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Oh, dang. I'm sure. A whole lot less overhead for them, too. I mean, it's all digital, so it should be cheaper. I need to look at mine. I think we have ... I would say we probably have around 30 or 40 books in Audible, and almost all of them are hers. I have a few. I have my ... I don't know if I told you this in the past, but my favorite author in the entire world is a guy named Edward Rutherford. He writes in the style of Mitchell. I don't know if you've ever listened or read any of Mitchell's books like Continual or Texas. He has a few. I love that writing style, so it is by far my favorite fiction style of writing. It follows a very historical grounded basis of truths and facts, but they'll create characters that interact with those events and peoples without changing the events of the people. they tell you a secondary or even a further back role into the story. Take the Great Five of London, you know, how it started and everything. The characters map, you know, see, hey, I see the fire a block away, you know, and then start responding and help them fight the, you know, nothing that would change the truth of the history at all. But anyhow, Edward Weatherford writes like that. And I have, I think every book he's pretty much put out. My favorite by far is called London. It starts at prehistoric times basically and tells you the entire story of London up till around 2000 and leaves families in and out of it. It's the very first book of his that I read. And I was in Airborne school, believe it or not, when I read it. And that started me on his journey. He has lots of them, Russia, China, Paris, New York. There's two of them based in Ireland and Celtic, one is called Princes of Ireland and the other one, oh gosh I don't remember the other one, anyhow, he is just an awesome, awesome author. So I don't know if I've ever mentioned him to you, great, big, long stories, I mean huge books. So there you go, KJ, bye-bye over here.

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