Shoutout to the Cursed Books Club, without whom this rant would not be possible, because I would have committed arson gone insane two days ago.
Real footage of me being convinced to read this.
Here’s your spoiler warning because I honestly have no patience to be funny right now. This book was terrible. I’m going to talk about everything that I found problematic or even vaguely annoying in this book. Please keep all trigger warnings in mind while reading this review. If you enjoyed this book and think I should have as well, I don’t want to hear it. Otherwise, well, have fun.
TW/CW: (view spoiler)
(To everyone who has been anticipating this review, apologies that it has taken me a week to type up. Apparently thinking about ‘After’ for any period of time makes me prone to fits of fury and general rage. Sorry about that.)
Objectively, ‘After’ is the worst book I’ve ever read. It has absolutely everything, and to top it all off, it’s Harry Styles Wattpad fanficton. This book honestly infuriated me even more than
(That’s not saying much, because the entire book is a sea of ‘nope’, with about three droplets of ‘not-as-shitty-as-the-rest-of-it’.)
Real footage of my braincells dropping dead because of this dumpster fire.
‘After’ tries to tell the story of Tessa Young, a perfect little college student whose life is turned absolutely upside down after meeting bad boy Harry Styles Hardin Scott, because of a relationship that is as long as it is fun to read about. So that is to say, not fun long at all.
Tessa is your classic good girl. All she does is study and never has any fun. She just wants to be successful in life and not get in trouble, and is therefore not like other teenagers, let alone other girls. Logic 100. Additionally, because of her financial situation, despite her AmAzInG gRaDeS she only applies to one school. Not even ONE safety school. Logic 1000.
As you can see, Tessa is the smartest person on the planet, ever. When she meets Hardin, things aren’t exactly off to a great start for this pErFeCt CoUpLe. She goes as far as to acknowledge that she’s judging him for his tattoos and piercings, but turns right around and says that she’s being polite. She claIMS THAT THERE ARE ONLY TWO GENDERS. SHE INSINUATES THAT PEOPLE WITH OCD ARE CRAZY.
*visibly attempts to remain sane*
She hates Steph, her roommate, on-site because she wears revealing clothes and has tattoos/piercings. (I actually somewhat liked Steph because she defends Tessa and remains supportive of her even when Tessa is so outright judgemental about her, even if Steph peer-pressures Tessa somewhat.) This brings us to one of the biggest problems with this book: all the slut-shaming.
You see, Tessa holds herself in such high regard because of how ‘perfect’ and ‘innocent’ she is. She hates everyone who “looks different”, especially girls who dress differently from how she does. It gets particularly worse when a side character, Molly, is introduced.
Girl-on-girl hate reaches its peak in this book, because Molly exists solely to make Tessa jealous, and she goes as far as to call Molly a ‘skank’ and a ‘whore’ multiple times. Just because Molly used to sleep with Hardin. Which Tessa now does.
((Call-out paragraph for Tessa’s mother, who takes one look at the band posters, piercings, and pentagrams black leather, and demands that Tessa change dorms, and occasionally shows up from time to time. No joke. Tessa’s mother is more of a Karen than the character named ‘Karen’ in this book.))
Tessa goes to a party with some other people and drinks for the first time. She stumbles into a bedroom with books in it. Because Tessa is the most intelligent of all intellectuals, her favorite book is ‘Wuthering Heights’, which she notices with the books. Just as she sits down to read it, Hardin walks into the room. We learn that not only is Hardin a bad boy, but an intellectual because he reads ✨classics✨.
There is instant kemistree between the two of them, and we know this because we get more descriptions of Hardin’s eyes than what goes on at school. In one of the few chapters that we do get to see what goes on at school, Tessa befriends Landon, who turns out to be Hardin’s step-brother, but is one of the only characters I actually liked because of how genuinely nice he is.
Apart from all of that, Tessa has actually had a boyfriend this entire time – Noah. Noah is also nice but basically has no role in the story other than to build part of Tessa’s love triangle. He’s worried about Tessa and calls her mother on a few occasions, on account of how Tessa seems unable to make good decisions anymore.
Time passes, drunken games of truth-or-dare are played, and Hardin and Tessa decide to try to be friends. They decide to go out one day…
…and Hardin fingers her at a lake.
Tessa comes to the conclusion that she doesn’t want to be with Noah, but actually Hardin. Of course, for how smart she is, Tessa can’t figure out how to break up with him, bEcAuSe ThEy’Ve BeEn BeSt FrIeNdS fOrEvEr. So, basically, it’s okay to cheat on your boyfriend if you ✨feel bad✨ about it. She repeatedly acknowledges that cheating is wrong but continues to do it because she’s nOt LiKe OtHeR gIrLs.
The level of drama in this book genuinely rivals that of a soap opera. Noah finds out that Tessa has been cheating on him with Hardin in the most dramatic way possible, but decides that he can put it behind them if Tessa stops seeing Hardin. So she does.
Kidding! Of course not! Tessa and Hardin get caught by Landon of all people and continue messing around with each other. Poor Noah finds out about them again and they properly break up.
And so begins a disturbing montage of push-and-pull between Tessa and Hardin, as they decide to properly date. Except not really. Hardin starts oPeNiNg Up to Tessa, and shows her a SoFtEr SiDe of him, which convinces her that he really does like her, but just feels conflicted sometimes.
So when the two of them argue (which is almost constantly), instead of standing up for herself, Tessa thinks that it’s better for her to just be quiet and let him work through it. Hardin will yell at her, and then thirty seconds later we’re getting ghastly descriptions of him going down on her. All while being told how rOmAnTiC he is.
This brings us to the biggest problem of the book: the relationship itself. Tessa and Hardin’s relationship is emotionally and at times physically abusive. Hardin manipulates Tessa to the point where she thinks that their relationship is normal. Hardin is actually so terrible that everytime he acts even remotely decent, he is lauded for how incredible he is.
He also constantly called Tessa ‘bAbY’, which absolutely grated on my nerves. If I ever have to hear that word again, I am going to ✨yeet myself into a void✨ and die a traumatized human.
Hardin is terrible to everyone, a behavior which seems to stem from the fact that his father was a neglectful alcoholic at one point. And so because of that, Hardin is still incredibly disrespectful to his father, his step-mother, his step-brother, and the world at large.
There’s one scene in particular that comes to my mind. Tessa is screaming about how miserable she is when she’s with Hardin, and how being with him was terrible for her. She acknowledges that his behavior is borderline sociopathic, and tells him that he brings out the worst in her.
His response? That even though he brings out the worst in her, she brings out the best in him, so it’s good for them to stay together.
Yeah. uMM-
AKA Hardin in a gif.
To make matters worse, they move in together. Tessa’s mother shows up, and drama ensues.
However I’d like to point out one VERY big problem with this: Tessa doesn’t really know Hardin. She met him, what, 6 months ago, when she started college? She doesn’t even know his favorite color, let alone who he truly is. He could be an axe-murderer for all she knows, luring her into a false sense of security, getting her to trust him completely and abandon all of her friends only to betray her in the worst way at the end.
Oh wait.
Tessa also gets an internship at Vance Publishing, where she gets her own office and basically reads manuscripts all day. I’d like to point out that Tessa is a COLLEGE. STUDENT. If she spends all day at her internship, and all night fucking Hardin, where the hell does she find the time to go to classes? Does she even go to classes?? What about hOMEWORK???
One day, Hardin stays out all night and refuses to tell Tessa where he had been. It’s clear to her that he has been drinking, even though he had initially claimed to almost never drink although he spends a good portion of this book drunk, but we’re not going to start questioning that now.
Tessa decides that she’s going to be strict with him, and tells him that she isn’t going to sleep with him that night, or something. He tells her something along the lines of “bUt YoU kNoW i GeT nIgHtMaReS wHeN i DoN’t SlEeP wItH yOu” (which, hey, again, manipulation!), and explains why: when he was really young, he saw his mother raped in front of him, and has had nightmares ever since.
I know, that’s a terrible thing to happen to someone, especially at a young age. But what does giving Hardin a tragic backstory do, other than “excuse” him for his disgusting behavior? Absolutely nothing. Trying to garner sympathy because you witnessed something that horrible is not okay. It does not, in any way, shape, or form give you special permission to treat everyone like dirt.
Things actually seem to get better between Tessa and Hardin, to the point where he acts like a decent human being at his father’s wedding. Of course, they have sex. However, things aren’t adding up, and Tessa decides to go meet Steph (who, surprise surprise, is still alive!) and the rest of their friends.
When she gets to the restaurant where they’re all meeting, she finds Hardin with Molly and immediately sees red. She demands an explanation from everyone there and finds out that her relationship with Hardin thus far has been a farce. It was all a bet to find out who could take Tessa’s virginity first.
Definitely didn’t see that coming.
Tessa leaves the restaurant in a heartbroken fury, all whilst Hardin attempts to console her, and claims that he had never meant to hurt her, and all sorts of irritating drivel.
Tessa and Hardin’s relationship right now. Probably. Hopefully.
And so this dreadful dumpster fire goes out. Except not really, because there are four more books. I’d like to think that Tessa really means it, splits with Hardin for real, and gets her life back on track, but something tells me not to be optimistic.
All of that being said, if you think about it, there’s really no plot whatsoever. It’s just a couple of college kids being horny and making bad decisions.
We’re not even going to talk about character development, because it’s nonexistent.
The writing was simultaneously slow and rushed, and ultimately very painful to read.
The narrator was… oh god. Let’s not even talk about this. The narrator must have been desperate to go through with all of this, but their voice only made it worse for me.
That’s actually a lie. I managed to make my way through this book, didn’t I?
There’s just one last thing I’d like to address: the 60,000 five-star ratings. To everyone who gave this book that high a rating, I’d just like to know one thing: why??? There’s literally no redeemable aspect of this book. It isn’t even remotely fun. The smut is dry and stale. Hardin’s relationship with Tessa is disturbing and abusive. Harding isn’t even hot!
Essentially this book accomplishes two things:
1.) Embodies every terrible trope that is characteristic of Wattpad fanfiction, and
2.) Tells readers that the sort of relationship Tessa and Hardin have is okay. That it’s perfectly fine, good even, to be emotionally abused the way Tessa is in the book if he’s “hot” and has a tragic past. (If I’m being completely honest, however, it is difficult for me to even show any sympathy for Tessa because of how awful and hypocritical she is.)
Live footage of me yeeting all my memories of this book.
So yeah. I’m done.
Pray for my braincells. ✌
~~~~~~~~
i know i said i would never read this
but here we are.
buddy read with the cursed books club! (yes, that is a thing now. don’t ask.)
~~~~~~~~~
update: my teacher was playing a harry styles song in english class today
i’m disappointed in myself to say that this is where my thought process ended up at.
~~~~~~~~~
what the actual fork
apparently this is harry styles wattpad fanfiction
what has the world come to[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]>[“br”]> ( 0.25/5 : 0.1 for Landon, 0.1 for Noah, 0.05 for Steph. That ‘s it. Fuck everyone else. ) ( To everyone who has been anticipating this review, apologies that it has taken me a week to type up. apparently thinking about ‘After ‘ for any period of time makes me prone to fits of ferocity and general rage. Sorry about that. ) objectively, ‘After ‘ is the worst book I ‘ve ever read. It has absolutely everything, and to top it all off, it ‘s Harry Styles Wattpad fanficton. This koran honestly infuriated me flush more than Ignite Me did, and that ‘s saying something. however, unlike ‘Ignite Me ‘, ‘After ‘ besides had precisely three slightly redeemable points. ( That ‘s not saying much, because the stallion record is a ocean of ‘nope ‘, with about three droplets of ‘not-as-shitty-as-the-rest-of-it ‘. ) ‘After ‘ tries to tell the story of Tessa Young, a arrant little college student whose biography is turned absolutely top gloomy after meetingHardin Scott, because of a relationship that is arsenic long as it is fun to read about. So that is to say, notlong at all.Tessa is your authoritative good female child. All she does is study and never has any playfulness. She just wants to be successful in life and not get in trouble, and is consequently not like other teenagers, let alone other girls. Logic 100. additionally, because of her fiscal position, despite her AmAzInG grade she only applies to one school. not tied ONE safety school. Logic 1000.As you can see, Tessa is the smartest person on the satellite, ever. When she meets Hardin, things are n’t precisely off to a big start for this perfect CoUpLe. She goes angstrom army for the liberation of rwanda as to acknowledge that she ‘s judging him for his tattoo and piercings, but turns right around and says that she ‘s being civilized. She claIMS THAT THERE ARE ONLY TWO GENDERS. SHE INSINUATES THAT PEOPLE WITH OCD ARE CRAZY. *visibly attempts to remain sane*She hates Steph, her roommate, on-site because she wears revealing clothes and has