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

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Richard III
Richard III
Richard III
Ebook511 pages5 hours

Richard III

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

The authoritative edition of Richard III from The Folger Shakespeare Library, the trusted and widely used Shakespeare series for students and general readers.

In Richard III, Shakespeare invites us on a moral holiday. The play draws us to identify with Richard and his fantasy of total control of self and domination of others. Not yet king at the start of the play, Richard presents himself as an enterprising villain as he successfully plans to dispose of his brother Clarence. Richard achieves similar success in conquering the woman he chooses to marry. He carves a way to the throne through assassination and executions.

This edition includes:
-The exact text of the printed book for easy cross-reference
-Hundreds of hypertext links for instant navigation
-Freshly edited text based on the best early printed version of the play
-Newly revised explanatory notes conveniently linked to the text of the play
-Scene-by-scene plot summaries
-A key to the play’s famous lines and phrases
-An introduction to reading Shakespeare’s language
-An essay by a leading Shakespeare scholar providing a modern perspective on the play
-Fresh images from the Folger Shakespeare Library’s vast holdings of rare books
-An annotated guide to further reading

Essay by Phyllis Rackin

The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, DC, is home to the world’s largest collection of Shakespeare’s printed works, and a magnet for Shakespeare scholars from around the globe. In addition to exhibitions open to the public throughout the year, the Folger offers a full calendar of performances and programs. For more information, visit Folger.edu.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 14, 2014
ISBN9781476788500
Author

William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare is widely regarded as the greatest playwright the world has seen. He produced an astonishing amount of work; 37 plays, 154 sonnets, and 5 poems. He died on 23rd April 1616, aged 52, and was buried in the Holy Trinity Church, Stratford.

Read more from William Shakespeare

Related to Richard III

Related ebooks

Performing Arts For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Richard III

