Emptying Europe

Where Europe’s Population is Shrinking, is an excellent example of how large-scale spatial data and clear visual design can come together to tell a nuanced geographic story. In this case, the story is one of Europe’s rural depopulation and how emigration and demographic decline have reshaped entire regions since the end of the Cold War.

The map draws on newly harmonized municipal-level data from the EU’s Joint Research Centre and charts demographic change across roughly 100,000 localities over more than six decades – offering a detailed spatial analysis of European population trends since 1961.

The map’s simple red–green color scheme is immediately effective. Growth and decline are clearly legible, and the continental pattern emerges quickly: a Europe where expansion is concentrated in urban cores and their commuter belts, while vast rural areas steadily fade.

Beyond the data itself, the accompanying narrative effectively connects demographic change to its social consequences. Declining populations are not just numbers on a map – they translate into school closures, reduced services, and increasing pressure on infrastructure in rural areas. At the same time, the map hints at future challenges, including ageing populations and the growing importance of migration in sustaining Europe’s overall population.

The guided story map provides a strong overview of 60 years of population trends across Europe. At the end of the article, however, readers can explore the data for themselves. The interactive map included in the CORRECTIV story even allows users to switch to a 1991-2024 view, making it possible to examine the more recent population changes over the last three decades.

Via: Datawrapper’s Data Viz Dispatch

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Hotel Retro

Letterform Archive has published a new large format peel and stick book Hotel Retro: Vintage Luggage Labels from Tokyo to Buenos Aires. A 330-sticker-long journey through this new age of global travel by train and sea designed by San Francisco agency MacFadden & Thorpe, this incredible design archive of souvenirs takes you on a tour around the world: “From cosmopolitan European capitals to cultural havens in Bali, from pristine ski resorts in the Alps to the bustling beaches of Rio de Janeiro,” Lucie says. “The sheer variety of their represented styles is also fascinating, reflecting both regional preferences and the rapid aesthetic developments of their moment.”

“In the late nineteenth century, as industrialization allowed for the emergence of the leisure class, an unprecedented number of world travelers began touring the globe via train and sea. From far-off destinations they brought home a curious collection: eye-catching labels bearing the insignia of grand hotels, pasted to their steamer trunks as souvenirs. Today, these labels are also souvenirs of graphic design—from the opulence of art deco to the minimalism of Swiss Style. Featuring hundreds of delightful examples from the collection of Letterform Archive, Hotel Retro highlights the labels’ artistry in illustration, lettering, and typography, and restores them to their original adhesive use for the pleasure of a new generation.”

 

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N is for New York

Those of you who stop by this site on a regular basis are likely aware of my interest in cities, urban transit and city planning. These subjects don’t suggest a topic for a children’s book, but in 1937 New York City Mayor Fiorello La Guardia’s Committee on City Planning saw an opportunity to get kids interested in what makes their city work. The ABC of City Planning is still fascinating today for urban planning geeks.

The little book opens with this foreword:

CITY PLANNING is not for “Adults Only”. Children of all ages can understand the necessity for a finer, better, safer and
more convenient city. Unless they do understand it, and it becomes as fundamental as the ABC, we can never hope to make
our city the healthful, happy home it should be for our children and our children’s children.

The entire pamphlet is available here, thanks to the Citizens Housing & Planning Council, an NYC housing non-profit.

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May the Fourth Be With You

 

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Indie Bookstore Comedy

The TV comedy Broadway Books released its pilot episode, “The Tipping Point,” on YouTube last month for Independent Bookstore Day. The creators noted that the debut came “after a successful bookstore tour (with stops including the Brooklyn Book Festival, Baltimore’s Atomic Books, & Boston’s Porter Square Books)” last year, along with showing the pilot at the Dances with Films fest in Los Angeles, Calif., and New York City’s the Downtown Festival. Crowdfunding is underway to produce additional episodes for a full season and you can be a producer (for a donation).

Written and directed by Carianne King, Broadway Books was developed in the Upright Citizens Brigade Pilot Writing Program and inspired by King’s experiences as a bookseller on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. Featuring music by Martin Courtney (of the band Real Estate), the project’s cast includes Carlos Dengler (founding member of the band Interpol), NYC comedians Joe Apollonio, Lauren Servideo, and Ruby McCollister.

