use the following search parameters to narrow your results:
e.g. subreddit:pics site:imgur.com dog
subreddit:pics site:imgur.com dog
advanced search: by author, sub...
It’s official! According to science, reading fiction makes you nicer.
2 years ago by Drewski to /s/books from lithub.com
Look inside the gorgeous English cottage where John Le Carré wrote Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy. ‹ Literary Hub
1 year ago by boston_blackie to /s/books from lithub.com
43 of the Most Iconic Short Stories in the English Language
4 years ago by [deleted] to /s/books from lithub.com
How Corporate Money Has Distorted American Science | lithub
4 years ago by Entropick to /s/collapse from lithub.com
How US Intelligence Agencies Hid Their Most Shameful Experiments
1 year ago by RandomCollection to /s/WayOfTheBern from lithub.com
For nearly two millennia after the death of Aristotle, educated men of the Western world believed the heavens were changeless and eternal. Then Tycho Brahe discovered a new star with a piece of string. Or, so we thought — until we realized he’d actually witnessed the death, not birth, of a star.
1 year ago by Chipit to /s/Astronomy from lithub.com
How the 1980s Soap Opera Craze Changed Television Forever
4 years ago by [deleted] to /s/Television from lithub.com