Rating: 4.001295239637305 out of 5 stars
4/5

1,158 ratings108 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Classic story of love and loss. ;) It's Shakespeare, and it's beautiful.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I love Shakespeare. I simply detest this play.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    "Go hence, to have more talk of these sad things.Some shall be pardoned, and some punishèd.For never was a story of more woeThan this of Juliet and her Romeo."So ends the play Romeo and Juliet which is probably the most popular play by William Shakespeare. You will have a hard time finding someone who has never heard of its plot. It is a timeless tragedy of two star-crossed lovers finding eternal love in death. While it is one thing to read the script on paper, it is a truly amazing experience to see it performed on stage. The play explores themes that will never be out of date: friendship, love, family rivalry, desperation, and mourning, to name but a few. It is well worth having a closer look at Romeo's relation to love and whether he is really in love with Rosaline or Juliet or just in love with the feeling of being in love. Then there is Romeo's unlikely friendship to Mercutio, two very different characters. Generally, there are many aspects to explore and with every new reading I discover yet another one. You might want to watch the 2014 Broadway performance with Orlando Bloom as Romeo. At least I enjoyed it very much. 5 stars. A true masterpiece.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    great classic
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Beautiful language, classic Shakespeare.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This review is for the 2012 edition of The Tragedie of Romeo and Juliet as annotated by Demitra Padadinas, founder and producing art director of the New England Shakespeare Festival.I’ve been a big fan of Shakespeare ever since high school when a clever English teacher pointed out that, in his day, Shakespeare was looked on as anything but high-brow. His audiences were more likely to consist of pickpockets, tavern-goers and whores than fine lords and ladies. Consequently, his scripts had to be snappy and laced with bawdy humor and innuendo to keep the audience coming back. While some of Shakespeare’s double entendres have survived the editors’ quills over the centuries, most of what we see in the editions taught in schools is muted and laced with safe footnotes that do more to conceal Shakespeare’s intent than to illuminate it. As an example, in Act 1 scene 3, the nurse, a comic character known for her bawdy humor, swears by “by my holidam” which Folger describes as referring to a holy relic while Papidinis explains that what she was swearing on was her “holy place”, an oath that, if accompanied by appropriate body language from the performer, could have an entirely different meaning.This version of Romeo and Juliet is as it appeared when the First Folio was first published in 1623 so its spelling and punctuation is a little more challenging to read than the modernized versions. It doesn’t take long, though, for the reader to catch on that, if read phonetically, such lines as “sailes upon the bosome of the ayre” are easily understood.I also like that Papadinis carries on the format seen in Folger editions of putting the text of the play on the left page and the annotations on the right. This makes it a lot easier to read the annotations and still keep you place.*Quotations are cited from an advanced reading copy and may not be the same as appears in the final published edition. The review copy of this book was obtained from the publisher via the LibraryThing Early Reader Program.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Ah, my favorite classic.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Romeo and Juliet is fairly far down on my list of Shakespeare's plays (compared, say, with The Tempest, Macbeth, and Twelfth Night at the top), so my five***** rating of this book (ISBN 978-0786447480) is not for the play itself but for the editorial work. I snagged Demitra Papadinis's "Frankly Annotated First Folio Edition" as an Early Reviewer, and after browsing it I've definitely wish-listed her similar edition of As You Like It (ISBN 978-0786449651, which I didn't win as an Early Reviewer) as well as her pre-order edition of Macbeth (ISBN 978-0786464791).I was particularly curious to see how Papadinis's "Frankly Annotated" editions would stack up versus the Norton Critical Editions (generically, that is, because there is no NCE of Romeo and Juliet to the best of my knowledge). There is simply no comparison between the two, and I say this in praise of both Papadinis and NCE. The strength of NCE is in its supplementary materials, which are completely lacking to Papadinis, while the strength of Papadinis is in her highly detailed line-by-line annotation. Papadinis and NCE, in other words, complement rather than compete with each other.Papadinis's annotation is highly detailed and presented in facing-page format, with the play's text on the left-hand page and the corresponding annotation on the right. What this means is that some left-hand text pages may contain only four or five lines while a corresponding right-hand annotation page will be completely filled, so that Papadinis's "Frankly Annotated" editions are not for a newcomer or casual reader, who will most likely find the design cumbersome and the trade paperback edition's price higher than a beginner would like. (Leaving out introduction and bibliography, both quite short, Papadinis's text/annotations for Romeo and Juliet run from pages 28 through 447 inclusive.)Another Early Reviewer has expressed some objection that these annotations represent a "tendentious study of the vulgar in Shakespeare's play." In reality, though, Romeo and Juliet (like Twelfth Night) in fact is one of Shakespeare's most bawdy plays, so I have to object to such a criticism. On the other hand, I also have to admit that I have not studied Papadinis's annotations that comprehensively, considering the time limit in posting an Early Review. In fact, this is not the kind of book that you are likely to read cover-to-cover, but rather one that you'll browse through, maybe just a scene (or even a few lines) at a time to savor the wealth of annotation that Papadinis provides. For that matter, I'm not such a Shakespeare specialist that I'd necessarily pick up on small annotational glitches anyway, so here's hoping some other ER can comment with more specificity on this subject.Papadinis's "Frankly Annotated" editions are available in both trade paperback and Kindle, but this does not seem like the kind of text that could be properly formatted for eBook reading, given the need for facing-page capability. I did download a Kindle sample, but it was too short (it included only some of the introduction, with none of the facing-page text/annotation) to be sure of this, but I'd definitely recommend the trade paperback edition. It's a bit pricey but worth it, though not recommended for a first-timer to the play.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Classic... what else is there to say?
