Fun Facts Friday: Josef Ĺ kvoreckĂ˝

Josef Ĺ kvoreckĂ˝ was an award-winning Czech-Canadian writer whose books deal with repression, totalitarianism, jazz, and being a stranger in a strange land...

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The book’s argument is that the military must welcome non-traditional, collaborative approaches to innovation so it can leverage new technologies promptly...

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Guest Post: How Creative Storytelling Can Enhance Memory and Cognitive Health

Expression through writing can be transformative if you feel you’ve lost your edge or need something to help you rediscover your passion for reading, writing...

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Fun Facts Friday: Alberto de Lacerda

Alberto de Lacerda - A prominent Portuguese poet and radio personality. Mr. Lacerda is considered to be Portugal’s most admired and distinguished poets....

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In a time when Jews around the world are being vilified and antisemitism is running wild, it’s important to remember the consequences of such rhetoric...

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Reflections on history, justice, antisemitism, as well as the double standards, demonization, and weaponizing of both int'l laws & organizations against Israel...

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Fun Facts Friday: Sherwood Anderson

Sherwood Anderson (13 September, 1876 – 8 March, 1941) was a novelist and short story writer from Camden, OH. Later on he settled in Chicago, IL...

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Leaves of Fire (עלים מן האש) by Simcha Guterman is not all doom and gloom. The author has a healthy sense of humor, which I would assume is good to have...

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This was a charming, easy-to-read, lovely story. I read it quickly and enjoyed the story even though I thought most of it was quite predictable...

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Fun Facts Friday: Julien Green

Julien Green - A prolific American writer of novels, essays, plays, and even a biography. Mr. Green was born in France, and wrote in both French and English...

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Fun Facts Friday: Charlemae Hill Rollins
Fun Facts Friday , Latest Posts / June 20, 2014

Among her many awards and honors, Mrs. Rollins was the first African-American to receive an honorary life membership in the ALA (1972). The children’s room at the Hall Branch Library was named in Rollins’ honor. The Charlemae Hill Rollins Colloquium is held twice a year at North Carolina Central University, where attendees discuss how to improve library services for children....

Guest Post: Feeling Nostalgic: Stephen King’s Night Shift to the Rescue
Guest Posts , Latest Posts / June 10, 2014

Although there are many great authors today, and the technology of the Internet allows more and more to publish works every day, sometimes I feel nostalgic for books I haven’t read in more than a decade. Such is the case with Stephen King’s Night Shift. I remember reading this novel when I was much younger as my father had a copy from 1979. Currently, its worn pages and creased spine and cover demonstrate the passage of time...

Book Review: Look Who’s Back by Timur Vermes
5 Stars , Fiction , Latest Posts / June 9, 2014

Hitler, the megalomaniac, sees the world as if he is the only sane man left. Mad women pick up dog poop, the youth has not respect and the airwaves are filled with garbage. At some point he even justifies how Chaplin's "cheap and shoddy" film, The Great Dictator, got less hits then him on U-Tube because it's been on for 75 years....

Kiva Loan to Edmundo
Latest Posts / June 7, 2014

We made one new Kiva loan this week, using a $25 bonus we got from the company. While we don’t make loans very often, we do whenever we get the chance and are happy to help our fellow men and women. Click here to donate yourself Edmundo from Peru Edmundo continues to dedicate himself to his rotisserie chicken business. He sells rotisserie chickens with french fries. He works from 8am to 7pm. He has been in this business for m...

Fun Facts Friday: Alexander Pushkin
Fun Facts Friday , Latest Posts / June 6, 2014

Pushkin's great-grandfather, Abram Petrovich Gannibal, was born in Northern Abyssinia (Ethiopia) in the 1690s. Abram was kidnapped from Ethiopia when he was eight years old by a "Frenchman collecting animals and other curiosities for Louis XIV" of France. Shipped to Istanbul, he was placed in the Sultan's seraglio where the Russian ambassador found him and sent him back to Russia as a present to Peter the Great. Peter was so taken by A...

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