The Au Pair

by

People June 2026 Pick - Literary Thriller / Domestic SuspenseUpdated July 2026
The Au Pair by Teddy Wayne book cover
A literary domestic thriller about Steven Hammer, a fading novelist whose infatuation with Astrid, the Norwegian au pair caring for his children, explodes into scandal, trial, and questions of desire, deception, and male ego.
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Reader Highlights

Steven Hammer begins the story from a position of wounded status. He is not presented as a simple failure; he was once taken seriously, and that earlier recognition makes his present decline feel humiliating. His wife is high-powered, his career is losing force, and the home that should anchor him becomes a stage where he measures himself against everyone else's competence. Astrid enters that stage as an au pair, but Steven reads her through the most dangerous possible lens: she appears to admire the version of him he misses. Her interest in his neglected novels offers him a private audience, and that audience becomes more intoxicating than ordinary affection.
Domestic thrillers often work because the home is both intimate and surveilled. The Au Pair uses that pressure well in its public premise. Astrid is close to the children, close to the routines of the family, and close enough to Steven's bruised ego to become a fantasy of recognition. The danger is not merely that Steven desires someone inappropriate. The danger is that he begins arranging his moral world around that desire. Every kindness can be reinterpreted as a signal, every professional disappointment can be blamed on people who do not understand him, and every boundary can be treated as an obstacle to a larger truth only he can see.
The central escalation is the movement from secrecy to notoriety. What begins as infatuation spirals into a scandal that makes both Steven and Astrid infamous. That shift is the key to the book's summary. A private story may be sustained by denial, but a public story is fought over by lawyers, headlines, witnesses, and spectators. Once the trial takes over, Steven no longer controls the genre of his own life. He may want to believe he is the protagonist of a late romantic awakening, but the surrounding world may see a middle-aged man using power, status, and fantasy to cross a line.

Plot Summary

Chapter 1: A fading novelist mistakes attention for rescue.

Steven Hammer begins the story from a position of wounded status. He is not presented as a simple failure; he was once taken seriously, and that earlier recognition makes his present decline feel humiliating. His wife is high-powered, his career is losing force, and the home that should anchor him becomes a stage where he measures himself against everyone else's competence. Astrid enters that stage as an au pair, but Steven reads her through the most dangerous possible lens: she appears to admire the version of him he misses. Her interest in his neglected novels offers him a private audience, and that audience becomes more intoxicating than ordinary affection. In The Au Pair, this is more than a point on the plot line. It establishes the terms on which later choices have to be judged. The pressure in chapter 1: a fading novelist mistakes attention for rescue comes from the fact that a character cannot simply step outside the situation and start again. What has already been said, withheld, promised, or damaged remains present in every later exchange. That accumulated pressure is what gives the chapter its weight: the reader is asked to notice not only an action, but the history that makes the action costly.

The public premise of The Au Pair is a literary domestic thriller about steven hammer, a fading novelist whose infatuation with astrid, the norwegian au pair caring for his children, explodes into scandal, trial, and questions of desire, deception, and male ego. Chapter 1 develops that premise by moving from an abstract problem to a personal one. A large system, family history, profession, friendship, romance, or social expectation becomes legible through the smaller decisions people make when they are afraid of being seen clearly. The most useful reading question here is therefore not who is simply right. It is what each person believes they can protect, and what that protection asks them to sacrifice.

Chapter 1: A fading novelist mistakes attention for rescue also changes the emotional vocabulary available to the characters. Before this point, they may be able to rely on a familiar story about themselves or about one another. Once the chapter's conflict becomes unavoidable, that story begins to fail. The tension does not have to depend on a hidden twist to feel real. It can come from the ordinary difficulty of admitting dependence, recognizing harm, revising a memory, or accepting that an old role no longer offers safety. That is the level on which this section is most rewarding to discuss.

A close reading should follow the gap between public behavior and private consequence. The Au Pair repeatedly makes social roles matter: people are shaped by what their environment rewards, by the version of events they can safely repeat, and by the relationships they cannot easily leave. In this chapter, those pressures narrow the field of choice. Even a decision that looks voluntary may carry the weight of earlier exclusions, loyalties, or expectations. The book's force lies in making that constraint visible without reducing its characters to a single explanation.