Describing Broadway Books as “a love letter to neighborhood bookstores everywhere, and the important role they play in our communities,” the creators said the series will portray “a group of over-educated, under-employed bookstore workers struggling to keep their independent bookstore in business using increasingly desperate measures. In the pilot, the team scrambles to raise the numbers for that night’s Malcolm Gladwell reading, drawing upon lessons from The Tipping Point to do so.”

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Bookstore Tourism: Best Indies in the USA

If you want to start a heated discussion with booklovers ask “what are the best indie bookshops in the U.S.” I have my favorites, but then again I’ve only visited a few hundred. Conde Nast Traveler shared its picks for “the best independent bookstores in America,” noting: “If you’re ever feeling lost in a new city, walking into a local bookstore will help anchor you. Far more than just a place of transaction, a good bookstore can serve as a sanctuary, a community space, and a portal into the town it calls home–all thanks to the dedicated owners and staffers who stock the shelves, scribble down recommendations, and welcome in readers, both young and old, through their doors.”

Out of the two dozen or so bookstores cited in the list, I’ve only been to six of them, which doesn’t seem to be a small number when you take into account that there are more than 10,000 bookstores in the USA. If I had to pick a favorite on the list, I’d probably choose Back of Beyond Books in Moab, Utah. It was a pleasant surprise to discover this small, but exceptionally well curated bookstore in the small town outside of Arches National Park.

Another top pick of mine from the article is Title Wave Books in Anchorage, Alaska. My selection is largely based on the fact that the shop is the furthest from home, but still in the USA and has one of the largest collections of any bookstore in the nation. There are some small town indie shops in Alaska that I loved, but that’s for another story.

The last bookshop from the article that I’d like to endorse is Duck’s Cottage in Duck, North Carolina. The selection is slim, but the place is so damn quaint and it’s situated on a barrier island in beautiful Duck.

 

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May Day 2026

 

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What is done cannot be undone

 

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France and Canada share a border (really)

Canada and France share a maritime border, despite the ejection of France from North America in the Seven Years’ War. Article 6 of the 1763 Treaty of Paris allowed France to retain the tiny islands of St. Pierre and Miquelon in the Gulf of St. Lawrence to facilitate French fishing in the region. France retained control over them despite losing the Napoleonic Wars to Britain and her allies.

During the Twentieth Century, the great powers gained increasing interest in directly controlling the seas from which they were able to extract wealth in the form of oil. So the precise border between these French islands and the now independent Canada was not a matter to ignore.

The two nations concluded arbitration in 1972, leading to the sea borders illustrated above. The map is provided by Sovereign Limits, a website about maritime boundaries. France maintains a sizeable Exclusive Economic Zone dangling inside otherwise Canadian waters.

via Amazing Maps

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Why Do You Write

The late Robert Coover in answer to the question:”Why do you write ?”

Because art blows life into the lifeless, death into the deathless.
Because art’s life is preferable, in truth, to life’s beautiful terror.
Because, as time does not pass (nothing, as Beckett tells us, passes), it passes the time.
Because death, our mythless master, is somehow amused by epitaphs.
Because epitaphs, well-struck, give death, our voracious master, heartburn.
Because fiction imitates life’s beauty, thereby inventing the beauty life lacks.
Because fiction is the best position, at once exotic and familiar, for fucking the world.
Because fiction, mediating paradox, celebrates it.
Because fiction, mothered by love, loves love as a mother might her unloving child.
Because fiction speaks, hopelessly, beautifully, as the world speaks.
Because God, created in the storyteller’s image, can be destroyed only by His maker.
Because, in its perversity, art harmonizes the disharmonious.
Because, in its profanity, fiction sanctifies life.
Because, in its terrible isolation, writing is a path to brotherhood.
Because in the beginning was the gesture, and in the end to come as well: in between what we have are words.
Because, of all the arts, only fiction can unmake the myths that unman men.
Because of its endearing futility, its outrageous pretensions.
Because the pen, though short, casts a long shadow (upon, it must be said, no surface).
Because the world is re-invented every day and this is how it is done.
Because there is nothing new under the sun except its expression.
Because truth, that elusive joker, hides himself in fictions and must therefore be sought there.
Because writing, in all space’s unimaginable vastness, is still the greatest adventure of all.
And because, alas, what else?

From Delta #28, June 1989; republished in Conjunctions.

 

 

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