Tag: books

Review – Gwen and Art Are Not In Love

Posted September 10, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 4 Comments

Review – Gwen and Art Are Not In Love

Gwen and Art Are Not In Love

by Lex Croucher

Genres: Arthuriana, Fantasy, Romance
Pages: 419
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

Gwen, the quick-witted Princess of England, and Arthur, future duke and general gadabout, have been betrothed since birth. Unfortunately, the only thing they can agree on is that they hate each other.

When Gwen catches Art kissing a boy and Art discovers where Gwen hides her diary (complete with racy entries about Bridget Leclair, the kingdom's only female knight), they become reluctant allies. By pretending to fall for each other, their mutual protection will be assured.

But how long can they keep up the ruse? With Gwen growing closer to Bridget, and Art becoming unaccountably fond of Gabriel, Gwen's infuriatingly serious, bookish brother, the path to true love is looking far from straight...

I found Lex Croucher’s Gwen & Art Are Not In Love a bit… frustrating. The Arthurian references are a bit all over the place, and how it fits into a post-Arthurian world is very non-obvious (any explanation of the Catholics vs cultists thing takes forever, and also makes no real sense with most versions of the Arthurian legends). Gwen and Arthur are not that Gwen and Arthur, they’ve just been saddled with being named after them and engaged from a very young age to get married. Why you’d do that and not think about the mixed messages of naming a child very obviously after a very famously unfaithful wife, I don’t know.

There are aspects of the story I enjoyed, with Gwen and Arthur’s slowly evolving dynamic (and also Arthur’s friendship with Sidney), but I felt the actual romances were a little undercooked (particularly Arthur’s) compared to that friendship, and actual communication would really have benefitted everyone a very great deal, which… is always a frustrating read for me, personally.

It’s not that I’m a purist about Arthuriana, or at least I try not  to be, but I like to understand what an author is doing, and, well, this really wasn’t clear. It sort of relied on “ambient knowledge that King Arthur is a thing, but I hope you don’t care about details”, and well, I do.

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

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WWW Wednesday

Posted September 10, 2025 by Nicky in General / 4 Comments

Cover of Infectious by Dr John S. TregoningWhat have you recently finished reading?

The last thing I finished was John S. Tregoning’s Infectious: Pathogens and How We Fight Them. I didn’t really enjoy it; part of it is the fact that since I bought it, I’ve studied immunology (as part of my MSc), so the first part of the book was boring, leaving plenty of time for me to get annoyed by Tregoning’s sense of humour. The tone really, really grated; Tregoning thinks he’s hilarious, and it’s just cringe.

It might be better for a layperson, though of course, the humour wouldn’t improve.

Cover of Nine Times Nine by Anthony BoucherWhat are you currently reading?

As ever, a few books at once, some of which I’m giving more attention than others. I’m most into Nine Times Nine by Anthony Boucher, at the moment, in the sense that I’m hoping to finish that today. The timing for reading it is maybe a bit stupid, because I read Boucher’s Rocket to the Morgue as we drove down to attend my grandmother’s funeral, and I’ve (totally without planning it) ended up reading this as I’m about to head to Wales again for the interment of my grandparents’ ashes. I can’t imagine I’m going to ever feel like reading Boucher’s work again at this rate, because there’s something about his style in this book that takes me very vividly back to reading Rocket to the Morgue. Oops.

That said, not a huge loss; I find it pleasant enough, but not something I’m wildly excited about.

I’m also reading Queer as Folklore, by Sacha Coward, which I’m finding interesting enough so far. Also The Story of the Bayeux Tapestry (David Musgrove & Michael John Lewis), which I’m enjoying, and Reignclowd Palace (Philippa Rice), which I need to give some more attention.

Cover of The Duke at Hazard by KJ CharlesWhat will you be reading next?

