Monthly Archives: August 2024

Who doesn’t love a good Dorling Cartogram

World Population Flags is a Dorling cartogram in which country flags are sized by population. The cartogram is used to visualize where people live around the world and the relative size of each country’s population. Take for a spin. A … Continue reading

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Managing Your Book Addiction

 

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A short description of European people

The chart below was created in Germany in the 18th century to describe the character traits of the various European peoples. Hardly insulting at all.

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Even a bad day of hiking is a day you’ll remember

Exactly forty years ago on this day I was tent camping in the Swiss alps. It’s one of those indelible travel memories that tends to stick out among all of the many trips. Filmmaker Reinis Kaspars spent two weeks hiking alone … Continue reading

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consternation at the departure gate

SONG OF THE DISGRACED PERSON Jack Underwood As a fire axe waits in its little shop window As a tongue returns raw to the lozenge It’s not your fault you’re like this, but you are As consternation at the departure … Continue reading

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Monday, Monday, can’t trust that day

, In 1974, Saturday Review magazine asked some of the world’s leading thinkers (Isaac Asimov, Jacques Cousteau, Andrei Sakharov, etc.) what the world of 2024 would look like. Here’s what they got right (internet) and wrong (factories on the Moon) … Continue reading

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Heaven’s Gate

“A Society of Scoundrels” by Franz Kafka Translated by Michael Hofmann There was once a society of scoundrels, or rather not scoundrels per se, just ordinary, average people. They always stuck together. When one of them had perpetrated some rascally … Continue reading

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Bibliolyte, destroyer of books

In The Book Hunter (1863), John Hill Burton identifies five types of “persons who meddle with books”: “A bibliognoste, from the Greek, is one knowing in title-pages and colophons, and in editions; the place and year when printed; the presses whence issued; … Continue reading

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It was a dark and stormy night

“She had a body that reached out and slapped my face like a five-pound ham-hock tossed from a speeding truck.” 2024 Grand Prize Winner Founded in 1982 at San Jose State University in California, the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest challenges entrants … Continue reading

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Tension for Tears

As I have previously mentioned, the novels and short stories of Ray Bradbury played an important role in my early love of reading. I recently ran across this marvelous brief video of Bradbury from fifty years ago discussing the importance … Continue reading

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