A Workout For Book Nerds
All you need for this workout is a stack of hardcovers and some yarn or rope to tie them together!
Workout #1: The Book Curl
Workout #2: The Book Up
Workout #3: The Brunch (Book Crunch) - Just like brunch this can be done alone or with a friend!
Cool Down
(via teachingliteracy)
“In the spring, at the end of the day, you should swell like dirt.” - Margaret Atwood
(via teachingliteracy)
naomi is not pleased by the great gatsby to the point that she can’t even stand to look at leonardo anymore
(via letsdrinkcoffeestuff)
Writopia: Great Reading for Teens (and adults!)
Great write ups for teen reading from many of us at P&P bookstore! AKA- what weirdness led to us becoming booksellers in our “adult” years?
Politics & Prose Bookstore congratulates the regional winners of the
2013 Scholastic Writing Award! In honor of teen writing and literature we’ve assembled staff recommendations of some of the books we enjoyed most as teens.
He says, hoping someone wanders off and he can rescue them!
(Source: thespoonmissioner, via doctorwho)
Dress however you want info graph. Best: How to get a bikini body: Put a bikini on your body.
Famous faces from history including William Shakespeare, Henry VIII and Horatio Nelson have been given a modern makeover to see how they would look if they were alive today.
The project, comissioned by history TV channel Yesterday to celebrate its new series, the Secret Life Of…, saw digital artists working closely with history experts to ensure the portraits gave a real sense of how historical characters would look if they were alive in the 21st Century.
Bookseller’s lament “this book is ruining my life.” *keeps reading*
(Source: ladyjay91, via walpurgisnuit)
The love song of time and space.
“Boy and girl fall in love, get separated by events, all politics, accidents in time. She’s thrown out of the hex, or he’s thrown into it, since then they’ve been yearning for each other across time and space.”
- Doctor Who: Hide
(Source: alexkingstonn, via doctorwho)
“if you can’t say something nice, say something clever but devastating.”
(Source: nickthejam, via teachingliteracy)