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    overly compressed, beautifully-written play in which two teenagers fall in love, marry, fuck, and die, all in the span of three days. concessions should be made to late 16th century literary convention, but still...
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    It's a classic, but not really a favorite of mine.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    For never was a story of more woe
Than this of Juliet and her Romeo.Reading a Shakespeare-play and seeing one is two entirely different things. Having been to the Globe in London and experienced the magic of an evening with Shakespeare it seems a dry thing to "just" read the play. Still, reading it offers time to stop and contemplate and enjoy and savour all the famous quotes and lines of poetry.In this romantic tragedy there's plenty of over-the-top emotions, frantic pace, overwhelming love-songs and declarations of eternal bliss or eternal sorrow - it's just a thing you accept coming to Shakespeare. This is his world and it's just for us to drink it in.And although it's exaggerated the theme is eternal and universal - love - mixed with infatuation and madness - it's a force too powerful to be kept down - and it's explosive in the midst of a feud between two families. This emotional tour de force between Romeo and Juliet is something to be appraised and lamented at the same time. I'm not sure what Shakespeare does most. But both things are there. The admiration of such head-over-the-heels love and the warning against it's power to overwhelm and blinding the persons involved. Good Night, Good night! Parting is such sweet sorrow
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Easily one of my least favorite of The Bard's works. Reading this in high school very nearly put me off Shakespeare for good. One of the first books I ever remember reading that made me want to smack both main characters upside the head and ask them "What the heck are you thinking?!"
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This review is for the Frankly Annotated First Folio Edition, with annotations by Demitra Papadinis.The layout of the book is fantastic, making it easy to keep your place in the play when checking on the notes. The notes themselves are fantastic, going in depth and not leaving out the dirty jokes. A thoroughly enjoyable and educational edition!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Found this very easy to use and understand. I think my family is tired of me quoting the play then explaining it according to the book. As a theater major I found this book fascinating.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I give this book 5 stars because it uses creative and expresses a true form of writing that makes you want to read more until you've read the whole book!!
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    This is a tragedy in the sense that Shakespeare did so much better with his other plays. This one is weak. The amount of coincidence is down right ridiculous, Shakespeare plays way too much into the "love" for a tale that is supposed to be cautionary(or so I think it might've been senseless fighting between two families led to tragic deaths, never really capitalizes on it til the end). It's also the standard for classic love story although it is nothing of the sort. I despised it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is a great romantic tragedy, which I had to read for my Intro. to Drama class. This is one of those works of Shakespeare that has been done in a multitude of forms and variations, so it is quite likely that everyone has a rough idea of the story. Still, you really cannot replace the original. There is a lot of unbelievable story to it, which can overdo it to the point of being distracting, but overall the language and story are so supremely memorable that it automatically qualifies as a must-read. As to the edition itself, I found it to be greatly helpful in understanding the action in the play. It has a layout which places each page of the play opposite a page of notes, definitions, explanations, and other things needed to understand that page more thoroughly. While I didn't always need it, I was certainly glad to have it whenever I ran into a turn of language that was unfamiliar, and I definitely appreciated the scene-by-scene summaries. Really, if you want to or need to read Shakespeare, an edition such as this is really the way to go, especially until you get more accustomed to it.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Bekannte Geschichte.Junge trifft Mädchen und sie verlieben sich. Eltern sind dagegen. Tragisches Ende. Der Stoff aus dem heute noch jeder dritte Liebesfilm besteht.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Bruce Colville’s retells Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet in story form. It includes a narration of the major plot points in a clear and easy to follow language that is appropriate for younger children (as early as third grade or so). The book also contains beautiful pictures that capture the important parts of the story and help to tell the story. What I like most about this book is that it incorporates quotes from the play itself. The way that it is mixed in with the easy-to-follow narration of the book would, I believe, help children develop a basic understanding of Shakesperian language that will be helpful to them as they advance into higher grades. This book could also be useful to students in middle and high school. This book could be helpful to me in my current situation as a high school English tutor: Many of the students I tutor are completely thrown off by the language that Shakespeare uses, which inhibits their understanding of the entire story. Supplementing a lesson on Romeo and Juliet with this book would be a good way to get students to grasp the basics of the play and also to ease them into the complex language of the play. Great Book!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I absolutely love this! Romeo can be an idiot sometimes, their families are jerks and the Friar seriously screwed up but you have to love it all.

