Question:
is reading good for the brain?
welshigirl
2008-04-18 13:21:41 UTC
is reading good for the brain?
39 answers:
2008-04-19 07:20:25 UTC
Yes. The Bookstart programme that gifts books to children proves this. Bookstart itself began in 1992 and introduced 300 babies to books. Initial research had demonstrated that children developed positive attitudes toward books and were more likely to engage in book centred activities. (book clubs, libraries, book purchasing) Further study of children who were between 2 1/2 and 3 years of age indicated that former recipients of Bookstart gave priority to books and libraries and that parents continued to share reading with their children. Some positive indicators that the programme contributed to language development were that participating children demonstrated interest in books, pointed to text and turned pages and asked questions. These findings led to a longitudinal study of Bookstart families and a baseline of 41 children with a matched comparison group to trace the benefits at the reception year. Because the results showed that Bookstart children were ahead of their peers in the comparison group in English, reading and Maths, the study continued into KS1 where SATS were taken into account and similar positive results were found. The findings suggest that Bookstart children maintain their superiority throughout their first years of primary education to the end of KS1.
2014-09-17 18:47:20 UTC
For a simple, step-by-step program that can help your child learn to read visit this site: http://readingprogram.toptips.org



Learning to read at a young age is important for the development of the child. It helps them develop a better understand of their surroundings, allows them to gather information from printed materials, and provides them with a wonderful source of entertainment when they read stories and rhymes. Children develop at different rates, and some children will develop reading skills quicker than other children; however, what's important is that as the parent, you are keenly aware of your child's maturity and reading level to provide them with appropriate books and activities to help them improve.



As parents, you are the most important teacher for your children.



Also Watch this video of a 2 year old child reading http://readingprogram.toptips.org
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2016-04-28 03:21:54 UTC
If your goal is to have your child becomes smooth in examining equally money and lowercase letters. Then you will require this system, Children Learning Reading from here https://tr.im/etD2y .

Children Learning Reading teaches your son or daughter phonemes so they have really a strong foundation in the skills that'll let them to go on to become a prolific reader. With Children Learning Reading will also centers on creating on the skills learned allowing your youngster to get their reading skills to the next level.

With Children Learning Reading is easy to teach your son or daughter just how to read.
pinholster
2016-10-10 15:02:29 UTC
this isn't any longer CSF. If it grew to become into you will have substantial problems, dizzyness... between different issues. this is basically an ear an infection. bypass to the MD and get antibiotics no matter if it remains draining pus.
2008-04-18 13:26:05 UTC
Yes it is to reading and answering questions on here keeps our brains active and healthy. So we have a lot to thank yahoo for,.,,
HotChipz777
2008-04-18 13:31:56 UTC
Yes, reading exercises your brain. Fish is also good for your brain. Doing physical exercise lets more blood flow through your brain, giving your brain more oxygen and making you think faster.



Reading can only be good for you, but I still don't like doing it. I like reading on my video games.
terryogib
2008-04-18 15:00:35 UTC
Yes it appears that reading is good fo the brain! It exercises your mind and allows you to expand your vocabulary, comprehension and writing skills!

Personally i find it relaxing and enthralling if you can get a good book!
bewerefan
2008-04-18 13:36:35 UTC
It depends upon what you are reading. If what you are reading makes you think, imagine, or figure out a puzzle, then it is good for the brain. If you are just exercizing your eyes (ie. romance novels), then you are better off with a complicated and intelligent television show (24, Battlestar Galactica, etc.) or even an involving video game.
2008-04-18 13:26:17 UTC
Yes it is - especially thrillers where there is a plot to follow and a twist to work out (apparently!)



The other things good for the brain are puzzles - crossword, sudoku etc. cinema and theatre!
Big Juice
2008-04-18 13:25:54 UTC
Yes, very good. it's definitely better than sitting in front of a T.V for 6 hours. On the positive side, it broadens your vocabulary, and when reading out loud, you become more confident and clearer.
Vb
2008-04-18 13:28:22 UTC
Yes
Tunz
2008-04-18 13:32:47 UTC
Yes....it helps keep the mind active and prevents other harmful activities. it improves sentence structure, vocabulary, syntax, comprehension, and creativity. overall, reading is among the best things you can do for your brain.....
karnevil9
2008-04-18 13:26:50 UTC
phenomenal for the brain . . . not so much for the eyes
myayro
2008-04-18 13:27:07 UTC
Yes! Plus it helps to teach you how to use grammar, punctuation and spelling as well as approving your vocabulary!
cake tin
2008-04-18 13:24:51 UTC
well it depends what you read i think, but it can't be bad for the brain!
2008-04-18 13:32:09 UTC
Yep. It helps you to have better grammar, spelling, and pronunciation because even if you aren't reading out loud, you still have a voice in your head.
2008-04-18 13:25:04 UTC
Yes. Keeps the mind active.



