Who Would Win?

Today, 21.7 million copies of Who Would Win? books are in print. That doesn’t include the countless homemade Who Would Win?
From household names like John Cleese and John Suchet to well-known politicians such as Nicola Sturgeon and acclaimed writers ...
This valuable study investigates how perceptual and semantic features of maternal behavior adapt to infants' attention during naturalistic play, providing new insights into the bidirectional and ...
Vinyl fans, especially those who love classic rock, jazz and folk, will especially rejoice this year as, in addition to some ...
Well, fellow treasure hunters, that better way exists at the Goodwill on Nicollet Avenue in Minneapolis, a veritable wonderland of secondhand delights that might just change how you shop forever. Let ...
In a small basement room, under a low ceiling lined with white Christmas lights, four members of a library board huddled around a table. The board, like many others in the wake of a 2024 Idaho law ...
The Library of Congress is a supreme intellectual achievement. There may be no superior institution for serious research.
Print books embody culture. We see it in social media trends for annotating books, community publishing and wartime ...
Jupyter is a way of creating interactive notebooks that blend text, graphics, and code. This is a unique form of programming.
While we are careful to put books back where they belong, they don't always end up in the right place.
Public libraries in Tennessee have begun to shut down as they carry out an order from state officials to remove children’s ...
The fight against book bans by public school librarians shown in new documentary According to a new report from PEN America, public schools across the U.S. saw more than 6,800 book bans in the 2024-25 ...