woman sitting & reading in front of book shelves

Books You Can Read in One Day

I must read five books in December to complete my Goodreads Challenge, so I’m turning to the list of books that can be read in one day. Here are some titles I’ve collected throughout 2020 because I knew I’d probably end up needing them when I turned the calendar page to December.  The books in […]

Books You Can Read in One Day Read More »

Last Week's Links

Literary Links

How Crime Writers Use Unreliable Narrators to Add Suspense Emily Martin uses the categories that William Riggan explores in his book Pícaros, Madmen, Naifs, and Clowns: The Unreliable First-Person Narrator to look at ways crime writers employ them to build suspense. The 2021 Tournament of Books Long List Next March’s Tournament of Books, something that

Literary Links Read More »

Where are the voices of indigenous peoples in the Thanksgiving story?

In my research and experience as a teacher educator, I have found social studies curricular materials (textbooks and state standards) routinely place indigenous peoples in a troubling narrative that promotes “Manifest Destiny” – the belief that the creation of the United States and the dominance of white American culture were destined and that the costs

Where are the voices of indigenous peoples in the Thanksgiving story? Read More »

stack of books and open notebook. Label: Quotation

Why ‘Gilmore Girls’ Endures – The New York Times

Sherman-Palladino picked Graham for the part of Lorelai over several more well-known actors, at least partly for her literary acumen. “She’s the first actress that pronounced the name ‘Kerouac’ correctly,” Sherman-Palladino told her husband after seeing her. Source: Why ‘Gilmore Girls’ Endures – The New York Times

Why ‘Gilmore Girls’ Endures – The New York Times Read More »

Last Week's Links

Literary Links

See What the World’s Reading Habits Look Like in 2020 The editing and proofreading service Global English Editing gathered statistics from various sources, including Pew Research and Amazon’s bestsellers page, that demonstrate how the world’s reading habits changed over the course of 2020: “35 percent of web users worldwide reported reading more during the pandemic,

Literary Links Read More »

Literary Links

The Golden Age of Book Adaptations for TV Andrew Neiderman, the author of 46 thrillers who has written as V.C. Andrews for over 34 years, says, “The pandemic has brought on a new age of book-to-series adaptations, and with it novelists have found not only new sources of income but greater satisfaction in how their

Literary Links Read More »

Last Week's Links

Literary Links

The 50 Greatest Apocalypse Novels “Apropos of . . . Nothing” I’m including this list here because, really, how could I not? How many of these have you read? I’ve read five, and I have two more on the top of my TBR pile. I think that’s pretty good, given that I usually avoid most

Literary Links Read More »

Covers: Madam, Will You Talk? Who in Hell Is Wanda Fuca? At Home in Mitford, Long Bright River, The Better Liar, Penmarric, The House on the Strand

6 Degrees of Separation: Life Replete with Questions and Drama

This month is a wild card: We are to start with the book we’ve ended a previous chain with, and continue from there.  I’ve decided to start with the final book from a 6 Degrees of Separation post I did over the summer: Madam, Will You Talk? by Mary Stewart. 1. Another novel with a

6 Degrees of Separation: Life Replete with Questions and Drama Read More »

Daylight saving time ends this weekend: Don’t let ‘fall back’ lure you into depression | The Seattle Times

As we prepare to turn the clocks back an hour on Sunday morning, experts in winter depression say the loss of daylight — just as coronavirus infections start to spike again and election tension comes to a head — could make this an unusually difficult stretch. Source: Daylight saving time ends this weekend: Don’t let

Daylight saving time ends this weekend: Don’t let ‘fall back’ lure you into depression | The Seattle Times Read More »

Last Week's Links

Literary Links

Mixing Genres Is All About Messing with Structure “Knowing what people are expecting allows you to subvert the trope. Expectation is its own red herring, built right into your reader.” Stuart Turton, author of the brilliant The 7½ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle and newly released The Devil and The Dark Water, admits, “I’m obsessed by

Literary Links Read More »

Scroll to Top