A Workout For Book Nerds

epicreads:

All you need for this workout is a stack of hardcovers and some yarn or rope to tie them together!

Workout #1: The Book Curl

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Workout #2: The Book Up

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Workout #3: The Brunch (Book Crunch) - Just like brunch this can be done alone or with a friend!

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Cool Down

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whatsthecatreading:

Reading nooks with views of the hip Shimokitazawa neighbourhood in Tokyo, Japan

A quick hop from Shibuya and Shinjuku, Shimokitazawa is a nice change of pace from the craziness of the big city. We stumbled upon this little shop selling books and curiosities with seating areas where one can take in the scene over a cuppa, and feel safe about burying one’s face in a book and being lost in thoughts.


(Source: justtouchedawkwardly)


harpercollinschildrens:

5 female authors and their books, that helped shape the world of Children’s literature!


Happy Women’s History Month!

Pretty much my childhood reading list (okay, not really. There were a LOT more, but fucking Little House was the BEST SHIT EVAR).


fuckyeahbookarts:

DIY Introduction to Bookbinding Kit by Supabinda 

These introductory kits come in an array of colors and provide beginners with basic binding tools, knowledge and instructions, all of which are then cleverly bound as a nifty little keepsake. I’ve tested my own hand at this single-section booklet and was very pleased with the results :) 

There is also a cheap PDF version of this DIY kit available here

If anyone has been pondering on the perfect gift for me…well, you know.


joehillsthrills:

explore-blog:

Pie-charting the appalling gender imbalance of the literary world. Podcasting and academia don’t fare any better.

Fifty years later, “the problem that has no name” has both a name and numbers, but little seems to have changed.

Some female authors have been saying for several years now that this is a problem (and have been catching flack for daring to say that the refs aren’t doing their jobs). Well, here’s the numbers. For folks who live in the fact-based world, the argument is over. C’mon NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS; C’mon TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT. You gotta do better than that.

THANK YOU. To all those who laughed and spat in Jodi Picoult’s face when she complained about this shit.

taylor-renee replied to your post: taylor-renee replied to your post: I really love…

It’s written fairly straightforward, but the actual events may be confusing just because they’re so strange? You can read the beginning of it on Amazon to check it out

Oh really? I’ll go do that. Thank you! I’ll have to add Coraline to my shopping cart as well then. The good thing about children’s paperback chapter books is that their relatively inexpensive.

I really love the book “Holes” by Louis Sachar and I want to use it for my reading class, but this is a co-ed class and the book is an all-boy book (okay, there are three female characters) and I want the girls in my classes to read something with a great female lead, but all the children’s chapter books with a  female lead are really pink and fluffy, which will no doubt alienate the boys in my class.

Run-on sentence, but this is an intermediate English language reading course I’m teaching. The students are 19-23 year olds and can’t handle much more than an English language children’s book. I’m looking for children’s chapter books for my students to read this semester. If they have a good movie adaptation, that would be awesome too. Which is why I was looking towards “Holes”.

But, Kissing Kate Barlow is a pretty good female character.

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