    Favourite Quote ;

    Oh she doth teach the torches to burn bright, it seems she hangs upon the cheek of night
    As a rich jewel in an Ethiop's ear, beauty too rich for use, for earth too dear.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I'm giving Romeo and Juliet 3 stars because the writing was brilliant. I must admit, Shakespeare was a master in this aspect; in others, not so much. Oh how much I loathe the characters of Romeo and Juliet. But Mercutio was pretty awesome.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I listened to an audiobook version by the BBC. It was very well done and a pleasure to listen to. It was also very short, only about 3 hours long. I enjoyed the story and am glad that I have finally experienced it. Would like to see the play performed live some day.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is not my favorite of the tragedies...perhaps too much memory of Ninth Grade English cramming comparisons of it and West Side Story down my throat. Seriously though, while I've reread it twice and can love the language, I can't overlook the essential silliness of the whole situation.Recommended because there's no Shakespeare I've yet read that I wouldn't recommend, I don't think it's the most enjoyable thing he's written.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    In the book Romeo and Juliet, two families, the Montagues and the Capulets, who are worst enemies, try to discourage the love between their children Romeo and Juliet. Things only get worse when Romeo kills one of the Capulet’s kinsmen, Tybalt, in a duel. Romeo is banished and Juliet is broken hearted when she finds out that she will have to marry Paris. To get rest and pass the time, she drinks a vile which will make her appear dead. After she drinks the vile she is pronounced dead and put into a charnel house. Word reaches Romeo that Juliet is dead so he buys a bottle of poison and drinks it next to Juliet’s body. When Juliet wakes up and sees Romeo dead, she takes his dagger and stabs herself. This book was a page-turner! I think it was so exciting because it had just the right amount of romance. It was also a little sad because death could have been prevented. A lesson I have been reminded of is think before you act. I look forward to reading another Shakespeare book. This edition was useful because it had a vocabulary list for some of the Old-English. In my opinion this is a must read.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I believed this play to be seriously overrated-- and then I read it. LOL. A beautiful piece of literature that truly encaptures what it is to be a "star-crossed lover."
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I'm a big Romeo & Juliet fan. I've memorized the book, that's how much I've read it. I read along to Leonardo di Caprio and Claire Danes as they said their lines in that movie.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Brilliant. I am not a fan of love stories or romances or even stories of betrayal and family dynamics. However, this is a stunning book, one of the best ever written I suppose. (I also liked the movie with Leonardo di Caprio and John Leguizamo by this name. It seemed to have all the original writing or a good chunk of it in a modern movie which I've never seen done well before -- I liked it much better than the Liam Neeson ones). The story is basic compared to many of his other books but the writing's as good or better.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Romeo and Juliet is a huge tragedy. It is a good romance novel though. I liked reading it because I was able to understand all of those classic lines used in the novel. like romeo oh romeo where for out thou romeo.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Thanks to TV and movies, I knew the basic premise of this book before even reading it. Thus, when I read it I was not really impressed. To be fair, I skimmed through it, but nothing stood out that made me want to read it. Damn Hollywood.