xx
2008-04-19 06:12:21 UTC
Hell Yeah! ... don't know about you guys but my brains never felt better! x
2008-04-18 13:29:40 UTC
Hah yeah, you got a lot of answers fast for that one.
truebluestyle
2008-04-19 04:11:45 UTC
THE BEST THING FOR BRAIN, INTELLIGENCE AND COMMUNICATION SKILLS!!!!!!!! I LOVE READING BOOKS!!!!
jen
2008-04-19 02:24:15 UTC
keeps the mind active, helps to improve your voabulary and writing skills, helps the imagination
2008-04-18 14:01:34 UTC
Yes, it expands your knowledge in many ways. It teaches you vocabulary, grammar, culture, history, and many other things.
Marisa
2008-04-18 13:24:48 UTC
Yes, It's really good to improve your grammar and writing skills.
Michelle
2008-04-18 13:24:37 UTC
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OK



To get more,visit sites below







The concepts important for teaching reading in the classroom have been revealed . Language and Reading in the Brain. A monthly column by Martha S. Burns,

http://www.brainconnection.com/library/?main=eduhome/reading-fundamentals





Mental fitness is all about making your brain find new connections between things and thinking about the world in a different way. Reading is one of the best ways

http://longevity.about.com/od/mentalfitness/tp/brain_reading.htm





Thought Translation -Brain-reading.com.

http://www.brain-reading.com





Understanding the Brain and Reading You read this passage quietly to yourself

http://www.sedl.org/reading/topics/brainreading.html





Find How The Brain Learns To Read by David A. Sousa now at AbeBooks.

http://www.abebooks.co.uk/servlet/BookDetailsPL?&bi=816726638&isbn=1412906016





Animated Science, Health, Technology, Math, Social Studies and English movies, comic strips, activity pages and all about the fundamentals of reading!

http://www.brainpop.com/english/readingandspeaking/readingskills





Speed Reading

Experts say that most people can learn to read up to 1000 words per minute.First you have to learn how your eyes and brain work

http://www.brainskills.co.uk/SpeedReading.html





Microsoft mind reading

Not content with running your computer, Microsoft now wants to read your mind too.



The company says that it is hard to properly evaluate the way people interact with computers since questioning them at the time is distracting and asking questions later may not produce reliable answers. "Human beings are often poor reporters of their own actions," the company says.



Instead, Microsoft wants to read the data straight from the user's brain as he or she works away. They plan to do this using electroencephalograms (EEGs) to record electrical signals within the brain. The trouble is that EEG data is filled with artefacts caused, for example, by blinking or involuntary actions, and this is hard to tease apart from the cognitive data that Microsoft would like to study.



So the company has come up with a method for filtering EEG data in such a way that it separates useful cognitive information from the not-so-useful non-cognitive stuff. The company hopes that the data will better enable to them to design user interfaces that people find easy to use. Whether users will want Microsoft reading their brain waves is another matter altogether.

http://www.newscientist.com/blog/invention/2007/10/microsoft-mind-reading.html





Book Recommendation - Shop.com

Shop for Book Recommendation in the Books & Magazines section of Shop.com. Thousands of Brands. Hundreds of Stores.

http://shop-com.co.uk/Books+&+Magazines-a-Book+Recommendation-nover-st.shtml





BooksPrice.com - Book Recommendations

Michael Pollan's beautifully written book about why and how .Illustrations by children's book author and New Yorker cover artist Maira Kalman

http://www.booksprice.co.uk/BookRecommendations.jsp





Recommend Us - The Book Of THoTH

The Book of THoTH Paranormal Research and Discussion. The Book Of THoTH: Recommend this Site to a Friend.

