 |
Joanna: Yesterday, a small purple flower popped up in my favorite ...
Sebastian: I am reading on the couch, waiting for the raspberry ...
Alicia Taylor: The Kenwood House Gardens: London, England
London's light breeze
floats through still ...
View more moments
Leave your moment
Who received the pie?
|
 |

 |
Tasha: I usually drove up the mountain on my way back ...
katie scott: the most looked at thing in history....
jessica m. hunt: Sometimes the moon looks like it is hanging so dangerously ...
View more descriptions
Leave your description
|
 |
|
<< Previous
| REVIEWS
| Next
>>
Comparing Encyclopedia of an Ordinary Life to Encyclopaedia Britannica
by Todd Lief
Fun to read?
[OL] Yes
[EB] No
Long articles?
[OL] No
[EB] Yes
Read the whole thing?
[OL] Yes
[EB] No
Nodded head?
[OL] Often
[EB] Rarely
Laughed out loud?
[OL] Frequently
[EB] Never
Shed a tear?
[OL] Ah, yes
[EB] Hardly
Knew what I'd find there?
[OL] No
[EB] More or less
Made me feel?
[OL] Smart and human
[EB] Smart
Enlightened me?
[OL] Definitely
[EB] Differently
Take with on airplane?
[OL] Fits in backpack
[EB] Fits in cargo hold
Bent my bookshelf?
[OL] No
[EB] Oh boy
Better than Google?
[OL] Way
[EB] Not any more
|
|
|


 |
The Chicago, Boston and San Francisco installments of the Lost and Found Project are now complete. 150 books were "intentionally left" around each city by a team of 20 friends/Book Hiding Specialists. They left them in places like the freezer at grocery store, shelf at Blockbuster, in the arms of a statue. Quite a few people wrote in to share their (often serendipitous) story of where & when they found the book. Filmmaker Steve Delahoyde documented the hiding of the first batch of Chicago books in this two-minute short film.
Did you find this book?
Notes from those who found a book
Watch the Lost and Found video
|
 |
|