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    Barack Obama is Mr Darcy --Maureen Dowd
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  8-5-2008    1
     by masbury  
    1
    POPS
    15th-Century Fanfic, Time Mag. 8/07
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  9-22-2007    1
     by buddhistbabe8  
    1
    POPS
    What Are Libraries For?--Bookworm, 9/07
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  9-16-2007   
     by abailart  
    3
    POPS
    L'Engle: Too Complex for Grown-ups--Salon, 9/07
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  9-11-2007   
     by thekay  
    1
    POPS
    Bitter author diatribe--Huffington Post, 9/07
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  9-10-2007   
     by abailart  
    2
    POPS
    International Literacy Day--8 Sept. 2007
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  9-8-2007    1
     by m-o-n-a  
    4
    POPS
    High school reading lists updating rapidly--8/07 Christian Science Monitor
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  9-1-2007    1
     by neochonetes  
    1
    POPS
    New Wave of Hipster Librarians -NYTimes, Jul 2007
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  7-12-2007   
     by caughtin_the_rain  
    1
    POPS
    Girls of Riyadh: A Saudi "Sex in the City"?
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  7-4-2007   
     by claratornvall  
    2
    POPS
    Lucy Snyder on women writers & prejudice
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  7-14-2007   
     by liotropi  
    3
    POPS
    The Future of Books -The Economist, Mar 2007
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  7-6-2007   
     by tidbit2  
    1
    POPS
    Kids Shouldn't Read Fiction -NYTimes Jul 2007
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  7-13-2007   
     by thekay  
    1
    POPS
    Harry Potter doesn't increase kids' reading -NYTimes Jul 2007
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  7-13-2007   
     by thekay  
    1
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    Porn closeups are industrial films with fur -Robin Williams
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  7-3-2007   
     by righthand  
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    POPS
    Best New Paranormal Romance -RfP, Jul 2007
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  7-8-2007   
     Several great stories and a couple of duds.
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    5 authors are 70% of fiction sales -Wash. Post, Jul 2007
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  7-19-2007   
     No Remarks
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    POPS
    Twilight is Wuthering Heights with vampires
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  9-9-2008   
     Nice description of the Twilight series, and an interesting comparison to other leaked materials.
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    3 Books on Male Sexuality... and Splooge --Chronicle, 9/07
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  9-23-2007   
     Reviewer Camille Paglia has been called a "feminist that other feminists love to hate," a "post-feminist feminist," and one of the world's top 100 intellectuals. She describes three very different books on male sexuality, with thoughtful criticisms of each. I quoted from "Sperm Counts: Overcome by Man's Most Precious Fluid" by Lisa Jean Moore, simply because it's a funny passage. The other two books are Murat Aydemir's "Images of Bliss: Ejaculation, Masculinity, Meaning" and Angus McLaren's "Impotence: A Cultural History".
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    LA Times review: Peony In Love by Lisa See, Jul 2007
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  7-3-2007   
     No Remarks
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    Bob WhEarley, newspaper editor & romance novelist--Houston Chron, 9/07
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  9-8-2007   
     Whearley wrote five romances in 1986-88: http://www.romancewiki.com/Fran_Earley
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    Sana Krasikov: Reading is not a communal activity
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  9-14-2008   
     An interesting reflection on book readings, book clubs, and book blogging.
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    Women & Literature: Call for Papers -River Walk Journal, 11/07
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  11-7-2007   
     No Remarks
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    Graham Greene: A Form of Masturbation, Paris Review, Nov 2007
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  6-30-2007   
     Found on The Elegant Variation blog
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    Patron Removes Kids' Sex Book From Library--PW, 9/07
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  9-22-2007   
     Karkos could have challenged the book through a formal process within the library and its board--and thus allowed the community to participate in deciding the fate of the book. Instead, she took it into her own hands to decide for everyone what is moral and what books should be available. By holding every copy of the book, she prevents anyone else from reading it and forming their own opinions. Regardless of the content of the book, Karkos' actions fly in the face of civil society and its crucial community aspects.
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    Death of the Short Story, Buzz Balls & Hype, Jun 2007
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  6-30-2007   
     Henkin makes a great point: short stories are perfect for the short attention span. So why aren't they selling? I often try a new author by reading her short stories. I know that an author's short stories may be very different from a novel, as the different lengths require such different approaches. But often reading the short stories is an easy intro to someone's style.
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    Boobs and Books --Scotsman.com, 9/07
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  9-23-2007   
     No Remarks
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    Chicago Sun: New focus on women authors
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  6-29-2007   
     Other major changes under Ms. Reed: "I do more graphic novel, food, and music books because I realize these appeal to different audiences. I also added poetry and politics to the types of books we review. I experimented with themed sections. My main thrust has been in highlighting local authors and mainstream authors who come to town. We do a lot more interviews with authors now and I encourage our reviewers to take an attitude. I want our section to be entertaining and engaging even if readers don't go out and buy all the books we review.... I encourage our reviewers to take strong points of views. We are a tabloid so we feel we're entitled to have some fun. I've insisted that reviewers' taglines be somewhat clever and funny. I've found that full-time freelancers often can't break out of the mold and the volleying of plot developments. I want my reviewers to write essays about books, not plot points."
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    Advertising in library books -BBC, 11/07
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  11-7-2007   
     No Remarks
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    "Girly" book covers discourage boys--Times, 9/07
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  9-22-2007   
     The article highlights a couple of books with plots that should appeal to boys. It's a pity they're given bright pink covers. Surely that increases boys' resistance to reading, and especially their resistance to reading books with female protagonists. (For more on that, see: http://observer.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,6903,1494932,00.html and: http://www.readforpleasure.com/2007/09/why-women-read-more-than-men-or-not.html
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    East African Views on Sci Fi, 9/07
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  9-21-2007   
     I'm intrigued with the developing world's view of western sci fi. Our technology-centric culture, and our western mythologies, must sound foreign in more ways than one. (Note that this article is actually from Kenya, one of the more developed African nations, with strong universities and reasonable internet access.)
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    Junot Díaz on Genre & Literary Fiction, 9/07
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  9-21-2007   
     No Remarks
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    Salon on Stephanie Meyer's "Twilight"
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  7-30-2008   
     A perceptive article. It's interesting that Miller mentions the placeholder theory, which holds that writing a flat character lets the reader insert him or herself into the role. That's an old theory and dated in some ways, but it's possible that teenagers do at times insert themselves into stories, imagining themselves as central characters.
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    What Book Are You?
    readforpleasure
    by readforpleasure  7-14-2007   
     OK, so it may not be totally accurate. You get what you pay for. And it's fun reading the interpretations of the books' "personalities". Found by the Classical Bookworm: http://arb0rv1tae.typepad.com/bookworm/
    — end of the list —

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