tattoos/piercings. ( I actually reasonably wish Steph because she defends Tessa and remains supportive of her even when Tessa is indeed outright judgemental about her, even if Steph peer-pressures Tessa reasonably. ) This brings us to one of the biggest problems with this script : You see, Tessa holds herself in such high gaze because of how ‘perfect ‘ and ‘innocent ‘ she is. She hates everyone who “ looks different ”, particularly girls who dress differently from how she does. It gets particularly bad when a side fictional character, Molly, is introduced.Girl-on-girl hate reaches its peak in this book, because Molly exists entirely to make Tessa jealous, and she goes ampere far as to call Molly a ‘skank ‘ and a ‘whore ‘ multiple times. Just because Molly used to sleep with Hardin. ( ( Call-out paragraph for Tessa ‘s mother, who takes one count at the band posters, piercings, andblack leather, and demands that Tessa change dorms, and occasionally shows up from clock time to time. No joke. Tessa ‘s beget is more of a Karen than the character named ‘Karen ‘ in this book. ) ) Tessa goes to a party with some other people and drinks for the beginning prison term. She stumbles into a bedroom with books in it. Because Tessa is the most intelligent of all intellectuals, her darling book is ‘Wuthering Heights ‘, which she notices with the books. just as she sits down to read it, Hardin walks into the room. We learn that not only is Hardin a bad male child, but an intellectual because he reads ✨classics✨.There is instant kemistree between the two of them, and we know this because we get more descriptions of Hardin ‘s eyes than what goes on at school. In one of the few chapters that we do get to see what goes on at school, Tessa befriends Landon, who turns out to be Hardin ‘s step-brother, but is one of the merely characters I actually liked because of how authentically nice he is.Apart from all of that, Tessa has actually had a boyfriend this integral clock time – Noah. Noah is besides courteous but basically has no character in the floor other than to build separate of Tessa ‘s love triangulum. He ‘s worried about Tessa and calls her mother on a few occasions, on score of how Tessa seems unable to make dear decisions anymore.Time passes, bibulous games of truth-or-dare are played, and Hardin and Tessa decide to try to be friends. They decide to go out one day … … and Hardin fingers her at a lake.Tessa comes to the termination that she does n’t want to be with Noah, but actually Hardin. Of course, for how smart she is, Tessa ca n’t figure out how to break up with him, bEcAuSe ThEy’Ve BeEn BeSt FrIeNdS everlastingly. therefore, basically, it ‘s all right to cheat on your boyfriend if you ✨feel bad✨ about it. She repeatedly acknowledges that cheating is wrong but continues to do it because she ‘s nOt LiKe OtHeR gIrLs.The flat of play in this ledger truly rivals that of a soap opera. Noah finds out that Tessa has been cheating on him with Hardin in the most dramatic way possible, but decides that he can put it behind them if Tessa stops seeing Hardin. So she does.Kidding ! Of course not ! Tessa and Hardin get caught by Landon of all people and continue messing around with each other. Poor Noah finds out about themand they properly break up.And then begins a disturb collage of push-and-pull between Tessa and Hardin, as they decide to properly date. Except not in truth. Hardin starts oPeNiNg Up to Tessa, and shows her a SoFtEr SiDe of him, which convinces her that he truly does like her, but just feels conflicted sometimes.So when the two of them argue ( which is about constantly ), rather of standing up for herself, Tessa thinks that it ‘s better for her to just be placid and let him work through it. Hardin will yell at her, and then thirty seconds later we ‘re getting ghastly descriptions of him going down on her. All while being told how romanticist he is.This brings us to the biggest trouble of the reserve : Tessa and Hardin ‘s relationship is emotionally and at times physically abusive. Hardin manipulates Tessa to the point where she thinks that their relationship is normal. Hardin is actually so awful that everytime he acts even remotely decent, he is lauded for how incredible he is.Hardin is frightful to everyone, a demeanor which seems to stem from the fact that his forefather was a inattentive alcoholic at one point. And indeed because of that, Hardin is still incredibly aweless to his father, his step-mother, his step-brother, and the world at large.There ‘s one scene in particular that comes to my mind. Tessa is screaming about how hapless she is when she ‘s with Hardin, and how being with him was frightful for her. She acknowledges that his demeanor is boundary line sociopathic, and tells him that he brings out the worst in her.His reaction ? That flush though he brings out the