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Monthly Archives: June 2023
Down a research rabbit hole
The free new research tool from Yale University called Lux is a fascinating opportunity to be led down a rabbit hole of infinite connections for any subject of interest. The digital tool works by building relationships between objects users look … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Art, Books, History, Libraries, Museums, Tech, USA
Tagged search engines, Yale, Yale Beinecke Library
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Books on Maps
If you stop by TBTP regularly, you probably know how I feel about maps and literary websites that manage to combine books AND maps. Books On Maps: is a new project that is mashing up cartography and novels. You don’t … Continue reading
Rules for Writers
Raymond Chandler’s 10 rules for writing a detective novel: It must be credibly motivated, both as to the original situation and the dénouement. It must be technically sound as to the methods of murder and detection. It must be realistic … Continue reading
Bookstore Mapping
The Pandemic had a devastating effect on the book trade in Philadelphia. Over the last two years, the city has lost some of its oldest and most beloved bookshops. I was heartened however to discover that the city’s surviving booksellers … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Bookstore Tourism, Maps, Tourism, USA
Tagged Bookselling, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
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Roman ruin that’s not just for cats anymore
Invariably when I visit Rome I always seem to wander by the Largo Argentina to gape at the inaccessable Area Sacra where Brutus stabbed Caesar on the Ides of March in the year 44 B.C.E. Until just recently, the site … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Europe, History, Museums, Tourism
Tagged ancient Rome, archeology, Italy, Rome
3 Comments
Living in the Real World
Most reasonably educated adults—other than flatearth nincompoops—are well aware that the way we map our planet distorts the actual size of countries and continents. For centuries, we have generally ignored the wildly misleading maps that are used in most publications. … Continue reading
Five for Friday
Hermann Hesse // “This day will never come again and anyone who fails to eat and drink and taste and smell it will never have it offered to him again in all eternity. The sun will never shine as it … Continue reading
The water was black and warm
Much has been written about the great American novelist Cormac McCarthy since his recent death. I have long admired his writing, but often found his books to be grim. Ironically, my favorite work is The Road, which is about a dark a … Continue reading