The chapter's structure invites attention to cause and effect. One moment of hesitation can alter how a relationship is read; one disclosure can make an earlier kindness look different; one act of loyalty can create a debt that later becomes difficult to repay. These are not interchangeable dramatic beats. They create the moral rhythm of The Au Pair. As you read, track which facts are confirmed, which assumptions are being challenged, and which questions remain deliberately open. That distinction helps preserve the novel's suspense while making its deeper concerns easier to name.

There is also an important difference between explanation and excuse. Chapter 1: A fading novelist mistakes attention for rescue may help readers understand why a character behaves as they do, but understanding is not the same as absolution. The most compelling fiction lets motives remain layered: fear can coexist with care, ambition with generosity, desire with control, and loyalty with avoidance. This chapter gains depth when it resists a simple verdict. Instead, it asks what responsibility looks like once a character sees the consequences of their choices and can no longer claim not to know.

For book-club readers, this section offers a useful point of disagreement. Some readers will focus on the immediate event, while others will read it as the result of an earlier pattern. Both approaches can be supported if the discussion stays close to the pressure the novel has already established. Ask which relationship changes most in this chapter, what information each person is missing or refusing, and whether the new situation creates freedom, obligation, or both. Those questions lead beyond recap into interpretation.

By the end of this movement, The Au Pair has made its central problem harder rather than merely larger. The story does not need to reveal every answer at once for the chapter to feel complete. Its achievement is to reposition the reader: the original premise now carries a more complicated emotional meaning, and the next decision will be judged against that expanded understanding. That is why this chapter belongs in the larger arc. It transforms the question from what will happen into what kind of person, relationship, or community can survive what has happened.

Chapter 2: The household setup turns emotional dependence into suspense.

This part of The Au Pair matters because it gives the central conflict an emotional shape rather than treating it as a sequence of plot points. The public premise frames the story around a literary domestic thriller about steven hammer, a fading novelist whose infatuation with astrid, the norwegian au pair caring for his children, explodes into scandal, trial, and questions of desire, deception, and male ego. Read the choices in this section as tests of loyalty, responsibility, and self-understanding: the important question is not only what a character does, but what that action makes possible or impossible afterward. In The Au Pair, this is more than a point on the plot line. It establishes the terms on which later choices have to be judged. The pressure in chapter 2: the household setup turns emotional dependence into suspense comes from the fact that a character cannot simply step outside the situation and start again. What has already been said, withheld, promised, or damaged remains present in every later exchange. That accumulated pressure is what gives the chapter its weight: the reader is asked to notice not only an action, but the history that makes the action costly.

The public premise of The Au Pair is a literary domestic thriller about steven hammer, a fading novelist whose infatuation with astrid, the norwegian au pair caring for his children, explodes into scandal, trial, and questions of desire, deception, and male ego. Chapter 2 develops that premise by moving from an abstract problem to a personal one. A large system, family history, profession, friendship, romance, or social expectation becomes legible through the smaller decisions people make when they are afraid of being seen clearly. The most useful reading question here is therefore not who is simply right. It is what each person believes they can protect, and what that protection asks them to sacrifice.

Chapter 2: The household setup turns emotional dependence into suspense also changes the emotional vocabulary available to the characters. Before this point, they may be able to rely on a familiar story about themselves or about one another. Once the chapter's conflict becomes unavoidable, that story begins to fail. The tension does not have to depend on a hidden twist to feel real. It can come from the ordinary difficulty of admitting dependence, recognizing harm, revising a memory, or accepting that an old role no longer offers safety. That is the level on which this section is most rewarding to discuss.

A close reading should follow the gap between public behavior and private consequence. The Au Pair repeatedly makes social roles matter: people are shaped by what their environment rewards, by the version of events they can safely repeat, and by the relationships they cannot easily leave. In this chapter, those pressures narrow the field of choice. Even a decision that looks voluntary may carry the weight of earlier exclusions, loyalties, or expectations. The book's force lies in making that constraint visible without reducing its characters to a single explanation.

The chapter's structure invites attention to cause and effect. One moment of hesitation can alter how a relationship is read; one disclosure can make an earlier kindness look different; one act of loyalty can create a debt that later becomes difficult to repay. These are not interchangeable dramatic beats. They create the moral rhythm of The Au Pair. As you read, track which facts are confirmed, which assumptions are being challenged, and which questions remain deliberately open. That distinction helps preserve the novel's suspense while making its deeper concerns easier to name.

