retort and seems to genuinely enjoy being verbally sparred with rather than fawned over. He’s not meant to memorize the way she laughs or find himself seeking her opinion on matters he’d normally keep private. The line between performance and truth begins to blur in that dangerous way where you can’t remember if you’re acting or if the feelings became real without your permission. Just as they’re both starting to question whether this arrangement might be something more, George Wickham arrives with his easy smiles and old grudges to complicate everything. 😈
His whispered insinuations about Georgiana Darcy threaten to unravel not just their deal but Georgiana’s reputation entirely—exactly what they’ve been trying to prevent. Meanwhile, Wickham’s particular attention to Elizabeth tests Darcy’s composure beyond endurance. Watching Wickham charm Elizabeth, knowing his history and his intentions, forces Darcy to confront whether his feelings are still part of the charade or whether he’s genuinely fallen for the woman he was blackmailed into courting. Rachelle Ayala delivers Pride and Prejudice variation that asks: what if the path to love started with coercion instead of choice? Can a relationship built on blackmail transform into genuine partnership, or does the corrupt foundation doom them from the start? 💕
What makes this essential: A Pride and Prejudice variation where Mrs. Bennet blackmails Darcy into courting Elizabeth to save Georgiana’s reputation, forcing a reluctant charade that becomes dangerously real until Wickham’s arrival threatens to destroy both the deal and their growing feelings.
Death in a Classroom (The Maeve Morgan Book 1)
A new life. A fresh start. A murder she didn’t commit. Maeve Morgan arrives in the quiet Scottish town of Strathfulton expecting challenges—restoring her crumbling inherited estate, gaining the trust of wary staff who remember the previous countess, settling into the aristocratic role she never asked for. What she absolutely doesn’t expect is to become the prime suspect in a murder investigation before she’s even unpacked her trunks. A beloved schoolteacher is found dead under suspicious circumstances, and with Maeve being the newcomer and an outsider with unclear motives for suddenly appearing in Strathfulton, suspicion falls squarely on the mysterious new countess who inherited a title most people didn’t know existed. 🏴
The local police inspector—a bumbling yet stubborn man determined to prove his worth by solving a high-profile case—seems all too eager to pin the crime on the convenient suspect who doesn’t fit into Strathfulton’s social hierarchy. He’s not interested in investigating other possibilities when he’s got a perfectly good aristocratic outsider right in front of him. But Maeve isn’t one to sit idly by while incompetent law enforcement builds a case against her based on circumstantial evidence and small-town prejudice. With her past experience as a police officer in England, she knows how to follow clues, ask the right questions, and see beyond the gossip that masquerades as evidence in tight-knit communities. 🔍
The more Maeve digs into the schoolteacher’s death, the more secrets she unearths—secrets that some would kill to keep buried and others would die to protect. The beloved teacher wasn’t quite as universally adored as everyone claims. There are financial irregularities, hidden relationships, professional rivalries that run deeper than anyone admits. As whispers swirl around Maeve and the town watches her every move with suspicious eyes, she must navigate the treacherous waters of 1920s high society, small-town politics where everyone is related to everyone else, and a murderer who may be closer than she thinks. Every social gathering is an opportunity to gather information or make enemies. Every conversation could contain the clue she needs or the lie that will bury her. 🎩
CM Rawlins crafts a 1920s murder mystery that understands the particular vulnerability of being an outsider accused of a crime in a community that’s already decided you don’t belong. Maeve’s position as countess gives her social standing but also makes her threatening—she has authority locals resent and wealth they covet. Her background as a police officer gives her investigative skills but also marks her as unfeminine and improper for her station. She’s fighting not just to solve a murder but to establish her place in a town that would prefer she disappear. This is historical mystery with sharp social commentary about class, gender, and the way communities protect their own even when “their own” includes a killer. ⚖️
What makes this essential: A 1920s Scottish mystery where a new countess with police experience must investigate the murder she’s accused of committing, navigating small-town secrets, incompetent law enforcement, and high society politics while the real killer watches her every move.