I don’t know. I’d like to say I’ll read KJ Charles’ The Duke at Hazard, because a) I can’t believe I haven’t read it yet, and b) it’s the very centre of this month’s Litsy bingo card, but I don’t know. I’ve been weirdly resistant to starting it, even though I’m pretty sure I’ll enjoy it. I might just start something I have few expectations of, like Sidney J. Shields’ The Honey Witch — or focus on the other books I’m technically currently reading that have slipped onto the back-burner.

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Review – Into the Riverlands

Posted September 9, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 4 Comments

Review – Into the Riverlands

Into the Riverlands

by Nghi Vo

Genres: Fantasy
Pages: 100
Series: The Singing Hills Cycle #3
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Wandering cleric Chih of the Singing Hills travels to the riverlands to record tales of the notorious near-immortal martial artists who haunt the region. On the road to Betony Docks, they fall in with a pair of young women far from home, and an older couple who are more than they seem. As Chih runs headlong into an ancient feud, they find themselves far more entangled in the history of the riverlands than they ever expected to be.

Accompanied by Almost Brilliant, a talking bird with an indelible memory, Chih confronts old legends and new dangers alike as they learn that every story—beautiful, ugly, kind, or cruel—bears more than one face.

This is an older review that somehow never got posted, unearthed again when I was rereading the series!

I didn’t love Into the Riverlands as much as I loved the second book of this series, but it was very enjoyable all the same. (Though I always want more of the neixin, Almost Brilliant, who travels with Chih and records what they do. Sure, Almost Brilliant is there to record what happens, but there’s a personality there too, and I enjoy that aspect of their interactions.)

This one is full of little details that slowly build up, and you have to keep your eyes open to collect the stories and put them together — just as Chih does. I found that process really enjoyable — though I wish, like Chih, that they’d been able to collect the story in the subject’s own words…

I also enjoy that though Chih is kind and wishes people well, they’re not particularly brave or practical. They sort of comfortably go along expecting that, as a cleric, others will look after them. Which doesn’t sound like something to like, but it is actually enjoyable to follow a character who is flawed like this, but still overall a good person. Lots of us are good more in intent than execution, after all.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Top Ten Tuesday: Villains

Posted September 9, 2025 by Nicky in General / 26 Comments

This week’s Top Ten Tuesday theme is “villains”, which I’m finding pretty tricky to fulfil… but let’s see what I can do!

Cover of The Scum Villain's Self-Saving System by Mò Xiāng Tóng Xiù Cover of Heaven Official's Blessing vol 8 by MXTX Cover of Ancillary Justice by Ann Leckie Cover of Kushiel's Dart by Jacqueline Carey Cover of Magic Triumphs by Ilona Andrews