Book preview

Richard III - William Shakespeare

p.abook_preview_excerpt.html}ےG寤iB-E8V%"nZ?2@fd=?v`cdLPd>I&R@f\<}Uz+<{r5=PvBepuͪ ͮź޻*µU1|O/˰,.ۢb芛ޗC}Xڻ W 8tc_T&xɻqUA^ 鉌/aZW|WD? G(cv 'm,v>~Ѹl"PhB֖8%R._{1$ׇ.ȶ;!`7K {_yCؓd[E9ڵm9kw }wmd{r]/VcjJҩ?DHIfcش6ziib%gW݄m1n BznWxx/!GFʲ( qv/ Ws֗dSwԡĴ\vL.x0= qKիO/>/߾vKnŏ/>{q'b!Ȝ,ݐ)OH.D^vF:zt"\Y=DTғW:nlats3w3rhV [fcӸ>xYz/2i놮'_sNh?`e-t\ߖ݋ԪJAǰ%Uw1}א<2pNdlr E0x-~J~u.ZB 9j,ub3 pI'~~x,:iMPw4!{uWʿcuc=T- y(ѽ=6M2}*:( 2QNR+׻bYyAQv-KNYݴ\܍=ųI_ꈔ6ҼGUqNO_4{89Ӡte2[.,x!B5< rsmʇRUЧDpKzVL2#쐸EX~" o b_4AAԚHnIxc\ qtl9Grrv$k}b%ŻZdX:6~"R#Ubu?wt\e6Gdsbu{/|9Q9nZއJ~/9+jSbgRh։/.0V48I"G|tdB:-vRn*B5Zy'm(^!w2 0=6ٍxr,$эy=i D'.,2MUW[g fw$v+.GofO!|4_0BV^j͍9ފ2]y i,wbCrE´RO+&%ZGtk@cFrs="F%E.^k\y]*%$|LKCXM38:8[;DsZ|5)7Ba{y5#V7ߪ0l\՚s уOԸnEbՉSέAPp6+(l1a1VyɌ0_~bY",r0_+v+H6mJ,_˖վrteQ/~C7ڷw*G[ 5rRȺ{~o88wS;vۭ ^DnwjWO4Q(3"Ϯzrv=*ey;2/;y rede>SP#[;k=/g%-Wd?LD;Y`=]U/S|y3)&Q=Y(ƯO)ĜO9g?ÙοfOߟK?og?OtfGZ-Vp~Y+x/tRuew*!3xX\0ﶇZ+%d:':/-4"~I_XZsm{o-_;1g4M \SZkS!95Ŭ[8bu<)`QZbZVsvQ_!\{7Kp+A6w$vp;U!VLAXJ5^n${Vr2q~.e $9A_<9D+$>Zu\#?d/4]>[sZz#ϓr;+WJ#SNcœyQX Mi-!NB;nདlWbN9CeI9gˇ8!wZ:+Щl{"3wED\!+97cՍmᅪmBV͉dKfAa )N(5g%D5-X#ԢGR&7G.Nd: }%$]0aVE]SkT ^ѼO܄jeW5vRa Q 3CvcGX T.f_#&P+ZbgF7::ܨ ߁N+ CLzmMl};gD#c q`8([aii&%Oz$^Q"U߀RZ `R70Iw a$=Kʹ}JqH|2C%ק9E VW ia';MC`2$gcN_!z==9=J\^CfTp 2J>65Q)5YnyeqtMW'k+Kz:՚RT!˥&/msٶ6hIyɏJE^|s!O鏉M@\SMxgsT*UhY9d*Uq :*_trnڢy#JV#U2y69FOgBϚEABXumDD|vѹa-X? q %bݶ-.R飨 Gr٢Li)xČ3H#qYYO dsā:=kz`aj S0&CQb3jPj9&W̋]N^(RExc4Ր6Æ_љ[]aT0F:uϕ3two[v&yA:ց>At(&A)D6PbZOhmh{WI> a*rdqR|*% P^,,e겕}  lBsmEss`AaNY@' quş5@%OcQWQdxVݞT:1J/ҏm"2n ԃ#,r_W=ڈa b$|);F"Iq ((ef >6˱IZLK2oywF&׉kmA?$lxlX[/-pH=E^8n葌&dEQ҄F>Pμ:RQvxB">J()}?:6A U3V(eq0UfT^.*,ֻă3S;.Zp}{KQ)?#ue?B _wtP 5B\'hJX;1t7sdbDZ/V# !&[-3Lf5;">e9q<45 >F$/njI([-%'n@ՈQFM7П jr*&2މn06p{WLh;p$La:)nˏ k5#fdg75GFNЭA$ QMZU"?̲Q>?