worst in her, she brings out the best in him, so it ‘s good for them to stay together.Yeah. uMM-To shuffle matters worse, they move in together. Tessa ‘s mother shows up, and drama ensues.However I ‘d like to point out one VERY big problem with this : Tessa doesn’tknow Hardin. She met him, what, 6 months ago, when she started college ? She does n’t even know his favorite color, let alone who he rightfully is. He could be an axe-murderer for all she knows, luring her into a false sense of security, getting her to trust him wholly and abandon all of her friends alone to betray her in the worst way at the end.Tessa besides gets an internship at Vance Publishing, where she gets her own office and basically reads manuscripts all day. I ‘d like to point out that Tessa is a COLLEGE. STUDENT. If she spends all day at her internship, and all night fucking Hardin, where the hell does she find the time to go to classes ? Does she even go to classes ? ? What about homework ? ? ? One day, Hardin stays out all nox and refuses to tell Tessa where he had been. It ‘s clear to her that he has been drinking, even though he had initially claimed to about never drinkTessa decides that she ‘s going to be rigid with him, and tells him that she is n’t going to sleep with him that night, or something. He tells her something along the lines of “ merely YoU kNoW iodine GeT nightmare wHeN i DoN’t SlEeP wItH yOu ” ( which, hey, again, handling ! ), and explains why : when he was truly new, he saw his mother raped in front of him, and has had nightmares ever since.I know, that ‘s a awful thing to happen to person, particularly at a young old age. But what does giving Hardin a tragic backstory do, other than “ excuse ” him for his disgusting behavior ? absolutely nothing. Trying to garner sympathy because you witnessed something that atrocious is not o. It does not, in any direction, shape, or form give you special permission to treat everyone like dirt.Things actually seem to get better between Tessa and Hardin, to the item where he acts like a decent human being at his father ‘s wedding. Of run, they have sex. however, things are n’t adding up, and Tessa decides to go converge Steph ( who, surprise surprise, is still alive ! ) and the rest of their friends.When she gets to the restaurant where they ‘re all meet, she finds Hardin with Molly and immediately sees crimson. She demands an explanation from everyone there and finds out that her relationship with Hardin frankincense far has been a forcemeat. It was all a count to find out who could take Tessa ‘s virginity first.did n’t see that coming.Tessa leaves the restaurant in a brokenhearted fury, all whilst Hardin attempts to console her, and claims that he had never meant to hurt her, and all sorts of irritating drivel.And sol this awful dumpster fire goes out. Except not very, because there are four more books. I ‘d like to think that Tessa in truth means it, splits with Hardin for very, and gets her life back on track, but something tells me not to be optimistic.All of that being said, if you think about it, there ‘s in truth no plot any. It ‘s good a couple of college kids being corneous and making bad decisions.We ‘re not even going to talk about character development, because it ‘s nonexistent.The write was simultaneously slowly and rushed, and ultimately very afflictive to read.The narrator was … ohio god. Let ‘s not even talk about this. The narrator must have been desperate to go through with all of this, but their voice only made it worse for me.There ‘s equitable one final matter I ‘d like to address :. To everyone who gave this ledger that high a rat, I ‘d merely like to know one thing : There ‘s literally no redeemable aspect of this book. It is n’t flush remotely playfulness. The smut is dry and cold. Hardin ‘s relationship with Tessa is disturbing and abusive. Harding is n’t even hot ! basically this bible accomplishes two things:1. ) Embodies every severe trope that is feature of Wattpad fanfiction, and2. ) Tells readers that the kind of relationship Tessa and Hardin have is okay. That it ‘s perfectly all right, full even, to be emotionally abused the way Tessa is in the book if he ‘s “ hot ” and has a tragic past. ( If I ‘m being wholly honest, however, it is unmanageable for me to even show any sympathy for Tessa because of how terribly and hypocritical she is. ) so yea. I ‘m done.Pray for my braincells. ✌~~~~~~~~i know i said one would never read thisbut here we are.~~~~~~~~~update : my teacher was playing a harass styles sung in english class todayi ‘m disappointed in myself to say that this is where my think work ended up at.~~~~~~~~~what the actual forkapparently this is harass styles wattpad fanfictionwhat has the universe occur to [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] > [ “ bromine ” ] > [ “ red brigades ” ] >