http://www.book-of-thoth.com/recommend.html





Poetry Book Society

Founded in 1953 by T.S. Eliot. Provides information, guidance, educational resources, and new poetry books at discounted prices to poetry lovers worldwide.

http://www.poetrybooks.co.uk





The Book Club Cookbook -- Recommend a Book

Recommend a Book. Have you read any terrific books lately? Your club enjoyed the book, and/or about the fun book-related activities

http://www.bookclubcookbook.com/recommend.htm





Booksontape.com : We Recommend

The largest selection of bestselling and hard-to-find unabridged audiobooks. The Today Show's Book Club. • YALSA Audio Book and Alternative Media Recordings

http://www.booksontape.com/recommendations.cfm





mickwood.com - Book & Software Recommendations

Use amazon a lot - they offer a great service and have never let me down,click on any of the book or software recommendations you will be taken directly

http://www.mickwood.com/recommend/index.shtml





Book Recommendations - General Information - LawCareers.Net

Find a Training Contract or Pupillage and access all other aspects of joining.Book Recommendations. Features. Podcast. Oracle. News. Diary. Glossary

http://www.lawcareers.net/Information/BookRecommendations





Barnes & Noble.com: Book Clubs

Reading group guides and recommendations for book clubs, as well a monthly online book club.

bookclubs.barnesandnoble.com





Oprah's Books

Information on Oprah Winfrey's past book clubs and features, including Oprah's personal favourites, reading lists, books featured on the show, and chat transcripts.

http://www.oprah.com/books/books_landing.jhtml



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referee
2008-04-18 13:24:34 UTC
Yes.
everybody loves 3000
2008-04-18 13:36:46 UTC
Depends on what is being read. Most often it can't hurt.
2008-04-18 13:34:44 UTC
Not so sure about that one. Many very intelligent people go on in later life to get dementia.x
rabbitgal
2008-04-18 13:25:58 UTC
Yes it expands your vocabulary and imagination

It can relax you too
2008-04-18 13:25:50 UTC
yes it gets the little gray cells going
Andy b
2008-04-18 13:25:00 UTC
it could be it depends on the book.
cmilja m
2008-04-19 08:45:25 UTC
depends on what do you read.
2008-04-18 13:24:38 UTC
yes, excellent
2008-04-19 03:23:56 UTC
actually no, nor good for your eyes,
Malcolm C
2008-04-18 13:41:13 UTC
Maybe it is and maybe it isn't.
nic nac
2008-04-18 13:25:30 UTC
Dorking is better. As is Reigate.
2008-04-18 13:25:00 UTC
no its good for the heart!!
ireadtomanybooks
2008-04-18 13:32:33 UTC
reading nonfiction helps more then fiction

well the fiction may have bigger words the nonfiction is real so

here is nonfiction books to read.



