Happy New Year!

2008 January 1
by queenmab04
reading-17.jpg

Well we’ve made it into a new year, my lovelies.  Do a happy jig.  Watch the Sci Fi Twilight Zone Marathon.  Take care of your hangovers.  And feast your eyes on the top ten most literate cities in the US from a Live Science article(my city is definitely not on here):

Residents of Minneapolis and Seattle are the most bookish and well-read, according to results from a new survey released today of the most literate American cities.

The survey focused on 69 U.S. cities with populations of 250,000 or above.  Jack Miller of Central Connecticut State University chose six key indicators to rank literacy. These included newspaper circulation, number of bookstores, library resources, periodical publishing resources, educational attainment and Internet resources.

Overall, the top 10 most literate (and wired) cities included:

1—Minneapolis, Minn.
2—Seattle, Wash.
3—St. Paul, Minn.
4—Denver, Colo.
5—Washington, D.C.
6—St. Louis, Mo
.
7—San Francisco, Calif.
8—Atlanta, Ga.
9—Pittsburgh, Pa.
10—Boston, Mass.

Minneapolis, Seattle, Pittsburgh, Denver and Washington, D.C., have made the top 10 every year since 2003, when the survey first launched.

Some cities that didn’t make it to the overall top 10, however, did strut their stuff in one of the six key literacy indicators. For instance, while Newark, N.J., was the 49th most literate city overall, it shared the top spot for newspaper circulation with Washington, D.C.

Plano, Texas, ranking 51st on the overall most-literate-city list, came in second for educational attainment. The education ranking included two factors: the percentage of the city’s adult population with a high school diploma or higher and those with a bachelor’s degree or higher.

Cleveland, Ohio, scored the highest for library resources, with St. Louis coming in second. The library category was a measure of five variables, such as the number of library professional staff and total branch libraries relative to library patrons.

Atlanta and Boston took the lead spots in the Internet resources category.

The District of Columbia and St. Louis reported the most large magazine publishers and large journals. New York City, which ranked 28th on the overall list, came in third in the periodical publishing category.

If your city didn’t make this list either, get reading.

And I hadn’t told you: I saw the Golden Compass this past weekend.  Overall it was an entertaining movie, but there is such a thing as pacing and unfortunately, this adaptation went a little too quickly for my taste.  Obviously they couldn’t shove the whole book into a Hollywood length film but, for instance, that subtle, entrancing, mysterious glamour of Mrs. Coulter was not explored.  We’d only just met her when she took Lyra away and was being cruel.  But with her kind of character subtlety is absolutely essential to her very sexiness.

Honestly, sometimes I think people ought to ask my advice before making a movie.

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