There is also an important difference between explanation and excuse. Chapter 2: The household setup turns emotional dependence into suspense may help readers understand why a character behaves as they do, but understanding is not the same as absolution. The most compelling fiction lets motives remain layered: fear can coexist with care, ambition with generosity, desire with control, and loyalty with avoidance. This chapter gains depth when it resists a simple verdict. Instead, it asks what responsibility looks like once a character sees the consequences of their choices and can no longer claim not to know.

For book-club readers, this section offers a useful point of disagreement. Some readers will focus on the immediate event, while others will read it as the result of an earlier pattern. Both approaches can be supported if the discussion stays close to the pressure the novel has already established. Ask which relationship changes most in this chapter, what information each person is missing or refusing, and whether the new situation creates freedom, obligation, or both. Those questions lead beyond recap into interpretation.

By the end of this movement, The Au Pair has made its central problem harder rather than merely larger. The story does not need to reveal every answer at once for the chapter to feel complete. Its achievement is to reposition the reader: the original premise now carries a more complicated emotional meaning, and the next decision will be judged against that expanded understanding. That is why this chapter belongs in the larger arc. It transforms the question from what will happen into what kind of person, relationship, or community can survive what has happened.

Chapter 3: Private obsession becomes public scandal.

Domestic thrillers often work because the home is both intimate and surveilled. The Au Pair uses that pressure well in its public premise. Astrid is close to the children, close to the routines of the family, and close enough to Steven's bruised ego to become a fantasy of recognition. The danger is not merely that Steven desires someone inappropriate. The danger is that he begins arranging his moral world around that desire. Every kindness can be reinterpreted as a signal, every professional disappointment can be blamed on people who do not understand him, and every boundary can be treated as an obstacle to a larger truth only he can see. In The Au Pair, this is more than a point on the plot line. It establishes the terms on which later choices have to be judged. The pressure in chapter 3: private obsession becomes public scandal comes from the fact that a character cannot simply step outside the situation and start again. What has already been said, withheld, promised, or damaged remains present in every later exchange. That accumulated pressure is what gives the chapter its weight: the reader is asked to notice not only an action, but the history that makes the action costly.

The public premise of The Au Pair is a literary domestic thriller about steven hammer, a fading novelist whose infatuation with astrid, the norwegian au pair caring for his children, explodes into scandal, trial, and questions of desire, deception, and male ego. Chapter 3 develops that premise by moving from an abstract problem to a personal one. A large system, family history, profession, friendship, romance, or social expectation becomes legible through the smaller decisions people make when they are afraid of being seen clearly. The most useful reading question here is therefore not who is simply right. It is what each person believes they can protect, and what that protection asks them to sacrifice.

Chapter 3: Private obsession becomes public scandal also changes the emotional vocabulary available to the characters. Before this point, they may be able to rely on a familiar story about themselves or about one another. Once the chapter's conflict becomes unavoidable, that story begins to fail. The tension does not have to depend on a hidden twist to feel real. It can come from the ordinary difficulty of admitting dependence, recognizing harm, revising a memory, or accepting that an old role no longer offers safety. That is the level on which this section is most rewarding to discuss.

A close reading should follow the gap between public behavior and private consequence. The Au Pair repeatedly makes social roles matter: people are shaped by what their environment rewards, by the version of events they can safely repeat, and by the relationships they cannot easily leave. In this chapter, those pressures narrow the field of choice. Even a decision that looks voluntary may carry the weight of earlier exclusions, loyalties, or expectations. The book's force lies in making that constraint visible without reducing its characters to a single explanation.

The chapter's structure invites attention to cause and effect. One moment of hesitation can alter how a relationship is read; one disclosure can make an earlier kindness look different; one act of loyalty can create a debt that later becomes difficult to repay. These are not interchangeable dramatic beats. They create the moral rhythm of The Au Pair. As you read, track which facts are confirmed, which assumptions are being challenged, and which questions remain deliberately open. That distinction helps preserve the novel's suspense while making its deeper concerns easier to name.