⚔️ Princess by mistake. 💀 Bride by sacrifice. 👑 Queen by fate? Every 25 years, a princess from the Lunaterra kingdom is sacrificed to the Stone Fae King in a bargain no one remembers negotiating but everyone honors out of terror. They call her the Stone Bride—because her fate is sealed from the moment she’s born, marked for death in a political arrangement disguised as tradition. For the handmaiden who’s served this doomed-but-spoiled princess since age five, the Stone Bride’s departure means freedom. She’s spent her entire life fetching gowns, keeping secrets, cleaning up messes, and sleeping on a floor mat at the foot of her mistress’s bed. “Tomorrow I’ll finally be free,” she tells herself the night before the princess’s departure to the mountain kingdom ruled by a merciless king whose monstrous deeds are whispered throughout their realm. 🏰
But tomorrow comes with a brutal twist. Instead of waking up on her floor mat, the handmaiden jolts awake inside a carriage wearing the princess’s wedding dress, her wrists bound in ceremonial chains, heading toward a fate she never agreed to. She’s been swapped—switched out to fulfill the Stone Bride’s sacrificial lamb role after a lifetime of thankless servitude. The princess escaped, probably bribed or blackmailed the right people, and left her handmaiden to die in her place because that’s what spoiled royalty does when faced with consequences. The handmaiden isn’t sure what’s worse: realizing she’s been betrayed after years of loyal service, or knowing what’s waiting for her at the end of this ride. 👰
A monstrous king rumored to have never let a single bride survive the wedding night. The Stone Fae King’s reputation precedes him—25 years ago, a bride. 25 years before that, another bride. None return. No one speaks of what happens in that mountain fortress except in horrified whispers about a king whose cruelty is legendary, whose power is absolute, whose wedding chambers are essentially an execution room. The handmaiden is riding toward her death dressed in silks she was never meant to wear, carrying a title she never wanted, about to marry a monster who won’t care that she’s the wrong princess because dead is dead regardless of whose name is on the marriage contract. 💀
Theodora Taylor subverts sacrifice-bride fantasy tropes by making the victim not the chosen princess but the servant who got screwed over by class hierarchy and royal selfishness. This isn’t a story about a noble princess bravely facing her fate—it’s about a commoner forced to pay for a princess’s cowardice, turned into collateral damage by people who always viewed her as disposable. But the metaphysical fantasy element promises something more than simple tragedy: what if the Stone Fae King isn’t exactly what the rumors claim? What if surviving requires becoming something other than a terrified handmaiden? Princess by mistake, bride by sacrifice, queen by fate—the transformation from servant to sovereign might be the only way to survive a wedding night designed to be fatal. 👑
What makes this essential: A metaphysical fantasy where a handmaiden is swapped for the princess she served and sent as sacrificial Stone Bride to a monstrous fae king, subverting chosen-one tropes by making the victim not noble-born but disposable—until survival requires claiming power she was never meant to possess.
At The Laughing Loaf Bakery in the California redwoods, the menu includes sourdough, cinnamon rolls—and murder. One day Gracie Markley is a happily married tech manager in Seattle living her best Pacific Northwest life. The next day, she’s turning in her husband to the FBI for selling tech secrets to foreign entities, and her entire existence implodes with federal-witness-level completeness. Under the witness protection program, Gracie, her dog Biga, and her absent-minded professor father are relocated to the small town of River Grove nestled in the Northern California redwoods—about as far from Seattle tech culture as you can get without leaving the continental US. Leaving her entire tech career behind, Gracie decides to pursue her actual passion: baking. She starts The Laughing Loaf Bakery and intends to keep a low profile in her new town. 🥖
The low profile plan works beautifully until a male model ends up dead behind her bakery, because apparently federal witness protection doesn’t protect you from stumbling into local murder investigations. Nico Behrens—gorgeous, professionally attractive, and now very deceased—is discovered in the alley where Gracie puts out her trash, turning her fresh-start bakery into a crime scene before she’s even established regular customers. To keep her business afloat and preserve her new life in River Grove, Gracie and her little dog Biga must figure out who killed the gorgeous Nico before the murder investigation destroys everything she’s rebuilt after betraying her husband to federal authorities. 🔍
Victoria Kazarian delivers cozy mystery that understands witness protection creates the perfect amateur sleuth setup: someone with reason to avoid police attention who absolutely cannot let law enforcement dig too deeply into her background, forced to solve crimes herself because involving the cops means risking her cover. Gracie’s tech management skills translate surprisingly well to murder investigation—project management is just tracking variables and connecting data points, which turns out to be exactly what solving murders requires. Her absent-minded professor father provides comic relief while occasionally dropping brilliant insights, and Biga the dog does that thing cozy mystery dogs do where they’re inexplicably helpful at finding clues. 🐕
The Northern California redwood setting provides atmospheric backdrop—small-town charm mixed with the eerie quiet of ancient forests, tourist season chaos, and the particular social dynamics of communities where everyone knows everyone except the witness protection transplants lying about their entire past. Plus the book includes recipes from The Laughing Loaf Bakery, because cozy culinary mysteries have a sacred obligation to make readers hungry while they’re trying to solve murders. Gracie’s journey from tech manager to FBI informant to small-town baker to amateur detective is exactly the kind of career pivot that makes sense only in witness protection programs and cozy mystery series. 🥐
What makes this essential: A cozy culinary mystery where a tech manager turned FBI informant starts a bakery in witness protection, only to find a dead male model behind her shop, forcing her to solve the murder without exposing her past—includes recipes from The Laughing Loaf Bakery.
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