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“Vinegar Valentines” — Send A Token Of Your Sentiment To The Ex You Despise

The name was given by present-day collectors and dealers; in their Victorian heyday, they were usually called mock or mocking valentines. They were very much intended to mock or offend their targets, and they did so with spirit. - The Conversation

Coffee Poets: The 16th-Century Muslim World’s Culture War Over The Brew Was Fought In Verse

In the medieval period, poets had used “coffee” as a symbol (or euphemism) for wine (forbidden in Islam), so praising coffee in a poem was suspect. So was all the fun being had at coffeehouses. Yet both the drink and the establishments serving it had passionate defenders making their case in poetry. - History Today

The Art Of Literary Subversion

The unique power of literary tradition, unlike philosophy or science, is that literature can respond to its predecessors without invalidating them, can contradict them without competing with them. - Aeon

The “Heated Rivalry” Language Coach Explains How She Taught Connor Storrie Such Good Russian

Storrie, who plays hockey star Ilya Rozanov in the hit miniseries, comes from West Texas and studied Russian only briefly in high school, yet his Russian accent in English and his fluent delivery of Russian-language dialogue are very impressive. Storrie’s language coach, Kate Yablunovsky, explains how she helped him do it. - Scientific American

Study: Reading To Children Improves Their Social Skills

I’m a neuroscientist with four children, and I wondered whether children might be losing more than just the pleasure of listening to books read aloud. In particular, I wondered whether it affected their empathy and creativity. - The Conversation

Requiem For One Of The All-Time Great Book Sections

The book section you really wanted to get your hands on was the Washington Post Book World. To put it bluntly, you read the Times Book Review because you had to, but you read Book World because you wanted to. - LitHub

The People Who’ve Gotten Obsessed By Audiobooks

Since my own fandom has grown, I’ve noticed, at least anecdotally, many more friends and acquaintances talking about their love for audiobooks, not just as a passing interest but as something verging on obsession. Is this a trend? - Washington Post

You’re About To Release A Novel, And Suddenly A News Event Comes Too Close To Your Plot For Comfort. What Do You Do?

That’s the dilemma that faced Simon & Schuster last fall, when right-wing media star Charlie Kirk was assassinated not long before the scheduled publication of Rebecca Novack’s satirical novel Murder Bimbo. - The New York Times

How Has India Managed To Develop Over 100 Literary Festivals?

“The answer is that festivals in India are only partly about books. They are a ‘spectacle’ offering music, dance, handicraft sales and food. Even the T.rex of them all, the Jaipur literature festival (which attracted 400,000 visitors last month according to its marketing team), would almost certainly attract fewer people without these extras.” - The Guardian

The Enormous Power Of Small Book Shops

How, against all odds, has City Lights managed to remain a vital symbol of literary dissent and free speech? How, after more than seventy years, has City Lights survived economic and industry changes? How, decade after decade, has it managed to respond to the forces that threaten to silence us? - LitHub

Indians Don’t Buy Books. So Why Do They Have So Many Literary Festivals?

If most middle-class homes are devoid of book-- if you can sit in an airport departure lounge or train all day and not see anyone reading--then why, come winter, do more than 100 literature festivals bloom every year, even in the smallest and unlikeliest of towns? - The Guardian

Spotify Adds Physical Books To Its Service

The tech platform is launching Page Match, a tool that will allow readers to scan a page of a printed or e-book using their phone and continue listening to the audiobook version where they left off. - The Hollywood Reporter

The Books Ecosystem Is Dying

In a sense, the decline of book reviews, like the decline of newspapers themselves, is a story about disaggregation. Newspapers used to bundle several functions together in a way that made them both useful and profitable. - The Atlantic

Author Elly Griffiths Says Magic And Mystery Novels Share A Big Similarity

The author of nearly 30 crime novels explains a few things about misdirection - and big reveals. - Irish Times (Archive Today)

Anthropic Wasn’t Just Taking Electronic Books To Feed The AI Maw, But Scanning And Pulping Hundreds Thousands Of Paper Books

Well, at least they bought those books? “This program raised red flags for some inside Anthropic, who knew that tearing books apart to feed into an AI model was rather literally bringing the critiques of these companies to life.” - LitHub

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