-
+18 +3Looking back at 20 years of Canada Reads, the great Canadian book debate | CBC Books
Listen to this celebration of CBC's battle of the books on Labour Day, Monday, Sept. 6 at 4 p.m. on CBC Radio, CBC Listen or wherever you get your podcasts.
-
+14 +1The major sci-fi and fantasy books arriving this fall
Open a book and a brand new world
-
+14 +2An App Called Libby and the Surprisingly Big Business of Library E-books
Increasingly, books are something that libraries do not own but borrow from the corporations that do.
-
+12 +3Why do so few men read books by women?
No matter if it is Austen or Atwood, the Brontës or Booker winners, data shows men are reluctant to read women – and this has real world implications
-
+24 +5Building an antilibrary: the power of unread books
Unread books are as powerful as the ones we read. An antilibrary is a private collection of unread books capturing the vastness of the unknown.
-
+12 +2How to gain more from your reading
There’s more to words than meets the eye. Deepen your appreciation of literature through the art of slow, attentive reading
-
+18 +2Bogus Social Media Outrage Is Making Authors Change Lines in Their Books Now
The silly idea that a fictional character’s statements reflect an author’s actual beliefs is spreading.
-
+18 +3Words of wisdom from 15 Canadian novels
The stories we love best are filled with subtle (and not-so-subtle) lessons and perspectives. These quotes from 15 modern Canadian books offer unique insights into the lives we live.
-
+19 +3Opinion: Why keep all those old books? Readers answer.
Biblioracle columnist John Warner had a recent crisis of confidence surrounding his habit of hoarding books, but then some readers reminded him of some good reasons why we should keep even the ones we've already read.
-
+20 +1Reading To Young Children Stimulates Brain Development, Creates Nurturing Environment
Research from the 5B45 initiative showed the more words little children were exposed to, especially before they turn five-years-old, the better. Experts said reading not only builds their brains, but helps a child feel nurtured and loved.
-
+24 +4Why I am deleting Goodreads and maybe you should, too
I can’t remember the last time I enjoyed reading a book where my enjoyment wasn’t tied to the euphoric sense of achievement I got from finishing it. This is not because I don’t love reading, or would rather watch television. No, it’s because of a little app on my phone called Goodreads.
-
+21 +4Inside the World’s Most Beloved Independent Bookstores
In the age of Amazon and e-books, these bookstores have faced more challenges than ever, but many have been able to persevere and remain treasured parts of their communities
-
+20 +5Children read more challenging books in lockdowns, data reveals
Report on reading habits of more than one million children also finds they read longer books, particularly during school closures
-
+26 +6This survey shows that people prefer printed books – even in the digital age
With smartphones, tablets and e-readers reaching mass adoption over the past few years, many have predicted that printed books would soon become a thing of the past. And while it’s true that people use their electronic devices to read, they still rely heavily on ink and paper when it comes to reading books.
-
+13 +3Jane Goodall’s Lovely Letter to Children About How Reading Shaped Her Life
“Books feed and cure and chortle and collide,” Gwendolyn Brooks wrote in her 1969 ode to why we read. For Kafka, a book was “the axe for the frozen sea inside us”; for Galileo, nothing less than a source of superhuman powers. “Without the writing of books, there is no history, there is no concept of humanity,” Hermann Hesse wrote in his visionary 1930 meditation on “the magic of the book” and why we will always remain under its generous spell, no matter how the technologies of reading may change.
-
+17 +3How Children Read Differently From Books vs. Screens
Scrolling may work for social media, but experts say that for school assignments, kids learn better if they slow down their reading.
-
+11 +1Dr. Seuss books – to cancel or not to cancel?
It is right to rethink old literature. But does cancel culture amount to book burnings? Sooner or later, everybody gets cancelled, but I could not imagine why anybody would pick on Dr. Seuss, a childhood favorite of mine.
-
+21 +4Ars’ plea: Someone make this into a series
The Ars staff picks the novels we think would make compelling TV adaptations.
-
+19 +5The Art of Reading More Effectively and Efficiently
In many ways, improving the way we read is the number one skill that can change our lives for the better. This article explains how this is done.
-
+15 +3Is it Worth Reading if I Forget Everything I Read?
My partner and I are both book nerds–we met working at a bookstore–but we don’t have a lot of overlap in our reading. He tends towards science fiction and horror, and I read YA, literary fiction, and queer lit of all genres. When we do both read the same book, though, it’s always an interesting experience for me. I tend to immerse myself in books, absorbing the general emotions I get from the story, or the big ideas that it grapples with.
Submit a link
Start a discussion




















