The Warminster Library will hold a historical re-enactment with the literary figure known for living at Walden Pond in the ...
The Oxford University Press uses lexicographers —people who author dictionaries — to track which words or phrases were most used and that most reflect the last 12 months. Brain rot’s usage increased ...
Thoreau worried about society’s desire to dumb down complex ideas. He feared a decline in intellect when he wrote the ...
Bibliophiles, lace up your boots and embark on this epic adventure! The places you have loved in your imagination are waiting ...
Sometimes, when the open road isn’t quite available, the best way to explore the USA is through your imagination. The ...
Oxford University Press noted that the term actually goes back to 1854 and was used, hyphenated, by Henry David Thoreau in “Walden.” But it has gained prominence in recent years over “concerns about ...
While it may seem a modern phenomenon, the first recorded use of “brain rot” according to Oxford was by Henry David Thoreau in his 1854 ode to the natural world, Walden. “While England ...
What I found at the top of the mountain was a radiant view over the blue Pacific, freedom from all distraction and a day that ...
Carly Tagen-Dye is the Books editorial assistant at PEOPLE, where she writes for both print and digital platforms. Lizz Schumer is the senior books editor at PEOPLE. She has been working at PEOPLE ...
Abe Lincoln was a cabin dweller. Henry David Thoreau spent a couple of years in one near Walden Pond. Ethel Waters, on Broadway and in film, sang longingly about a cabin parked high in the sky.