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Word: readerly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...time I want to help Harvard move into the world of digitized information.” To show how one could meld the e-book and the “old book,” Darnton told his audience about an electronic book that he plans to write which readers could then customize. Inspired by an archive in an old Swiss town in which he found—and spent 14 summers reading—50,000 unpublished letters, Darnton said he plans to write about book smuggling across the French border during the 18th century. The book will...

Author: By Angela A. Sun, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: New Library Director Calls for E-Scholarship | 10/31/2007 | See Source »

...That's hardly a profound point, whether you agree with it or not, but it does set the tone for what follows. Both the Naipaul fan and the general reader will turn the pages of A Writer's People with mounting dismay, not simply because it compares poorly with his previous work - the slow waning of which has been well documented - but because it indulges Naipaul's famous petulance to such an extent that the man himself fails at looking and feeling, whatever his book's subtitle might be. In place of truth-telling, he has substituted superciliousness and spite...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Pique Performance | 10/25/2007 | See Source »

...artists, but others as well—choose the paths they do? Though the collection is necessarily a bit incoherent, Thurman’s consistently lively narrative voice compensates for any discontinuity. In each successive essay, Thurman takes on a new topic with equal ferocity, laying out for her reader the inner workings of the minds of artists, eccentrics, and politicians alike.Thurman opens her collection with “The Wolf at the Door,” a horrifying essay with a strangely hypnotic appeal. “The Wolf at the Door” profiles Anne Beecroft, a performance...

Author: By Rachel A. Burns, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Digging Beneath Tofu and Art | 10/25/2007 | See Source »

...summer editor, said he didn’t remember how he came to assign the story, although he pointed out that Mankiw “is a big figure on campus,” so recent criticism over years-old actions might be newsworthy. Still, a conservative reader might have reason to think The Crimson has a political ax to grind. Mankiw isn’t apparently that reader. He declined last week to comment on The Crimson’s coverage...

Author: By Michael Kolber | Title: Ombudsman: Some Notes from Summer Crimson | 10/23/2007 | See Source »

Michael Kolber is The Crimson’s ombudsman and a Harvard Law School student. He has written a column, responding to reader complaints with his independent critiques of The Crimson. This is his fourth and final column...

Author: By Michael Kolber | Title: Ombudsman: Some Notes from Summer Crimson | 10/23/2007 | See Source »

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