1. THE EDUCATION OF HENRY ADAMS by Henry Adams

2. THE VARIETIES OF RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE by William James

3. UP FROM SLAVERY by Booker T. Washington

4. A ROOM OF ONE'S OWN by Virginia Woolf

5. SILENT SPRING by Rachel Carson

6. SELECTED ESSAYS, 1917-1932 by T. S. Eliot

7. THE DOUBLE HELIX by James D. Watson

8. SPEAK, MEMORY by Vladimir Nabokov

9. THE AMERICAN LANGUAGE by H. L. Mencken

10. THE GENERAL THEORY OF EMPLOYMENT, INTEREST, AND MONEY by John Maynard Keynes

11. THE LIVES OF A CELL by Lewis Thomas

12. THE FRONTIER IN AMERICAN HISTORY by Frederick Jackson Turner

13. BLACK BOY by Richard Wright

14. ASPECTS OF THE NOVEL by E. M. Forster

15. THE CIVIL WAR by Shelby Foote

16. THE GUNS OF AUGUST by Barbara Tuchman

17. THE PROPER STUDY OF MANKIND by Isaiah Berlin

18. THE NATURE AND DESTINY OF MAN by Reinhold Niebuhr

19. NOTES OF A NATIVE SON by James Baldwin

20. THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF ALICE B. TOKLAS by Gertrude Stein

21. THE ELEMENTS OF STYLE by William Strunk and E. B. White

22. AN AMERICAN DILEMMA by Gunnar Myrdal

23. PRINCIPIA MATHEMATICA by Alfred North Whitehead and Bertrand Russell

24. THE MISMEASURE OF MAN by Stephen Jay Gould

25. THE MIRROR AND THE LAMP by Meyer Howard Abrams

26. THE ART OF THE SOLUBLE by Peter B. Medawar

27. THE ANTS by Bert Hoelldobler and Edward O. Wilson

28. A THEORY OF JUSTICE by John Rawls

29. ART AND ILLUSION by Ernest H. Gombrich

30. THE MAKING OF THE ENGLISH WORKING CLASS by E. P. Thompson

31. THE SOULS OF BLACK FOLK by W.E.B. Du Bois

32. PRINCIPIA ETHICA by G. E. Moore

33. PHILOSOPHY AND CIVILIZATION by John Dewey

34. ON GROWTH AND FORM by D'Arcy Thompson

35. IDEAS AND OPINIONS by Albert Einstein

36. THE AGE OF JACKSON, Arthur Schlesinger by Jr.

37. THE MAKING OF THE ATOMIC BOMB by Richard Rhodes

38. BLACK LAMB and Grey Falcon by Rebecca West

39. AUTOBIOGRAPHIES by W. B. Yeats

40. SCIENCE AND CIVILIZATION IN CHINA by Joseph Needham

41. GOODBYE TO ALL THAT by Robert Graves

42. HOMAGE TO CATALONIA by George Orwell

43. THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF MARK TWAIN by Mark Twain

44. CHILDREN OF CRISIS by Robert Coles

45. A STUDY OF HISTORY by Arnold J. Toynbee

46. THE AFFLUENT SOCIETY by John Kenneth Galbraith

47. PRESENT AT THE CREATION by Dean Acheson

48. THE GREAT BRIDGE by David McCullough

49. PATRIOTIC GORE by Edmund Wilson

50. SAMUEL JOHNSON by Walter Jackson Bate

51. THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF MALCOLM X by Alex Haley and Malcolm X

52. THE RIGHT STUFF by Tom Wolfe

53. EMINENT VICTORIANS by Lytton Strachey

54. WORKING by Studs Terkel

55. DARKNESS VISIBLE by William Styron

56. THE LIBERAL IMAGINATION by Lionel Trilling

57. THE SECOND WORLD WAR by Winston Churchill

58. OUT OF AFRICA by Isak Dinesen

59. JEFFERSON AND HIS TIME by Dumas Malone

60. IN THE AMERICAN GRAIN by William Carlos Williams

61. CADILLAC DESERT by Marc Reisner

62. THE HOUSE OF MORGAN by Ron Chernow

63. THE SWEET SCIENCE by A. J. Liebling

64. THE OPEN SOCIETY AND ITS ENEMIES by Karl Popper

65. THE ART OF MEMORY by Frances A. Yates

66. RELIGION AND THE RISE OF CAPITALISM by R. H. Tawney

67. A PREFACE TO MORALS by Walter Lippmann