  1. Shen Qingqiu, from The Scum Villain’s Self-Saving System (Mo Xiang Tong Xiu). Well, okay, the original Shen Qingqiu is not that inventive as a villain… and to say we’re talking about Shen Yuan mostly removes his claim to be on this list. But I thought I’d be funny and give a nod to him for anyone else who knows the fandom. The real villain is Shen Yuan’s internalised homophobia and general obliviousness to Luo Binghe’s feelings, though, am I right?
  2. White No-Face (Bai Wuxiang), from Heaven Official’s Blessing (Mo Xiang Tong Xiu). This guy is a genuine villain. No spoilers for his true identity, but he torments Xie Lian and orchestrates his fall from grace, and makes it so that he can’t die no matter what happens to him. Xie Lian suffers immensely just from that, but White No-Face also gets into his head and warps his reality, trying to damage his essential goodness. He’s a hell of a villain, even without getting into the spoilery stuff.
  3. Anaander Mianaai, from Ancillary Justice (Ann Leckie). Anaander is a really fascinating villain, divided against herself due to her many bodies, and somehow managing to hold it all in balance and keep secrets against herself. She’d be run of the mill as a mere tyrant, but her war against herself makes her fascinating.
  4. Melisande Shahrizai de la Courcel, from Kushiel’s Dart (Jacqueline Carey). Melisande is a complicated figure, with her own motivations that from her point of view are perfectly reasonable. She’s a villain because we care about the characters she moves against, and she’s amoral on her way to her planned victory… but if she’d succeeded in her aims, history might’ve cast her as a hero.
  5. Roland, from the Kate Daniels series (Ilona Andrews). This one’s a long story, much of it spoilery for anyone who hasn’t read the whole series. There’s never any doubt, though: Roland will crush anything that doesn’t go the way he plans.
  6. Kossil, from The Tombs of Atuan (Ursula Le Guin). The Nameless Ones are formless, dark and terrifying, but they’re like forces of nature. Kossil is self-serving, cruel, and motivated by worldly power. Her evil is so mundane compared to the dark weight of the Nameless Ones, which… actually makes her more awful.
  7. Governer David Tate, from Feed (Mira Grant). A right-wing conspiracy taking advantage of a zombie plague is all too realistic, so I couldn’t pass this one up. It’s just the tip of the iceberg, of course (further awfulness follows in the later books). But no spoilers…
  8. The Company, from The Murderbot Diaries (Martha Wells). It looms large over Murderbot’s existence, so much so that Murderbot won’t even say the name of the Company and edits it out of everything it says and remembers. Capitalism’s everything in the Corporation Rim, and arguably the whole system is the villain here, but the Company is certainly a potent avatar of it.
  9. Lancelot, from The Winter King (Bernard Cornwell). It’s rare for Lancelot to be cast as a villain — and admittedly he’s a very petty one — but this one’s memorable because it’s a very unusual choice to portray Lancelot as a small and cowardly run-of-the-mill villain, rather than some kind of tortured hero.
  10. Regal Farseer, from Assassin’s Apprentice (Robin Hobb). Regal’s pretty much never likeable on the page, and his arc is pretty obvious from the outset, so in a way he’s a very obvious and unsubtle villain, and not exactly a favourite of mine. Still, he’s certainly memorable.

Cover of The Tombs of Atuan by Ursula Le Guin Cover of Feed by Mira Grant Cover of All Systems Red by Martha Wells Cover of The Winter King by Bernard Cornwell Cover of Assassin's Apprentice by Robin Hobb

It took me a while, but I did it! I’m very curious what villains other people will name, though I spotted a lot of people going off-piste this week, so far…

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Review – Fence, vol 4

Posted September 8, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Fence, vol 4

Fence: Rivals

by C.S. Pacat, Johanna the Mad, Joanna LaFuente

Genres: Graphic Novels
Pages: 113
Series: Fence #4
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

The GLAAD Award nominated series Fence returns as a graphic novel series as best-selling novelist C.S. Pacat (Captive Prince) and popular online sensation Johanna The Mad present the next all-new thrilling chapter of the Kings Row fencing team! Just as Nicholas, Seiji and the fencing team at the prodigious Kings Row private school seem to be coming together, a deadly rival from their past stands in their way once more. MacRobertson is the school that knocked Kings Row out of the State Championships last year - but unless Nicholas and Seiji can learn to work together as a team, their school is doomed once again! And maybe those two can learn to be something more than teammates too...

The fourth volume of C.S. Pacat and Johanna the Mad’s Fence is still pretty predictable: having fenced as individuals so far, it’s time for them to fence as a team — which means they run smack into Seiji’s insistence on individual achievement. The event concludes satisfyingly all the same, of course.

What did surprise me, even though I kinda saw it coming, was Seiji coming to help Nicholas improve. I knew they were going to get close, but the scene kind of surprised me all the same, because it was intense and stood out as a quietly very emotional moment.

I wasn’t sure how this would move anywhere like a relationship between Seiji and Nicholas, but this volume managed a shift in their relationship that made it make sense.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Review – 100 Dresses

Posted September 7, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 4 Comments

Review – 100 Dresses

100 Dresses

by The Costume Institute, The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Genres: Fashion, History, Non-fiction
Pages: 232
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

An irresistible look into more than 300 years of fashion through an exquisite collection of designer dresses

What woman can resist imagining herself in a beautiful designer dress? Here, for the first time ever, are 100 fabulous gowns from the permanent collection of the renowned Costume Institute at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, each of which is a reminder of the ways fashion reflects the broader culture that created it.

Featuring designs by Paul Poiret, Coco Chanel, Madame Gr s, Yves Saint Laurent, Gianni Versace, Vivienne Westwood, Alexander McQueen, and many others, this one-of-a-kind collection presents a stunning variety of garments. Ranging from the buttoned-up gowns of the late 17th century to the cutting-edge designs of the early 21st, the dresses reflect the sensibilities and excesses of each era while providing a vivid picture of how styles have changed--sometimes radically--over the years. A late 1600s wool dress with a surprising splash of silver thread; a large-bustled red satin dress from the 1800s; a short, shimmery 1920s dancing dress; a glamorous 1950s cocktail dress; and a 1960s minidress--each tells a story about its period and serves as a testament to the enduring ingenuity of the fashion designer's art.

Images of the dresses are accompanied by informative text and enhanced by close-up details as well as runway photos, fashion plates, works of art, and portraits of designers. A glossary of related terms is also included.

100 Dresses is a very shallow overview of some of the dresses held by The Costume Institute at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and as such is obviously a very narrow selection. It’s heavy on some individual designers (like Dior) and surprisingly light on others (Vionnet), and it’s not like there’s a lot of details about any given dress or designer, but it’s still a fun quick read.

Despite the short blurbs for each dress, there are some fascinating details — I particularly boggled at the dress with probably hundreds of pleats, pressed rather than stitched into place, which would need to be returned to the designer for the pleats to be re-set if it got damp or just crushed with wear.

Not exactly a groundbreaking volume, but enjoyable.

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

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Stacking the Shelves & The Sunday Post

Posted September 6, 2025 by Nicky in General / 27 Comments

Woo, Saturday!

The upcoming week is going to be a bit weird for various reasons (with the interment of my grandparents’ ashes coming up next week, travel, etc), but I have lots of reading plans to keep me cheerful and occupied.

Books acquired this week

This week, I haven’t bought or been given anything new, but I did drop by the library, so I do have some interesting finds! First up, fiction/graphic novels:

Cover of The Last Tale of the Flower Bridge by Roshani Chokshi Cover of Glass Town by Isabel Greenberg Cover of Mooncop by Tom Gauld

And then a bunch of non-fiction! Something of an unusual mix, as ever — and that’s the way I like it.

Cover of The Far Edges of the Known World by Owen Rees Cover of The Genius Myth by Helen Lewis Cover of Fabulous Frocks by Sarah Gristwood and Jane Estoe

Cover of The House Dress by Elda Danese Cover of City of Ravens by Boria Sax Cover of Eat Me by Bill Schutt

Posts from this week

It was a quieter week on the blog this week, but let’s do a quick roundup of the reviews:

The only other post was my chatter for What Are You Reading Wednesday!

What I’m reading

I feel like I’ve done quite a lot of reading this week, but I haven’t yet counted it up, so let’s see. As usual, here’s the sneak peek of the books I’ve finished off this week (excluding any I don’t intend to review on the blog)…

Cover of Stony Jack and the Lost Jewels of Cheapside: Treasures and Ghosts in the London Clay, by Victoria Shepherd Cover of Paladin's Strength by T. Kingfisher Cover of Cackle by Rachel Harrison Cover of Rebel Bodies: A Guide to the gender Health Gap Revolution, by Sarah Graham Cover of It's the End of the World by Adam Roberts

Cover of Mr Collins in Love by Lee Welch Cover of Eat the World by Marina Diamandis Cover of Resorting to Murder ed. Martin Edwards Cover of A Magical Girl Retires by Park Seolyeon

So… yep, quite a lot of reading! This weekend I’m probably looking to dig into Uketsu’s Strange Houses, since it’s probably due back at the library. I’ll probably also read one of the library books from a couple of weeks ago, Nineteenth-Century Fashion in Detail. Other than that… who knows!

