October 25, 2024

Learning

A new survey suggests that young people are shunning AI algorithms and online retailers to experience the joy of visiting bookshops.

Ler Devagar (Slow Reading) bookshop, Lisbon, Portugal. Photo by Pedro Ribeiro Simões via Wikimedia Commons

Ler Devagar (Slow Reading) bookshop, Lisbon, Portugal. Photo by Pedro Ribeiro Simões via Wikimedia Commons

Ler Devagar (Slow Reading) bookshop, Lisbon, Portugal. Photo by Pedro Ribeiro Simões via Wikimedia Commons

"Gen Z’s cultural tastes are heralded, maligned and mythologised in almost equal measure. But one stereotype persists above all: that young people are addicted to their phones, keen to live their lives primarily through a screen.

"But is this the whole picture? A survey commissioned by the Booksellers Association ahead of Bookshop Day (on October 12) has found that gen Z and millennials are more likely to buy a book based on a bookseller’s recommendation – in person, in a bookshop – than older age groups: 49% and 56% respectively, compared with 37% of gen X and 31% of baby boomers. Booksellers from around the UK told me this wasn’t surprising – that, in the last few years, they’ve noticed a sharp rise in young readers coming into their shops seeking out human guidance, eager to be in a physical store rather than filtering through AI and influencer-recommended titles online." - Sarah Manavis

ARTICLE: ‘I Love the Whole Atmosphere and Can Spend Hours Browsing’: How Did Bookshops Suddenly Become Cool?

Learning

Complaints are a really lousy way to express and idea.

ARTICLE: Why You Should Stop Complaining

Learning

"Seriously, I mean starting right now. Do art and do it for the rest of your lives."

‍VIDEO: James Earl Jones reads Kurt Vonnegut's inspirational letter to a group of students

Learning

How learning to live with uncertainty about the past can help us make wiser decisions about the future

ARTICLE: The Lost Art Of Thinking Historically

Learning

Banned Books Week ends tomorrow. But young people still have free digital access to books that may be restricted in their communities.

ARTICLE: Books Unbanned: 1 Million Checkouts