The bean jar
In fact, it's the best way of living life
Strolling aimlessly in a bookshop is selfcare
Me reading books: ๐
Me buying books: ๐
Me touching books: ๐
Me seeing books: ๐
Me smelling books: ๐
Me talking about books: ๐
Books in general: ๐
โA cat has absolute emotional honesty: human beings, for one reason or another, may hide their feelings, but a cat does not.โ โ Ernest Hemingway
*gulps down pill 6 and 8*
Reblog with just TWO choices
My biggest bookworm pet peeve is when other people open their books way too wide. I weep over white lines in the book's spine.
ok so crying over a book is one of the most prominent sign of compassion for humanity. youโre crying over someone who isnโt really there, doesnโt really exist, but you still feel for them as if you've known them your entire life.
After finishing a book, I kiss its front page and sob quietly. I hold it tight and cradle it like a baby. It's my farewell ritual. Afterwards, I don't know if I can find another book that can satisfy the last one I've just read.
Things we should do in English class instead of just Shakespeare:
Compare & contrast a Rick Riordan book, an original Greek myth, and/or a retelling like Song of Achilles
Instead of talking about poetic devices, look for imagery, symbolism, and color theory in comics/graphic novels/Webtoons (Lore Olympus is a great example!!)
Analyze a Broadway musical instead of a Shakespeare play. (Thereโs SO MUCH to unpack in Dear Evan Hansen)
Have half the class read a book, and the other half listen to the audiobook. Do the audiobook kids have more similar interpretations? How much does the inflection and (unsaid) thoughts of the narrator influence ones takeaway?
10k notes and Iโll show this to my English teacher
19 | random literature + bookblr stuff | dormant acc, used for interactions only | more active on @sunbeamrocks
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