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Opinion | We’re Reading the Coronavirus Numbers Wrong: Up-to-the-minute reports and statistics can unintentionally distort the facts—John Allen Paulos @nytimes https://t.co/w9gnJ1viDs
Library Journal on Twitter: Three books reviewed by LJ's #AnnalisaPesek cover the Ferrante phenomenon. https://t.co/jGYoTo2Atd
By the Book: How Libraries Saved Cheryl Strayed @nytimes https://t.co/JWbNodDubA
2 Big Teachers Unions Call For Rethinking Student Involvement In Lockdown Drills—Anya Kamenetz @MindShiftKQED https://t.co/melmjefCAC
The Biodiversity Heritage Library Makes 150,000 High-Res Illustrations of the Natural World Free to Download @openculture https://t.co/XpKkxmxUvB
What we know about dark matter. Although scientists have yet to find the spooky stuff, they aren’t completely in the dark: 1) It’s built to last, 2) It shaped entire galaxies without touching a thing, 3) It all adds up to 85%—Jim Daley @symmetrymag https://t.co/4ZVaupWumS
[I favor getting out the vote] Can Slavery Reënactments Set Us Free? Underground Railroad simulations have ignited controversy about whether they confront the country’s darkest history or trivialize its gravest traumas— Julian Lucas @NewYorker https://t.co/PBQ6EWL59e
The Jerks of Academe: Who knows? You might be one yourself—Eric Schwitzgebel / Chronicle of Higher Education https://t.co/2yOtsG31dP
All the New Genre-Bending Books Arriving in February! @tordotcom https://t.co/b2cTFQ8tNN
Reading to the Womb—Emily Mroczek-Bayci @wearealsc https://t.co/0QHEv06AVC