There is also an important difference between explanation and excuse. Chapter 3: Private obsession becomes public scandal may help readers understand why a character behaves as they do, but understanding is not the same as absolution. The most compelling fiction lets motives remain layered: fear can coexist with care, ambition with generosity, desire with control, and loyalty with avoidance. This chapter gains depth when it resists a simple verdict. Instead, it asks what responsibility looks like once a character sees the consequences of their choices and can no longer claim not to know.

For book-club readers, this section offers a useful point of disagreement. Some readers will focus on the immediate event, while others will read it as the result of an earlier pattern. Both approaches can be supported if the discussion stays close to the pressure the novel has already established. Ask which relationship changes most in this chapter, what information each person is missing or refusing, and whether the new situation creates freedom, obligation, or both. Those questions lead beyond recap into interpretation.

By the end of this movement, The Au Pair has made its central problem harder rather than merely larger. The story does not need to reveal every answer at once for the chapter to feel complete. Its achievement is to reposition the reader: the original premise now carries a more complicated emotional meaning, and the next decision will be judged against that expanded understanding. That is why this chapter belongs in the larger arc. It transforms the question from what will happen into what kind of person, relationship, or community can survive what has happened.

Chapter 4: Astrid becomes the book's central uncertainty.

This part of The Au Pair matters because it gives the central conflict an emotional shape rather than treating it as a sequence of plot points. The public premise frames the story around a literary domestic thriller about steven hammer, a fading novelist whose infatuation with astrid, the norwegian au pair caring for his children, explodes into scandal, trial, and questions of desire, deception, and male ego. Read the choices in this section as tests of loyalty, responsibility, and self-understanding: the important question is not only what a character does, but what that action makes possible or impossible afterward. In The Au Pair, this is more than a point on the plot line. It establishes the terms on which later choices have to be judged. The pressure in chapter 4: astrid becomes the book's central uncertainty comes from the fact that a character cannot simply step outside the situation and start again. What has already been said, withheld, promised, or damaged remains present in every later exchange. That accumulated pressure is what gives the chapter its weight: the reader is asked to notice not only an action, but the history that makes the action costly.

The public premise of The Au Pair is a literary domestic thriller about steven hammer, a fading novelist whose infatuation with astrid, the norwegian au pair caring for his children, explodes into scandal, trial, and questions of desire, deception, and male ego. Chapter 4 develops that premise by moving from an abstract problem to a personal one. A large system, family history, profession, friendship, romance, or social expectation becomes legible through the smaller decisions people make when they are afraid of being seen clearly. The most useful reading question here is therefore not who is simply right. It is what each person believes they can protect, and what that protection asks them to sacrifice.

Chapter 4: Astrid becomes the book's central uncertainty also changes the emotional vocabulary available to the characters. Before this point, they may be able to rely on a familiar story about themselves or about one another. Once the chapter's conflict becomes unavoidable, that story begins to fail. The tension does not have to depend on a hidden twist to feel real. It can come from the ordinary difficulty of admitting dependence, recognizing harm, revising a memory, or accepting that an old role no longer offers safety. That is the level on which this section is most rewarding to discuss.

A close reading should follow the gap between public behavior and private consequence. The Au Pair repeatedly makes social roles matter: people are shaped by what their environment rewards, by the version of events they can safely repeat, and by the relationships they cannot easily leave. In this chapter, those pressures narrow the field of choice. Even a decision that looks voluntary may carry the weight of earlier exclusions, loyalties, or expectations. The book's force lies in making that constraint visible without reducing its characters to a single explanation.

The chapter's structure invites attention to cause and effect. One moment of hesitation can alter how a relationship is read; one disclosure can make an earlier kindness look different; one act of loyalty can create a debt that later becomes difficult to repay. These are not interchangeable dramatic beats. They create the moral rhythm of The Au Pair. As you read, track which facts are confirmed, which assumptions are being challenged, and which questions remain deliberately open. That distinction helps preserve the novel's suspense while making its deeper concerns easier to name.

There is also an important difference between explanation and excuse. Chapter 4: Astrid becomes the book's central uncertainty may help readers understand why a character behaves as they do, but understanding is not the same as absolution. The most compelling fiction lets motives remain layered: fear can coexist with care, ambition with generosity, desire with control, and loyalty with avoidance. This chapter gains depth when it resists a simple verdict. Instead, it asks what responsibility looks like once a character sees the consequences of their choices and can no longer claim not to know.

