What kind of book is most often requested by people who are incarcerated? The book that prison inmates ask for the vast majority of the time is a dictionary. These books, as well as thesauruses, prove useful for mastering reading skills, writing...
In an essay in LitHub, Kate Angus urges writers to be kind to themselves when they have a creative block. Sometimes you can get past it simply by letting yourself not write at all, with the hope that lying fallow for a while may be just what you...
Virginia teacher and playwright Sheri Bailey has some writing advice as smart as it is succinct: βThere are no writers β only re-writers.β This is part of a complete episode. Transcript of βRewritersβ Hereβs some writing advice from Sherry Bailey...
Matt from Portage, Wisconsin, says that as a musician, he often finds himself focused on analyzing the structure and quality of a piece of music rather than just sitting back and enjoying it with everyone else. He asks if the hosts face a similar...
Darcy calls from North Pole, Alaska, to share a saying her grandparents used when she asked for something she couldnβt have. It sounded like either You may want horns, but youβll die mole-headed or You may want horns, but youβll die mull-headed...
Following up on our conversation about whether cursive handwriting should be taught in schools, 23-year-old Rachel from Newport News, Virginia, wrote to say she learned cursive in third grade, but has never used it since. This is part of a complete...

