Monday, September 23, 2019

How to display your books when space is tight

Having no problems is the biggest problem of all. 
~Taiichi Ohno


Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity. 
~Martin Luther King, Jr.


 
The internet asks us to optimize our appearance, to banish our “dark corners”; it turns our basic humanity into an exploitable  viral asset 





And there were oh so many ways
For her to spend her days
She could clean the house for hours
Or rearrange the flowers
Or run naked through the shady street
Screaming all the way
Housewives and UBI.


I have always shared Joseph Ting's concerns regarding food waste around tourism, particularly at breakfast buffets, so I was pleased to see at many hotels in Norway, the sign, "Take what you want but eat what you take".
At an Oslo hotel which had the most amazing breakfast in terms of variety, amount and quality that I have ever seen, I asked the manager whether they had much waste. No waste, he said. After guests, all hotel staff had breakfast, followed by deliveries to homeless shelters. Any leftovers then go to landfill for conversion to biogas which powers Oslo's public transport.
We have much to learn from Scandinavia.
 

Letters from Travellers
Follow us: @TravellerAU on Twitter | TravellerAU on Facebook


How to display your books when space is tight - Washington Post – “Cruise Instagram or Pinterest, and you’ll find numerous examples of warm, cushy reading areas decked out with twinkling string lights and endless built-in shelves. How do you evoke the feeling of having your own library in a small space with a small budget? We surveyed some experts for advice…” 



100 best albums of the century

Do grandmasters live longer?

Spotted in Kenya: A Baby Zebra With Polka Dots Smithsonian