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Showing posts from October, 2020

National Friends of Libraries Week

Friends, I promise a massive review is coming soon, as I am reading a trilogy that I plan to review as a unit. Until then, I'll be here reading and writing mini-posts on holidays I find interesting. I hope you all find them fun too. At least I'm learning something, right?  October 18th through October 24th is National Friends of Libraries Week.  The third week of October promotes groups who support libraries. This week is a great platform for groups who are active in their local library scene to increase awareness in their communities, grow membership, and encourage people to read and get active in their libraries'. Some groups, as you may have seen in your communities, focus on getting youth (especially teens) involved with their library. This, from experience, is no easy task. Their efforts are reasons to celebrate! How can you observe National Friends of Libraries Week?  *safely* (because of the COVID-19 pandemic) Join the teen/youth group at your library Know that YOU...

National Dictionary Day and Noah Webster's Birthday

Happy belated National Dictionary Day! I am going to start posting a mini-post for each of the holidays posted on the Bibliophile's Calendar !       October 16th is nationally recognized as Dictionary Day, which is based on Noah Webster's birthday. Noah Webster, the Father of the American Dictionary, is fittingly recognized with this celebration. He published his first dictionary, A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language , in 1806. Immediately following its release he began compiling his most cumbersome work: An American Dictionary of the English Language . To do so, he learned 26 languages some being Old-English, German, Greek, Latin, Italian, Spanish, French, Hebrew, Arabic, and Sanskrit. It took him 27 years to compile over seventy thousand words, twelve thousand of which had never been recorded in a dictionary before.       Webster sparked a massive linguistic reform. He found some British spellings unnecessarily complicated; thus, he ...

A Bibliophile's Calendar

 Hello, again. I am so happy to be posting. Turns out there are a lot of literary holidays! Enjoy!