Reading

Design for the Real World: Ribbon Bookmark

Arts, Culture & Media

Architectural writer Sara Moss celebrates the simple and fabulous ribbon bookmark.

Bonus Track: <em>Attachment</em>

Arts, Culture & Media

<em>Things Fall Apart</em>

Arts, Culture & Media

<em>Things Fall Apart</em>

Arts, Culture & Media

High School Reunion

Arts, Culture & Media

“Blood Music”

Arts, Culture & Media

In Greg Bear’s novel “Blood Music,” a scientist infected with a synthetic virus realizes that the organisms in his body have become self-aware — and they’re talking in his head. 

Children reading

A new study gives parents another reason to read to their kids

Education

Research has shown that reading books aloud to children helps them become better readers and maybe even better learners. A close look at the text of children’s books offers a possible explanation why.

A commuter reads on a Kindle e-reader while riding the subway in Cambridge, Mass. Neuroscience says the way his brain treats reading on the Kindle is different than the way the brain processes the newspaper next to him.

Your paper brain and your Kindle brain aren’t the same thing

Technology

If you’ve given up on reading paper books for the ease of your e-reader’s screen, you may want to step back a bit. Neuroscience confirms that our brains use different areas to read on paper and screens, and you need to exercise both.

Ann Morgan reading

One reader, 197 books, one year to finish them all

Arts, Culture & Media

In 2011, Ann Morgan, a journalist and author in the UK, set herself the goal to read a book from every country in the world in one year. And she blogged about it.

The Reading Brain

Our brains evolved in survivalist terms, prioritizing basic sensory functions, like sight and scent. Today, our brains are forced to process information at a higher capacity — and must faster — than our ancient ancestors.   Learning to read is a complex process for the brain, explains Maryanne Wolfe, the Director of the Center for Reading […]