68. THE GATE OF HEAVENLY PEACE by Jonathan D. Spence

69. THE STRUCTURE OF SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTIONS by Thomas S. Kuhn

70. THE STRANGE CAREER OF JIM CROW by C. Vann Woodward

71. THE RISE OF THE WEST by William H. McNeill

72. THE GNOSTIC GOSPELS by Elaine Pagels

73. JAMES JOYCE by Richard Ellmann

74. FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE by Cecil Woodham-Smith

75. THE GREAT WAR AND MODERN MEMORY by Paul Fussell

76. THE CITY IN HISTORY by Lewis Mumford

77. BATTLE CRY OF FREEDOM by James M. McPherson

78. WHY WE CAN'T WAIT by Martin Luther King by Jr.

79. THE RISE OF THEODORE ROOSEVELT by Edmund Morris

80. STUDIES IN ICONOLOGY by Erwin Panofsky

81. THE FACE OF BATTLE by John Keegan

82. THE STRANGE DEATH OF LIBERAL ENGLAND by George Dangerfield

83. VERMEER by Lawrence Gowing

84. A BRIGHT SHINING LIE by Neil Sheehan

85. WEST WITH THE NIGHT by Beryl Markham

86. THIS BOY'S LIFE by Tobias Wolff

87. A MATHEMATICIAN'S APOLOGY by G. H. Hardy

88. SIX EASY PIECES by Richard P. Feynman

89. PILGRIM AT TINKER CREEK by Annie Dillard

90. THE GOLDEN BOUGH by James George Frazer

91. SHADOW AND ACT by Ralph Ellison

92. THE POWER BROKER by Robert A. Caro

93. THE AMERICAN POLITICAL TRADITION by Richard Hofstadter

94. THE CONTOURS OF AMERICAN HISTORY by William Appleman Williams

95. THE PROMISE OF AMERICAN LIFE by Herbert Croly

96. IN COLD BLOOD by Truman Capote

97. THE JOURNALIST AND THE MURDERER by Janet Malcolm

98. THE TAMING OF CHANCE by Ian Hacking

99. OPERATING INSTRUCTIONS by Anne Lamott

100. MELBOURNE by Lord David Cecil



1. THE VIRTUE OF SELFISHNESS by AYN RAND

2. DIANETICS:THE MODERN SCIENCE OF MENTAL HEALTH by L. RON HUBBARD

3. OBJECTIVISM: THE PHILOSOPHY OF AYN RAND by LEONARD PEIKOFF

4. 101 THINGS TO DO TIL THE REVOLUTION by CLAIRE WOLFE

5. THE GOD OF THE MACHINE by ISABEL PATERSON

6. AYN RAND: A SENSE OF LIFE by MICHAEL PAXTON

7. THE ULTIMATE RESOURCE by JULIAN SIMON

8. ECONOMICS IN ONE LESSON by HENRY HAZLITT

9. SEND IN THE WACO KILLERS by VIN SUPRYNOWICZ

10. MORE GUNS, LESS CRIME by JOHN R. LOTT

11. PSYCHIATRY: THE ULTIMATE BETRAYAL by BRUCE WISEMAN

12. FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS by G. HANCOCK

13. CLASSICAL INDIVIDUALISM: THE SUPREME IMPORTANCE OF EACH HUMAN BEING by TIBOR MACHAN

14. FREE TO CHOOSE by MILTON AND ROSE FRIEDMAN

15. AIN'T NOBODY'S BUSINESS IF YOU DO by PETER MCWILLIAMS

16. THE ROAD TO SERFDOM by F. A. HAYEK

17. FREEDOM IN CHAINS by JAMES BOVARD

18. AMERICA'S GREAT DEPRESSION by MURRAY N. ROTHBARD

19. THE ROOSEVELT MYTH by JOHN T. FLYNN

20. THE TRUE BELIEVER by ERIC HOFFER

21. VINDICATING THE FOUNDERS by THOMAS WEST

22. THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE by CARL L. BECKER

23. COGNITIVE THERAPY AND THE EMOTIONAL DISORDERS by AARON T. BECK

24. DEATH by GOVERNMENT by R. J. RUMMEL

25. A ROOM OF ONE'S OWN by VIRGINIA WOOLF

26. LONGITUDE by DAVA SOBEL

27. ORDINARILY SACRED by LYNDA SEXSON

28. SPEAK, MEMORY by VLADIMIR NABOKOV

29. THE ART OF MEMORY by FRANCES YATES

30. DUMBING US DOWN by JOHN TAYLOR GATTO

31. THE GOLDEN BOUGH by JAMES FRAZER

32. UNDAUNTED COURAGE: MERIWETHER LEWIS, THOMAS JEFFERSON, AND THE OPENING OF THE AMERICAN WEST by STEPHEN E. AMBROSE

33. A MODERN PROPHET by HAROLD KLEMP

