Here’s a fun story. It’s about how a librarian in Dundee, Scotland learned the code behind the many books that had been marked in her library. It’s from Atlas Obscura.
Here’s a fun story. It’s about how a librarian in Dundee, Scotland learned the code behind the many books that had been marked in her library. It’s from Atlas Obscura.
Wife liked this a lot. Her favored genre is the historical mystery, preferably from English history. More than once, she has come home with a book that she had previously bought. The Kindle has mostly fixed that.
Steve
How we gonna do that with T V episodes?
If she likes mysteries in historical settings, has she read any of the mysteries by Robert Van Gulik? They’d be a bit far afield for her since they’re not set in England but in Tang Dynasty China but I found them enormous fun.
Just thinking of all the possibilities for the use of secret codes in library books. Such codes could provide a short hand critique of the book – a struck or underline 7 would mean the book is not worth finishing; a star would suggest it is a good book; and ‘A’ and Omega symbol instructs the reader only need to read the first and last chapter, and X may be useful in rating certain Danielle Steel novels.