Linking up with Reading Reality’s Stacking the Shelves, Caffeinated Reviewer’s The Sunday Post, and the Sunday Salon over at Readerbuzz.

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Review – The Paper Chase

Posted September 5, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 4 Comments

Review – The Paper Chase

The Paper Chase: The Printer, The Spymaster & The Hunt for the Rebel Pamphleteers

by Joseph Hone

Genres: History, Non-fiction
Pages: 272
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

In the summer of 1705, a masked woman knocked on the door of David Edwards’s London workshop. She did not leave her name, only a package and a coded means of identifying her courier.

Edwards was a Welsh printer working in the dark confines of Nevill’s Alley, outside the city walls. The package was an illegal, anonymous pamphlet: The Memorial of the Church of England. The argument it proposed threatened to topple the government, but sedition sold well in the coffeehouses of Fleet Street and the woman promised protection. Edwards swiftly set about printing and surreptitiously distributing the pamphlet.

Parliament was soon in turmoil and government minister Robert Harley launched a hunt for all those involved. When Edwards was nowhere to be found, his wife was imprisoned and the pamphlet was burnt in his place. The printer was not the only villain, though, and Harley had to find the unknown writers who wished to bring the government down.

Full of original research, The Paper Chase tears through the backstreets of London and its corridors of power as Edwards’s allegiances waver and Harley’s grasp on parliament threatens to slip. Amateur detectives and government spies race to unmask the secrets of the age in this complex break-neck political adventure. Joseph Hone shows us a nation in crisis through the fascinating story of a single incendiary document.

Joseph Hone’s The Paper Chase: The Printer, The Spymaster, and the Hunt for the Rebel Pamphleteers digs into the publication and censorship of a very particular pamphlet published in 1705 by a Welsh printer working in London, David Edwards. It’s actually available online via the Open Library, if you’re curious to get a look at it.

Joseph Hone paints a vivid picture of the world of illicit printing and its dangers through the reception of the Memorial, and David Edwards’ run from the law. Much of the book focuses on the government minister, Robert Harley, and his attempts to find and punish the authors of the Memorial; this somewhat makes sense as a choice because the best evidence is what Harley had in his hands, with the true authors of the Memorial probably eventually correctly identified, but not through books and papers of their own. (At least, if they exist then Hone doesn’t discuss them at all.)

On the other hand, it means that the narrative is pretty much on Robert Harley’s side — the side of censorship. It does sympathise somewhat with Edwards, whose life and livelihood were threatened while the influential writers of the pamphlet hid (after assuring him of their protection when he agreed to print it for them)… but mostly it follows Harley’s efforts to track down the perpetrators. The tone is anti-Whig, pro-Tory, pro-censorship, I think; perhaps that was somewhat forced upon the author by the angle he used to get at the whole thing and examine evidence, but… Hmm. In general, the heavily fictionalised narrative lends itself to all manner of bias.

In addition, it’s a little awkward to follow up on everything, because although there are notes, the book lacks numbered footnotes, and the bibliography is in the form of a bibliographic essay. I admit, I didn’t dig into that at all, other than looking up the Memorial for myself and a couple of historical facts.

It’s not all negative or ambivalent; I found the first half a little slow, as I tried to get my head around the period (which I don’t know very well), but the second half was pretty good. Mary Edwards (the printers’ wife) seemed pretty awesome, a determined investigator and advocate for her husband, though I wish there’d been more to know about the other women in the case (the woman in the vizard mask who took the material to David Edwards’ press to print, or the servant who was with her). It can be difficult to tell the fiction from the fact, but it was still an interesting read, bearing that in mind.

I’m a bit torn on how to rate it, so definitely bear in mind my caveats.

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

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Review – Sorcery and Small Magics

Posted September 4, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – Sorcery and Small Magics

Sorcery & Small Magics

by Maiga Doocy

Genres: Fantasy, Romance
Series: The Wildersongs Trilogy #1
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Desperate to undo the curse binding them to each other, an impulsive sorcerer and his curmudgeonly rival venture deep into a magical forest in search of a counterspell—only to discover that magic might not be the only thing pulling them together.

