Change, but start slowly

Change

But start slowly, because direction is more important than speed.
Sit in another chair, on the other side of the table.
Later on, change tables.
When you go out, try to walk on the other side of the street. Then change your route, walk calmly down other streets, observing closely the places you pass by.
Take other buses. Change your wardrobe for a while; give away your old shoes and try to walk barefoot for a few days – even if only at home.
Take off a whole afternoon to stroll about freely, listening to the birds or the noise of the cars.
Open and shut the drawers and doors with your left hand.
Sleep on the other side of the bed. Then try sleeping in other beds.
Watch other TV programs, read other books, live other romances – even of only in your imagination.
Sleep until later. Go to bed earlier.
Learn a new word a day.
Eat a little less, eat a little more, eat differently; choose new seasonings, new colors,
things you have never dared to experiment.
Lunch in other places, go to other restaurants, order another kind of drink
and buy bread at another bakery.
Lunch earlier, have dinner later, or vice-versa.
Try something new every day: a new side, a new method, a new flavor,
a new way, a new pleasure, a new position.
Pick another market, another make of soap, another toothpaste.
Take a bath at different times of the day.
Use pens with different colors.
Go and visit other places.
Love more and more and in different ways. Even when you think that the other will be frightened, suggest what you have always dreamed about doing when you make love.
Change your bag, your wallet, your suitcases, buy new glasses, write other poems.
Open an account in another bank, go to other cinemas, other hairdressers,
other theaters, visit new museums.
Change. And think seriously of finding another job, another activity,
work that is more like what you expect from life, more dignified, more human.
If you cannot find reasons to be free, invent them: be creative.
And grab the chance to take a long, enjoyable trip – preferably without any destination.
Try new things. Change again. Make another change. Experiment something else.
You will certainly know better things and worse things than those you already know, but that does not matter. What matters most is change, movement, dynamism, energy.
Only what is dead does not change –  and you are alive.

—Clarice Lispector

 

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Kurt Vonnegut Goes Shopping

 

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A sad farewell

Anyone who has visited Japan over the last 25 years has likely used the very helpful and convenient Suica transit card. Like most things in contemporary Japan, the Suica comes with a cute mascot. The epitome of kawaii culture, JR East’s cuddly penguin is beloved by commuters and tourists alike. Sadly, the train company JR East announced that their beloved mascot, the Suica penguin, will retire after 25 years of serving as the iconic face of IC  travel cards. The penguin was designed by picture book author and illustrator Chiharu Sakazaki and was modeled after the Adelie penguin, which lives in Antarctica.

The Suica penguin debuted in 2001 along with the launch of the prepaid electronic money service and has been a popular cultural icon for close to a quarter century. It got its name from the onomatopoeic phrase sui-sui, meaning to glide smoothly through the train or metro station turnstile.

JR East will be launching public campaigns aimed at penguin fans and others in the lead up to the penguin’s retirement at the end of fiscal year 2026. A new character who will be selected from train travelers’ suggestions and revealed in the coming months.

 

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Dylan’s mind and other diversions

Can AI tell us anything meaningful about Bob Dylan’s songs? What was uncovered when computer scientist Prashant Garg  fed Dylan’s official discography from 1962 to 2012 into a large language model (LLM), building a network of the concepts and connections in his songs. The model combed through each lyric, extracting pairs of related ideas or images. For example, it might detect a relationship between ‘wind’ and ‘answer’ in ‘Blowin’ in the Wind’ (1962), or between ‘joker’ and ‘thief’ in ‘All Along the Watchtower’ (1967). By assembling these relationships, we can construct a network of how Dylan’s key words and motifs braid together across his songs. asked an artificial intelligence to sift through every word Dylan ever wrote?

 

The Word for World: The Maps of Ursula K. Le Guin reveals how maps were central to the other-world building she was so famous for. Fans will find much to enjoy here, including the opportunity to walk around enlarged screen prints of well-known maps from books such as Earthsea and Always Coming Home. They will also have the chance to pore over unpublished maps and artworks from the Le Guin Foundation archive.

“After more than 200 years of sharing a unique blend of weather, wit and wisdom, we’ve made the very difficult decision to write the final chapter of this historical publication. The 2026 Farmers’ Almanac will be our last edition. ” NB: Not to be confused with the even older Old Farmers’ Almanac.

An Australian charity shop purchase of JRR Tolkien’s The Hobbit could be worth tens of thousands. A woman who bought a copy of The Hobbit from an op shop in the 1990s says even then she suspected it could be worth a considerable amount — experts now say she could be sitting on a first edition copy, worth tens of thousands.

