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Today's Document

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

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@ebookporn
In its look at the adoption of electronic book formats, Pew Research stumbled onto an interesting data point. The most likely person to read
Most of this article is copied below. Bold added.
In its look at the adoption of electronic book formats, Pew Research stumbled onto an interesting data point. The most likely person to read a book — in any format — is a black woman who's been to college. Slate's Jacob Weisberg spotted the data point buried in Pew's report, "E-Reading Rises as Device Ownership Jumps." When asked Pew asked people if they'd read a book over the past year, there were clear demographic differences in the responses. Not all of the distinctions are statistically significant here, meaning that since Pew is looking at smaller and smaller subsets of its data, small percentage differences can misrepresent reality. But some distinctions are clear and significant: -Women read more books than men. -Black and white people read more books than Hispanics. (The difference between black and white readers isn't large enough to be statistically significant.) -People who've been to college read more books than those who haven't. There are other contrasts that the report draws: people who make $50,000 or more a year are more likely to read books, as are young people, in some circumstances. Nor is it the case that ebooks are rapidly gaining on traditional paperbacks. More Americans own tablets or ereaders (like a Kindle), but still 69 percent of Americans are reading traditional book-books. Only 28 percent of Americans read an ebook last year. That 69 percent figure is actually up slightly over 2012, when only 65 percent of Americans did so. That distinction doesn't vary much by demographic group. Young people are more likely to read ebooks than older people, but they're also generally more likely to read paper books, too. Black people read more of every type of book, though it's statistically close. Ebooks are more likely to be read by people in cities or suburbs than in rural areas.
In today's society, Black women remain all too invisible in plain sight.
The statistics from this 2014 article still rings true. More books across the board are being read by Black women, that exact group those many, many stories that forsake diversity tend to shun completely or box into a supporting act, often some flat variation of a sassy, angry, romance-less typecast. Negative bonus points if our story begins and ends in tragedy!
Fun fact for today! Ida B. Wells-Barnett
Today is the birthday of Ida B. Wells.
Born on July 16, 1862 in Holly Springs, Mississippi, Ida B. Wells was a journalist, author, suffragist, Black feminist, and much more.
Read more about Ida B. Wells-Barnett >>
Let's support Black women's voices, their stories, and the works that include Black women with respectable, full-faceted and beautiful representation!
Here are some related posts from WWC to inspire you:
More reading:
Black girls and women: Representation that we want
Black sexuality representation we want to see
Top favorite books from Black authors and/or Black MCs (2025)
~Mod Colette
Pipe Down
Still funny.
Happy Mid-July
From my desk at the bookstore where I work, I can see most of fiction and all of our new releases, the poetry section by the front door, the
“Booksellers are already reading, already thinking with some critical engagement about what makes a book work and why they enjoyed it.”
These are were the first science fiction books I read, checked out from my elementary school library in the late 60s.
They are a great entry point for young readers looking for fantasy and adventure. Though there is so much more fantasy and science fiction they get exposed to in the post Star Wars world, the tripods really resonate. They are very well written and are exciting and suspenseful reads.
Today there are so many more mediums other than books and movies that are entry points fantasy and science fiction for kids including video games, card and board games, comics, manga, and anime.
Still, nothing gets in the brain and hardwires it like a book.
Tills Books, Edinburgh
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/10/books/review/michel-foucault-ai-tech-power.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share
Untitled - Charles Martin
Literati Bookstore - Ann Arbor, MI
saw a vintage card that was so them i went into a fugue state and woke up to this
original under here ⬇️
Well, now I know what kipling is...
‘More postmodern than ancient’: why the Odyssey is everywhere, from Oz to Westeros
The question is: why are we still connecting with stories that were told in those ancient halls, their animating sparks perhaps as old as the Greek bronze age? Why has the director of Inception and Oppenheimer been so determined to adapt them, and why will so many people want to experience his vision of them?
The answer partly lies in the fact that the Odyssey – the story of a warrior’s homecoming, his long and tortuous journey to reintegrate himself within his own household – has passed into the bloodstream of many storytelling traditions. In his introduction to his recent translation, classicist and essayist Daniel Mendelsohn lists Dante’s Inferno, Star Trek, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, The Wizard of Oz, Finding Nemo, The Catcher in the Rye, Gladiator, Pride and Prejudice, and Game of Thrones as works in which the Odyssey’s ideas and motifs resurface.
READ MORE
https://www.instagram.com/reel/DaEfspkJIOk/?igsh=aTV3Ym41eXZnNDk4
Librarians and booksellers, do you cry when you "weed"?
Going through some books I had in storage. For once I marked what was inside.
Cormac (McCarthy)
Buckminster (Fuller)
Stern (Howard)
...shut up, you don't know me.