34. THE FLUTE OF GOD by PAUL TWITCHELL

35. REAL PRESENCES by GEORGE STEINER

36. OUT OF AFRICA by ISAK DINESEN

37. WAYS OF SEEING by JOHN BERGER

38. THE SHADOW UNIVERSITY: THE BETRAYAL OF LIBERTY ON AMERICA'S CAMPUSES by ALAN CHARLES KORS

39. PROPERTY MATTERS: HOW PROPERTY RIGHTS ARE UNDER ASSAULT AND WHY YOU SHOULD CARE by JAMES V. DE LONG

40. STORMING HEAVEN by JAY STEVENS

41. THE TEXAN by C. S. BARRIOS

42. HOMAGE TO CATALONIA by GEORGE ORWELL

43. THE VARIETIES OF RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE by WILLIAM JAMES

44. HOW TO LIE WITH STATISTICS by DARRELL HUFF

45. BUT IS IT TRUE? by AARON WILDAVSKY

46. A MATHEMATICIAN READS THE NEWSPAPER by JOHN ALLEN PAULOS

47. ANATOMY OF CRITICISM by NORTHROP FRYE

48. THE MAINSPRING OF HUMAN PROGRESS by HENRY GRADY WEAVER

49. MODERN TIMES by PAUL JOHNSON

50. MEN TO MATCH MY MOUNTAINS by IRVING STONE

51. THE EDUCATION OF HENRY ADAMS by HENRY ADAMS

52. THE GREAT BRIDGE by DAVID MCCULLOUGH

53. AMERICAN GAY by STEPHEN O. MURRAY

54. THE DOUBLE HELIX by JAMES D. WATSON

55. THE SENSE OF AN ENDING by FRANK KERMODE

56. THE GNOSTIC GOSPELS by ELAINE PAGELS

57. EROS THE BITTERSWEET by ANNE CARSON

58. THE WESTERN CANON by HAROLD BLOOM

59. THE WHITE GODDESS by ROBERT GRAVES

60. HEALING OUR WORLD by MARY RUWART

61. SILENT SPRING by RACHEL CARSON

62. PILGRIM AT TINKER CREEK by ANNIE DILLARD

63. SEXUAL PERSONAE by CAMILLE PAGLIA

64. THINK AND GROW RICH by NAPOLEON HILL

65. A LIFE OF ONE'S OWN by DAVID KELLEY

66. DOORS OF PERCEPTION by ALDOUS HUXLEY

67. THE DISCOVERY OF FREEDOM by ROSE WILDER LANE

68. MORE LIBERTY MEANS LESS GOVERNMENT by WALTER WILLIAMS

69. LIBERTARIANISM: A PRIMER by DAVID BOAZ

70. BEYOND LIBERAL AND CONSERVATIVE by WILLIAM MADDOX AND STUART LILIE

71. A CONFLICT OF VISIONS: IDEOLOGICAL ORIGINS OF POLITICAL STRUGGLES by THOMAS SOWELL

72. PARLIAMENT OF WHORES by P. J. O'ROURKE

73. SEPARATING SCHOOL AND STATE: HOW TO LIBERATE AMERICA'S FAMILIES by SHELDON RICHMAN

74. THE FUTURE AND ITS ENEMIES by VIRGINIA POSTREL

75. THE ELEMENTS OF STYLE by WILLIAM STRUNK AND E. B. WHITE

76. ORIENTALISM by EDWARD SAID

77. ECOTERROR by RON ARNOLD

78. WHY GOVERNMENT DOESN'T WORK by HARRY BROWNE

79. OUT OF THE CRISIS by W. EDWARDS DEMING

80. NOT OUT OF AFRICA by MARY LEFKOWITZ

81. THE END OF RACISM by DINESH D'SOUZA

82. BEHIND THE MASK by IAN BURUMA

83. IN A DARK WOOD by ALSTON CHASE

84. PRIVATE PARTS by HOWARD STERN

85. THE TELEPHONE BOOK by AVITAL RONELL

86. THE MINUTEMAN: RESTORING AN ARMY OF THE PEOPLE by GARY HART

87. WAKING AND DREAMING by JOSEPH HART

88. THE GREATEST STORY NEVER TOLD by LANA CANTRELL

89. RADICAL SON by DAVID HOROWITZ

90. UNDER THE SIGN OF SATURN by SUSAN SONTAG

91. THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF MALCOLM X by ALEX HALEY AND MALCOLM X

92. A FEELING FOR BOOKS by JANICE RADWAY

93. THE HERO OF A THOUSAND FACES by JOSEPH CAMPBELL

94. THE JOB by WILLIAM BURROUGHS

95. SILENT INTERVIEWS by SAMUEL R. DELANY

96. SLATS GROBNIK AND SOME OTHER FRIENDS by MIKE ROYKO

97. RISE OF THE UNMELTABLE ETHNICS by MICHAEL NOVACK

98. REVERSE ANGLE by J
betting_on_alice
2008-04-18 13:25:24 UTC
yes!!!
2008-04-18 13:25:01 UTC
no its bad for you


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