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So then I moved on through some to Carolyn Graham and she's the person who famously wrote the first seven Midsomer Murders mysteries and it's just an eighth that I've got that I have read and I understandably had never made it into a Midsomer Murders episode because it is too freaked out and spooky and almost you know psychotic at the end. But anyway I'm just loving this Carole and Graham I it's an episode I love death in disguise and it's about like a hippie quasi-religious commune in an old manner kx to see that we 33 to my gals including especially Rebecca at the moment and on all the numbers to all my hands Joan kicks to see that we back tonight well thank you Joan Kacz to CWK7WFD. That's a good report on murder mysteries and spy novels and stuff. Sounds like you are on a roll here and doing well weaning yourself from Facebook and you have a nice winter activity to boot. I've been reading spy nonfiction lately which has been a lot of fun. If anybody is interested in something, I've read a book called called The Woman Who Smashed Codes. And this is a woman who really was one of the, in cryptography, starting after, just I guess in World War I and then after World War I and breaking the codes of rum runners during prohibition. And then of course played a major role in World War II. It's really interesting woman. Very talented and very hardworking. Very good, thank you. Let's see, then we had a couple of I.O.s from Arthur and Brian. Well, let's get a few more going in this round. We're still in round three. Want to join us? You come ahead now with your call sign and your name.
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