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Top 10 Tuesday: Ten Children’s Literature Characters I’d Like to Check In With

For this week’s Top 10 Tuesday hosted by The Broke & the Bookish, we’re sharing ten characters we’d like to check in with. I've decided to choose some of the most important characters in children’s literature because who doesn’t want to know what the future had in store for them?

Posted by Maria Vicente

Bookish Events in New York City: April 13th–April 19th

It’s another jam-packed week for bookish events in New York City. Some monthly readings are on this week, including the Franklin Park Monthly Reading Series, The Moth StorySLAM!, and Women of Letters. There’s also the opportunity to celebrate a few debut authors, as well as hear from a Pulitzer Prize winning veteran. Wednesday offers the chance to party at Housing Works in honor of the PEN Literary Awards. Choose wisely, and make sure to tweet at us to let us know where you go!

Posted by Jennifer Morell

Kimmy Schmidt: Unbreakable Librarian

In celebration of this year's National Library Week—and Library Workers' Day, Bookmobile Day, and Teen Literature Day—I’ve decided that between Netflix seasons, and on break from the Voorhees, Kimmy Schmidt will be working as a librarian. A gosh-darn good one too! Plus it’s a perfect place for her to fill in the fifteen years she missed while in the bunker and catch up on some reading.

So while you’re honoring your library by checking out books, eBooks, movies, giving your librarian a nice card for being awesome, or finally returning that book you’ve had since the fourth grade—you know who you are—Kimmy will be helping her friends in the best possible way, selecting books for them to read. And because Kimmy is so considerate these selections will be spoiler free.

Posted by Jamie Canaves

LAERTES AND OPHELIA, LUKE AND ORGANA (LEIA): AN ODE FOR NATIONAL SIBLING DAY

Whether you're William Shakespeare or George Lucas, you no doubt revel in a good story about siblings.  Shakespeare's stories feature a good number of siblings, from Laertes and Ophelia in Hamlet to the two Antipholuses and the two Dromios of The Comedy of Errors, from the warring siblings Richard, Henry and Clarence in Richard III to the comedic Kate and Bianca in The Taming of the Shrew. George Lucas, Shakespeare's brother from another mother (well, maybe that's stating the case a bit strongly), gave the world one of its most startling—inappropriate? confusing? hair-raising?—sibling relationships in 1983, when Return of the Jedi revealed to all of us that the kiss Leia planted on Luke in The Empire Strikes Back was no more than sisterly devotion.
 
So today, in honor of National Sibling Day, here's an ode to my own sibling—my brother, Erik—in light of Leia, Luke, Ophelia, and Laertes.

Posted by Ian Doescher

To Be Continued: 6 Cancelled TV Shows That Came Back As Books

image via Janet Cho

As fans of television and books there are things we’ve become accustomed to: the common book-to-TV/film adaptation and, sadly, the common “ratings game” that puts any and all of our favorite television shows on the cancellation plank. So what happens when we reverse the first model and attach it to the second? Our beloved characters come back to life nestled safely between a book’s covers! 

Here are 6 television shows that lived on as novels or comics, listed in order of cancelation date.

Posted by Jamie Canaves

Top 10 Tuesday: 10 Inspiring Quotes for Book Lovers

In this week’s Top 10 Tuesday, hosted by Broke & the Bookish, we’re supposed to share inspiring quotations from books. Which I could do, but I’m not going to. Instead, I have ten inspiring books for book lovers because sometimes we need a little reading encouragement.

Posted by Maria Vicente