Leovander Loveage is a master of small magics.

He can summon butterflies with a song, or turn someone’s hair pink by snapping his fingers. Such minor charms don’t earn him much admiration from other sorcerers (or his father), but anything more elaborate always blows up in his face. Which is why Leo vowed years ago to never again write powerful magic.

That is, until a mix-up involving a forbidden spell binds Leo to obey the commands of his longtime nemesis, Sebastian Grimm. Grimm is Leo’s complete opposite—respected, exceptionally talented, and an absolutely insufferable curmudgeon. The only thing they agree on is that getting caught using forbidden magic would mean the end of their careers. They need a counterspell, and fast. But Grimm casts spells, he doesn’t undo them, and Leo doesn’t mess with powerful magic.

Chasing rumors of a powerful sorcerer with a knack for undoing curses, Leo and Grimm enter the Unquiet Wood, a forest infested with murderous monsters and dangerous outlaws alike. To dissolve the curse, they’ll have to uncover the true depths of Leo’s magic, set aside their long-standing rivalry, and—much to their horror—work together.

Even as an odd spark of attraction flares between them.

Maiga Doocy’s Sorcery and Small Magics was a fun slow burn. I was a little worried by remembering someone saying it’s Harry and Draco with the serial numbers filed off, but Leo and Grimm didn’t feel like that to me, because there’s no suggestion that they’re on two wholly different sides. Neither of them is remotely close to being evil, or expressing awful opinions (even if Leo is privileged and sometimes snobby). They’re highly incompatible people, at least at the point where they refuse to show anything of their inner selves to one another — but being forced to work together lights sparks, even if we don’t get any explicit confirmation of how Grimm feels by the end.

There’s also a lot going on other than “magical school”, with hints at something weird happening with Leo’s magic, and the system of scrivers and casters setting limits around magic (though it annoyed me that Leo kept breaking those, and it wasn’t quite clear to me whether he’s a special case or anyone could do what he did).

It took me a little bit to get into the book because I wasn’t sure where the romance would come in, and the characters felt too different, but throwing them together for an adventure in a dangerous forest worked well for that — a classic gambit, and I don’t mean that to throw shade. I enjoyed their adventures and discoveries, and the way they snipe at each other along the way.

I’m very curious where it’s going next, and slightly regret reading it when there’s no sign of more on the immediate horizon…

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Review – Solo Leveling, vol 4

Posted September 3, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Solo Leveling, vol 4

Solo Leveling

by Dubu, Chugong

Genres: Fantasy, Manga
Pages: 320
Series: Solo Leveling #4
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

With a veritable army at his command, Jinwoo is now ready to take on the Demon's Castle-but he's got a meeting with Jinah's teacher to deal with first! When asked to talk down a high school student from a life of being a hunter, Jinwoo figures the fastest way would be to show them the realities of a raid. Little does he know that there's more to this particular gate than meets the eye...

In volume four of the Solo Leveling manhwa, things are hotting up on various levels, aaaand I really shouldn’t talk about it all in detail because I’m sure people who are interested want to discover it for themselves! But suffice it to say that weird and unprecedented circumstances follow him around, and now we’re going to learn more about his family (I presume)… plus there’s a big crisis coming that will need all hands on deck.

I’m very curious about how all of that goes, and kind of want to flip through previous volumes again already just to see if I missed something or if it was just revealed now.

I’m grateful the volumes include quick reminders of the characters, though I could honestly use a few more reminders, like a mini-biography. I don’t normally look at that kind of thing a lot, but I have poor visual recognition and for some characters, it’d be handy to have a quick reference with a tad more information. I guess I need to look for a wiki!

I did note with volume three that each volume is getting darker, but there were a couple of glimpses of Jinwoo just being a real nerd here. There was one preeeetty dark moment, but other than that… half the time it felt like it was a video game to Jinwoo, and that’s kinda fun.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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