New exhibition at the British Library in London: Secret Maps. “Some of the maps on display reveal hidden landscapes, offering insight into places long forgotten or erased from official histories. Others are purposefully deceptive…”

Strike a Pose! 100 Years of the Photobooth, a new exhibition at The Photographers Gallery brings this side of the last century of photography into focus. Celebrating the centenary, the show will highlight the journey of the photobooth and some of its major fans throughout the decades. To mark the occasion we spoke to artist, photographer and professor Rafael Hortala Vallve and designer and lecturer Corinne Quin, the founders of Autofoto, alongside Taous Dahmani an art historian, writer and curator at The Photographers Gallery, to explore the continued relevance of the analogue in contemporary photography.

As with the Holocaust, denialism about the atrocities of October 7 is running rampant, especially among “progressive” groups.

 

 

 

 

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Oh, the places we’ll go

More than three decades after Dr Seuss’s death, the beloved children’s author (real name Theodor Geisel) is set to publish a “new” book next summer. Titled Sing the 50 United States!, the never-before-seen manuscript was discovered earlier this year in the archives of the Geisel Library at the University of California, San Diego, and will be released on June 2, 2026.

The book, which stars the Cat in the Hat and two of his Little Cat companions, invites readers on a cross-country adventure through rhyme. Each page is designed to help children memorize the names of all 50 US states. The timing of its release is no accident: it coincides with America’s upcoming 250th anniversary, turning the late author’s rediscovered manuscript into both a celebration of language and a nod to national unity.

Random House Children’s Books, which holds the rights to Seuss’s works, confirmed that the manuscript was found alongside a cover sketch, handwritten notes, and detailed art direction from Seuss himself. Illustrator Tom Brannon was tapped to complete the visuals, carefully following the late author’s instructions to retain the familiar Seussian flair—whimsical lines, zany color palettes, and all.

The first edition will see a print run of half a million copies, with a portion of the books distributed to schools across the country through the nonprofit First Book.

 

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The poem I didn’t write

The Poem I Didn’t Write,
by Raymond Carver

Here is the poem I was going to write
earlier, but didn’t
because I heard you stirring.
I was thinking again
about that first morning in Zurich.
How we woke up before sunrise.
Disoriented for a minute. But going
out onto the balcony that looked down
over the river, and the old part of the city.
And simply standing there, speechless.
Nude. Watching the sky lighten.
So thrilled and happy. As if
we’d been put there
just at that moment.

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Travel Opens The Mind

For a More Creative Brain, Travel. “New sounds, smells, language, tastes, sensations, and sights spark different synapses in the brain and may have the potential to revitalize the mind.”

Writers and thinkers have long felt the creative benefits of international travel. Ernest Hemingway, for example, drew inspiration for much of his work from his time in Spain and France. Aldous Huxley, the author of Brave New World, moved from the U.K. to the U.S. in his 40s to branch out into screenwriting. Mark Twain, who sailed around the coast of the Mediterranean in 1869, wrote in his travelogue Innocents Abroad that travel is “fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness.”

 

 

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Do Literary Prizes Really Matter

Flesh by David Szalay was named the winner of the Booker Prize 2025 at a ceremony in London on Monday. Szalay receives £50,000 and a trophy, which was presented to him by last year’s winner, Samantha Harvey. I suppose that it’s time to put Flesh and the other nominated titles on my tbr list.

The winner and all the shortlisted authors receive a hand-bound edition of their own novel. This tradition of presenting each writer with a one-of-a-kind binding of their work created by Fellows from the Designer Bookbinders society at the evening ceremony has been in place for three decades. This year’s bookbinders are:

  • Glenn Bartley for Audition by Katie Kitamura
  • Stuart Brockman for Flesh by David Szalay
  • Hannah Brown for The Rest of Our Lives by Ben Markovits
  • Sue Doggett for The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny by Kiran Desai
  • Angela James for The Land in Winter by Andrew Miller
  • Tom McEwan for Flashlight by Susan Choi

Seems like a topnotch idea.

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Do Not Seize The Day

 

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Lit Box

Regular visitors to TBTP know that I have an inordinate interest in vending machines, especially when they dispense books. I recently heard about a cool new one at the entrance of Western Market in downtown Washington D.C. What makes this vending machine unusual is that all of the literature is  written by local authors.

LitBox was launched by author Lauren Woods in a bid to promote and celebrate smaller press books that have to contend with a hypercompetitive publishing industry and the current administration’s slashing of federal funding for the arts.

As NPR reports in an article on the project, LitBox  aims to raise the literary profile of Washington, D.C. “I’m so proud to live in this city, and it doesn’t get enough good attention,” says the LitBox founder. “And so I wanted to do something to share my pride in the people that I live with and talk to every day, too.”

 

 

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