Literature
The Case for Charles Dickens, the Science Communicator
A new exhibition dives into the Victorian novelist's passion for science
The Story of Josiah Henson, the Real Inspiration for 'Uncle Tom’s Cabin'
Before there was the novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe, a formerly enslaved African-American living in Canada wrote a memoir detailing his experience
A Botanical Wonderland Resides in the World of Rare and Unusual Books
The Smithsonian’s librarian and antiquarian Leslie Overstreet time travels, sharing centuries of horticultural splendors
How "Young Adult" Fiction Blossomed With Teenage Culture in America
In the '60s and '70s, books like <em>The Outsiders</em> and <em>The Chocolate War</em> told stories that dealt with complex emotions and social realities
Analysis Breaks Down the Annoying "Poet Voice"
It's not just you; poets also read their works aloud with long pauses, weird cadences and almost no emotion
Scholar Finds New Isaac Bashevis Singer Story
“The Boarder,” which is published for the first time in the <i>New Yorker</i>, was discovered while going through the prominent writer’s vast archives
How Charles Dickens Imagined a Westworld-like Robot Theme Park Back In 1838
The writer's dystopia, populated by 'automaton figures,' was surprisingly modern
Why Are We Always Searching For "A Quiet Place?"
Perhaps the real monster is not noise, but instead our own intolerance of unwanted sounds
Britain's Lake District Was Immortalized by Beatrix Potter, But Is Its Future in Peril?
Shepherds and ecologists are butting heads over what's next for the beloved landscape
Poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge's Casket Rediscovered in Former Wine Cellar
Parishioners at St. Michael's Church in Highgate hope to refurbish the crypt after identifying where exactly Coleridge's final resting place was
Watch: The First Trailer for 'Mary Shelley' Explores the Many Inspirations for 'Frankenstein'
The biopic will follow Mary Wollstonecraft's scandalous teenage romance with the older Percy Bysshe Shelley and the events that shaped her most famous book
The First Novel for Children Taught Girls the Power of Reading
Nearly three centuries before heroines like Katniss and Meg Murray, Sarah Fielding published a book on the values of female education
The Beloved Classic Novel “The Little Prince” Turns 75 Years Old
Written in wartime New York City, the children’s book brings out the small explorer in everyone
Casanova Is Getting a Museum
The womanizer and Enlightenment polymath will be memorialized with an interactive museum in Venice opening April 2
A Never-Ending Poem Grows in the Netherlands
De Letters van Utrecht is carved into the city streets and will continue indefinitely
The 19th-Century “Golden Hours” Convention Brought Young Readers Together to Meet Their Literary Heroes
The dime novels and story papers entertained boys and launched a popular culture we still consume today
Winnie-the-Pooh Returns to the Big Screen in a New Teaser Trailer
A live-action film of the iconic tubby little cubby all stuffed with fluff hits theaters this summer
The Fantastic Beasts of John James Audubon's Little-Known Book on Mammals
The American naturalist spent the last years of his life cataloguing America's four-legged creatures
Women Were Better Represented in Victorian Novels Than Modern Ones
Big data shows that women used to be omnipresent in fiction. Then men got in the way
From Helping Shut-Ins to Sisterly Advice, Mail-Order Magazines Did More Than Just Sell Things
The cheap monthly publications that flooded rural homes offered more than just advertising—they also provided companionship
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