|pO3WkRpϢrX= Un^0`SΫuZ A>|՟x&OjD$7D* /Ci@M6=A*=M>qDN^;Y&Wz+/~F"BauK3%Ds%n"X]N$KĆSO"uilڥZ ;vJ8+xyzDqn)d]'l|)0ѷܾ|м'RV- bڣ~24/_.)9 o.˦p0A$igG,5?mXX$/ ? 1me[~RN:$ƝPrBҢ5%ʉEĉ`~5)PP.P(= [W!ZXM1[8/Qߧj::q=2)r6h][2L=a;sWP2ѧ9e0a2spC98UZT 8R\GΗ&O}**"aB !jtǹm$|]wmo(٨˰/ǁ(k;v_k w YD ٙ%I<'mdP݁l{N-fLح{kc4΀߾W&=Zk'/b 9j.Nn"iV@N496܏+hh-iï/@`l}erzA7΅6\C)AiZ])V` TO%]eSȩ LKI,S_{ 6 l} jD'kN㜞%Ea cҭE~4+~bd'm`H](I(NNfb?/9vH.L*eBcUY:O 0f`3Mdːތ݄כKԞf74![gL"GIvhj#ܿ)=6uSg7#ՀMG>>DP$׭'Cec Ķ[6[([!4fw2L y$1CkTokؽ-W9Ո&F5|;ũ}R m_Nefz=gmĻv3G" I? Ɲ0?"Ce/+G!|JcDZA@鑾afeߡ tn p!$8~[K"ߴS!X3f~L؇RC%r\ꜿB0ЁDi:>w^ҁ׻7샖N9w:xXO$_6׶%oҜdR9 XAi6EvUGqLS 1C wbOBW'>@~zM 5.yqVu\N WPݳ[q>nON"zMx ^:5_3V/-9缼-sM>oa^ō"oA̞<*ˍ믳Sp&yg ^oTi*Tu'8+Z 2E)Fꯕ]+wi=S$պO+9HǙ斁\8zlRˊc&Yg16E50rQg ՚4mZ彛#{@QeEa.J8 uϨvK̴>-d:GRݎqE}j®D Uw49Z8c\[Ig4^ aڂD6xq},6cj;^G4#|94ɉ?g?E _{~uq5}Yh@ҋhhRkݖe4Nv5r8MTx!r^+tHSŰU+*Gs"=4 d)ľaXk)\|uTuٗ,ARM7@98'&%Yd0~G;h$J)J3B=O)Y#V5Dʆ*z&fTzj0kWMnQ%c 7wT;`I)ĵ{ޜDZu-,+Jo] ejM ޫH^Gky_cJk~+1BE΁6N\C#7@ʑLW}iro*": Vt9 kj1]Yh \3TpA Me>}cW=gcsؠ b跇aKA:=3M4$EĤ[c'# Ss'BuIO~h낛^DI0]\j%`o:Af9kl+)686xm)uT9.U/2p9v-o&"j dWZŀa=:7ϼ6 9`rS9DPB,fI[3\8@"] =>~Ж䮟K`{Y+8;l֦;ﱚzl4"W}"Jp992l֧'Jh{jUFecfU6mlg6W|m}&KcP6K1 ۓTҥU͡ kCUQZљ zK`6iYNfo͠hnI*='`3D%h*"$-[#+dfJ- PU16Sŕl$|ndIő7##O 0 ح=:V5W8ioQB!!cĔJs ؗ&x[%ٱkv#MP#Nj{L|kUt#PE|{!ek:kAؓ)uCR< -pR.pYRxH / _)O+Uv`hI1!㉅M$J`j  #SLg ) 7iͼhV(­Rμ:ükad?"ھ~OLoSfPރ*_;NZ3jݭYF:^%{'bV S;"'@– ZW֏8/Ȉh8vc̎5+B=ڃ0g,e.OO lMVQHlo(p3i6~_xeclP\-P6%\< t=q"ͤ39N $TW !'ѬЛR"#`ȡܑ5+V.쨸&A\̩ ^lѫgR-:f*#`AQA%7^[:gZ ({zR?Wb n tu8v9K8^91aB{~Ru 'H+1wdž;5R4iLM@U hJY޾'Ԩg!a1I)raw eX2qOcl'9Wg6C,qf] ޹ nS0n-1~C9D$ߡK5x*)A׉ӕ\9M` sxמM:YFkEԖK+- PtB4 #֓"#L1-Ok'޶VZkAhۮj3]8|>3Ahn`WД/5}sbq25'hY/ 1WZ:7: D'W{9a wz~/NuP)L3ٲ/5PSwٽa~0h^xL]tFm4ҟX6*yV8a&X~[,l7u,Ghh<`UwП9GNΛu_%1%g!rEw eө]{K'e٫ϋċ wkz~fSqDe"밳@a]+\LҖ)b%QBMCV hҡiӫe##D |~c|ುpb2"~+tA5d眑]?Ep^r7G;37rv
Enjoying the preview?