Barbara Basbanes Richter

I don’t know about you, dear readers, but it’s been nothing short of a miracle for me to focus on much other than the parade of horribles happening right now.
Alcott completists, take note: Though she died in 1888, Little Women author Louisa May Alcott is back with a new story.
The secret to great book design may be akin to an exquisite ballet performance: the experience is nearly perfect when the effort and work put into the creat
"Where were you during the coronavirus pandemic of 2020," will become a common query of us by generations to come.
Ready or not, parts of the country are beginning to reopen, but opportunities to exercise those
In another pandemic-era example that makes a compelling case for broadband to one day be reclassified as a
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930) is perhaps best remembered for creating the intrepid detective Sherlock Holmes.
Like nearly every other aspect of modern life today, what can migrate online is doing so at a rapid clip, and at first blush, it might seem that the announcement of San Francisco-based 
On the heels of Internet Archive's recent decision to launch a "National Emergency Library" by offering access to 1.4 million book
And now, a post totally unrelated to coronavirus, because we need to remember the beautiful things that light up our world: