Agatha Christie loved to think through her book plots while eating an apple in the bathtub.🍎🛀💡 read more Agatha Christie wrote six romance novels under the pseudonym name Mary Westmacott. read more Albena Beach Library, located in a resort on the Black Sea coast, Bulgaria, is the first of its kind open air library in EU, boasting 6k+ books in 15+ languages. With 140 white shelves made from a special material and a vinyl cover, the library is resistant to sun, wind and rain. read more American author Edgar Allan Poe (1809 - 1849) is considered to be the inventor of the detective fiction genre. read more American poet and novelist Maya Angelou spoke six languages (English, French, Spanish, Hebrew, Italian, and Fante) but did not talk for five years after her childhood trauma. read more American teenagers now spend on average 7 hours and 14 minutes per day using screen media such as watching TV and playing video games, excluding the time spent on schoolwork and eBooks. They spend on average 20 minutes per day reading print books or eBooks. The ratio is 22:1. read more Americans check out an average of eight books from a library every year, according to American Library Association. read more An auto-buy author is the one whose new books you will always purchase or borrow as soon as they are released. read more An average American reads 5.7 hours every week. read more An avid cook, Maya Angelou published two cookbooks, Hallelujah! The Welcome Table: A Lifetime of Memories With Recipes (2005) and Great Food, All Day Long (2010). read more An e-reader is a necessity, not a luxury! read more An epistolary /eh-PISS-tuh-lair-ee/ novel is a literary work written entirely or predominantly in the form of letters, diary entries, journal entries, or other documents, such as emails or text messages. This style allows the story to unfold through the characters’ personal writings, offering an intimate and immediate perspective. A famous examples is “Frankenstein” by Mary Shelley. The story is framed as a series of letters from Robert Walton to his sister, narrating Victor Frankenstein’s tale. read more «« « 3 4 5 6 7 » »»
Agatha Christie loved to think through her book plots while eating an apple in the bathtub.🍎🛀💡 read more
Albena Beach Library, located in a resort on the Black Sea coast, Bulgaria, is the first of its kind open air library in EU, boasting 6k+ books in 15+ languages. With 140 white shelves made from a special material and a vinyl cover, the library is resistant to sun, wind and rain. read more
American author Edgar Allan Poe (1809 - 1849) is considered to be the inventor of the detective fiction genre. read more
American poet and novelist Maya Angelou spoke six languages (English, French, Spanish, Hebrew, Italian, and Fante) but did not talk for five years after her childhood trauma. read more
American teenagers now spend on average 7 hours and 14 minutes per day using screen media such as watching TV and playing video games, excluding the time spent on schoolwork and eBooks. They spend on average 20 minutes per day reading print books or eBooks. The ratio is 22:1. read more
Americans check out an average of eight books from a library every year, according to American Library Association. read more
An auto-buy author is the one whose new books you will always purchase or borrow as soon as they are released. read more
An avid cook, Maya Angelou published two cookbooks, Hallelujah! The Welcome Table: A Lifetime of Memories With Recipes (2005) and Great Food, All Day Long (2010). read more
An epistolary /eh-PISS-tuh-lair-ee/ novel is a literary work written entirely or predominantly in the form of letters, diary entries, journal entries, or other documents, such as emails or text messages. This style allows the story to unfold through the characters’ personal writings, offering an intimate and immediate perspective. A famous examples is “Frankenstein” by Mary Shelley. The story is framed as a series of letters from Robert Walton to his sister, narrating Victor Frankenstein’s tale. read more