For book-club readers, this section offers a useful point of disagreement. Some readers will focus on the immediate event, while others will read it as the result of an earlier pattern. Both approaches can be supported if the discussion stays close to the pressure the novel has already established. Ask which relationship changes most in this chapter, what information each person is missing or refusing, and whether the new situation creates freedom, obligation, or both. Those questions lead beyond recap into interpretation.

By the end of this movement, The Au Pair has made its central problem harder rather than merely larger. The story does not need to reveal every answer at once for the chapter to feel complete. Its achievement is to reposition the reader: the original premise now carries a more complicated emotional meaning, and the next decision will be judged against that expanded understanding. That is why this chapter belongs in the larger arc. It transforms the question from what will happen into what kind of person, relationship, or community can survive what has happened.

Chapter 5: The trial exposes more than one lie.

The central escalation is the movement from secrecy to notoriety. What begins as infatuation spirals into a scandal that makes both Steven and Astrid infamous. That shift is the key to the book's summary. A private story may be sustained by denial, but a public story is fought over by lawyers, headlines, witnesses, and spectators. Once the trial takes over, Steven no longer controls the genre of his own life. He may want to believe he is the protagonist of a late romantic awakening, but the surrounding world may see a middle-aged man using power, status, and fantasy to cross a line. In The Au Pair, this is more than a point on the plot line. It establishes the terms on which later choices have to be judged. The pressure in chapter 5: the trial exposes more than one lie comes from the fact that a character cannot simply step outside the situation and start again. What has already been said, withheld, promised, or damaged remains present in every later exchange. That accumulated pressure is what gives the chapter its weight: the reader is asked to notice not only an action, but the history that makes the action costly.

The public premise of The Au Pair is a literary domestic thriller about steven hammer, a fading novelist whose infatuation with astrid, the norwegian au pair caring for his children, explodes into scandal, trial, and questions of desire, deception, and male ego. Chapter 5 develops that premise by moving from an abstract problem to a personal one. A large system, family history, profession, friendship, romance, or social expectation becomes legible through the smaller decisions people make when they are afraid of being seen clearly. The most useful reading question here is therefore not who is simply right. It is what each person believes they can protect, and what that protection asks them to sacrifice.

Chapter 5: The trial exposes more than one lie also changes the emotional vocabulary available to the characters. Before this point, they may be able to rely on a familiar story about themselves or about one another. Once the chapter's conflict becomes unavoidable, that story begins to fail. The tension does not have to depend on a hidden twist to feel real. It can come from the ordinary difficulty of admitting dependence, recognizing harm, revising a memory, or accepting that an old role no longer offers safety. That is the level on which this section is most rewarding to discuss.

A close reading should follow the gap between public behavior and private consequence. The Au Pair repeatedly makes social roles matter: people are shaped by what their environment rewards, by the version of events they can safely repeat, and by the relationships they cannot easily leave. In this chapter, those pressures narrow the field of choice. Even a decision that looks voluntary may carry the weight of earlier exclusions, loyalties, or expectations. The book's force lies in making that constraint visible without reducing its characters to a single explanation.

The chapter's structure invites attention to cause and effect. One moment of hesitation can alter how a relationship is read; one disclosure can make an earlier kindness look different; one act of loyalty can create a debt that later becomes difficult to repay. These are not interchangeable dramatic beats. They create the moral rhythm of The Au Pair. As you read, track which facts are confirmed, which assumptions are being challenged, and which questions remain deliberately open. That distinction helps preserve the novel's suspense while making its deeper concerns easier to name.

There is also an important difference between explanation and excuse. Chapter 5: The trial exposes more than one lie may help readers understand why a character behaves as they do, but understanding is not the same as absolution. The most compelling fiction lets motives remain layered: fear can coexist with care, ambition with generosity, desire with control, and loyalty with avoidance. This chapter gains depth when it resists a simple verdict. Instead, it asks what responsibility looks like once a character sees the consequences of their choices and can no longer claim not to know.

For book-club readers, this section offers a useful point of disagreement. Some readers will focus on the immediate event, while others will read it as the result of an earlier pattern. Both approaches can be supported if the discussion stays close to the pressure the novel has already established. Ask which relationship changes most in this chapter, what information each person is missing or refusing, and whether the new situation creates freedom, obligation, or both. Those questions lead beyond recap into interpretation.

