Fans Hope to Preserve Jack Kerouac’s Florida Home
The modest house in St. Petersburg is now for sale, and may be turned into a museum
Stanford Researchers Map the Feelings Associated With Different Parts of London
The university’s Literary Lab combed British novels from the 18th and 19th centuries to determine if areas elicited happiness or fear
George Orwell Wrote ‘1984’ While Dying of Tuberculosis
Orwell, like thousands around the globe today, struggled with tuberculosis for many years before finally succumbing to the disease
This Game Turns James Joyce’s Most Notorious Novel Into Virtual Reality
But will it make you want to finish Ulysses?
France’s Famous High School Exam Will Soon Feature Its First Woman Author
Madame da La Fayette will infuse a much-needed POV into France’s literary curriculum
Emily Dickinson Was Fiercer Than You Think
A new biopic shows the poet as more than a mysterious recluse
White Southerners Said “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” Was Fake News
So its author published a “key” to what’s true in the novel
L.M. Montgomery’s Ontario Home Will Open As a Museum
While living in the village of Norval, the beloved author enjoyed stunning literary success. But this chapter of her life was tinged with darkness
One Writer Used Statistics to Reveal the Secrets of What Makes Great Writing
In his new book, data journalist Ben Blatt takes a by-the-numbers look at literary classics and finds some fascinating patterns
America’s First Writers Museum Is Slated to Open in May
A new home for celebrating American literary titans, titles and traditions takes root in Chicago
Dr. Seuss Had an Imaginary Daughter Named Chrysanthemum-Pearl
Theodor Seuss Geisel created the character with his first wife, Helen Palmer Geisel
As “Dord” Shows, Being in the Dictionary Doesn’t Always Mean Something’s a Word
Even dictionaries can make mistakes, although Merriam-Webster maintains this is their only one
Five Things to Know About Little Golden Books
What to know as the iconic series of children’s books celebrates 75 years
The Illustrator of Alice in Wonderland Also Drew Abraham Lincoln. A Lot
John Tenniel was a well-known editorial cartoonist as well as the man who gave Lewis Carroll’s books their visual charm
A Graduate Student Just Discovered a Lost Work of Fiction by Walt Whitman
The serialized novella was first published anonymously in 1852
Some of the Most Important (and Cutest) Teddy Bear Moments of the Past 114 Years
The American toy was introduced in 1903, and almost immediately made its mark
Meet the Historically Accurate Mr. Darcy
A team of experts on fashion and social culture offer their take on Jane Austen’s brooding hero
Fans of Dorothy Parker Can Pay to Wear Her Mink Coat
It’s all in the name of preservation
Rachel Carson Wrote Silent Spring (Partly) Because of the Author of Stuart Little
The book was a turning point for the environmental movement
This Hell-Raising Suffragist’s Name Will Soon Grace an Oregon Hotel
Abigail Scott Duniway staged a lifelong fight for women’s rights
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