By the end of this movement, The Au Pair has made its central problem harder rather than merely larger. The story does not need to reveal every answer at once for the chapter to feel complete. Its achievement is to reposition the reader: the original premise now carries a more complicated emotional meaning, and the next decision will be judged against that expanded understanding. That is why this chapter belongs in the larger arc. It transforms the question from what will happen into what kind of person, relationship, or community can survive what has happened.

Character Analysis

Steven Hammer

A once-celebrated novelist whose career decline and marriage trouble make him vulnerable to admiration, fantasy, and self-justifying obsession.

Astrid

The Norwegian au pair whose care for Steven's children and reverence for his books make her both emotional catalyst and central ambiguity.

Steven's wife

A high-powered spouse whose success sharpens Steven's insecurity and turns the household into a place where power is constantly compared.

The children

Not just background family detail, but the reason the employer-employee boundary has moral weight inside the home.

The public and legal audience

The spectators, journalists, lawyers, and readers inside the story who transform private behavior into a contested narrative.

Themes and Literary Devices

Fragile male ego

The book's sharpest theme is the way bruised status can disguise itself as romance. Steven wants admiration to feel like proof that he still matters.

Power inside intimacy

The au pair setup makes affection inseparable from employment, class, age, and household authority. That makes every private gesture harder to read innocently.

Fiction as self-defense

Steven's identity as a novelist matters because the book is fascinated by the stories people tell to protect themselves from shame.

Public judgment

The trial turns readers into a kind of jury, asking them to weigh evidence, performance, sympathy, and manipulation.

Desire and relevance

Steven does not only want Astrid. He wants to be the person Astrid's admiration allows him to imagine he still is.

Critical Analysis

The Au Pair earns its force from the way its stated premise becomes a test of interpretation. The story's conflicts are useful to discuss not because they offer a single moral lesson, but because they place competing obligations beside one another. Track how the book distributes sympathy, power, and knowledge; those choices explain why different readers may draw different conclusions from the same turn.

For readers returning after finishing the book, the key is to connect the opening pressure to the later consequences. The most satisfying reading does not reduce the novel to a twist or a mood. It notices how the characters' decisions, the social world around them, and the book's recurring images work together to make the ending feel consequential.

The ending of The Au Pair should be read through the conflict between fantasy and evidence. Steven's private version of events may give him emotional permission, but the book's public scandal forces that version into a harsher light.

The main question is not simply whether Astrid is innocent or calculating. The more durable question is why Steven needs either answer so badly. If Astrid is innocent, Steven's desire looks predatory and self-deluding. If Astrid is strategic, Steven still has to explain why his ego made him available to the strategy.

That is the reason the trial frame matters. A courtroom can expose facts, but the novel's deeper ending exposes authorship. Who gets to write the meaning of the relationship: Steven, Astrid, his wife, the press, the law, or the reader?

A satisfying interpretation treats the ending as a dismantling of Steven's romance plot. He may imagine himself in a story about rescue and late-life passion, but the surrounding evidence suggests a story about power, vanity, and the costs of confusing admiration with love.

Book Club Questions

  1. Did you trust Steven's interpretation of Astrid at any point?
  2. Where does admiration become manipulation, and who benefits most from that confusion?
  3. How does Steven's career as a novelist shape the way he narrates his own choices?
  4. Is Astrid more powerful, less powerful, or differently powerful than Steven believes?
  5. What role does Steven's wife play in the book's critique of status and masculinity?
  6. Does the trial clarify the truth or create a second performance?
  7. Which private boundary matters most in the story: marriage, employment, parenting, age, or art?
  8. What does the book suggest about being famous for the worst moment of your life?
  9. Would the story change if Astrid narrated it?
  10. Does the ending punish Steven, expose him, pity him, or all three?

Frequently Asked Questions

What is The Au Pair about?

A literary domestic thriller about Steven Hammer, a fading novelist whose infatuation with Astrid, the Norwegian au pair caring for his children, explodes into scandal, trial, and questions of desire, deception, and male ego.

Is The Au Pair good for book clubs?

Yes. It gives groups strong discussion angles around fragile male ego, power inside intimacy, fiction as self-defense, public judgment.

People June 2026 pick plus HarperCollins and NYT/Vogue summer-book positioning

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