Sunday, 25 January 2026

Dr. Seuss - The Lorax

 



"Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot,
Nothing is going to get better. It's not."
Dr. Seuss - The Lorax
Natacha Chohra Fine Art
Paired by Whispers from the Heart


Friday, 23 January 2026

Dogs


 




Persistence

 





Fairy Tales

 




8 Cozy Stays in the UK for Book Lovers

 

Limehouse Library Hotel, London

Photo Credit: Limehouse Library Hotel London

There are many incredible scientists, authors, and philosophers who’ve left their mark on the world, and the Limehouse Library Hotel in London makes sure they get the recognition they deserve. All 75 of their rooms are named after major historical figures, from Jane Austen to George Orwell.

Photo Credit: Limehouse Library Hotel London

These aren’t just standard hotel spaces. They’re crafted with intention and detail to honor the icons they represent. You can choose from superior double rooms, deluxe king options, deluxe suites, and spacious duplex suites.

Address: Limehouse Library, 638 Commercial Rd, London E14 7HS, United Kingdom
Opening hours:
– Check-in time: 3PM
– Check-out time: 12PM

Neidpath Castle Cottage, Peebles

Photo Credit: Neidpath Castle

Once the home of Scottish aristocrats, Neidpath Castle and its cottages in Peebles, Scotland, hold a timeless history that carries into the present. Those who visit will be spoiled with a stay surrounded by Scottish nature and accommodation options designed with readers in mind.

Barn’s Library is the room option to keep an eye out for. It’s a real retreat, with a four-poster bed and a wood-burning stove that keeps the space nice and toasty for when you settle in with a few books from the dedicated selection provided for guests.

Address: Neidpath Castle, Peebles EH45 8NW, United Kingdom
Opening hours:
– Check-in time: 4PM – 12AM
– Check-out time: 11AM

Hypatia Apartment, Penzance

Photo Credit: Airbnb

The Hypatia Trust in Penzance is a fantastic organization that publishes materials celebrating women’s accomplishments. You won’t find many bookstores like this in this part of the UK, which makes their commitment to celebrating women even more impressive.

Photo Credit: The Hypatia Trust

At their site in Penzance, they offer a homely, spacious two-bedroom apartment with a kitchen, patio, and plush couches, available for traveling literary enthusiasts. It’s also dog-friendly, and the profits support the charity.

Address: Lower Ground Floor, The Regent, 54 Chapel St, Penzance TR18 4AE, United Kingdom
Opening hours:
– Check-in time: 4PM – 9PM
– Check-out time: 10AM

The Studio and Hut, Georgeham

Photo Credit: Kip Hideaways

It was famed author Henry Williamson who first owned the site where the Studio and Hut stand today. The writer behind works such as Tarka the Otter left a clear imprint on this property in Georgeham, with his original author’s hut still standing firmly in the garden.

The Studio and Hut have the charm of a secluded cabin in the woods, completely removed from everyday life. Small details such as a dedicated reading area and a selection of books, including some by Williamson himself, bring the entire setting together.

Address: EX33, Georgeham, Croyde, Braunton EX33 1JN, United Kingdom
Opening hours:
– Check-in time: 3PM
– Check-out time: 10PM

University Arms Hotel, Cambridge

Photo Credit: University Arms Hotel

The University Arms Hotel is a true literary getaway in Cambridge that’s guaranteed to appeal to admirers of the written word. The experience begins in the library, where shelves filled with books line the walls and readers gather in the center to discuss their favorite titles.

Each room follows the book-inspired theme as well, with some featuring designated bookshelves that divide the space, luxury bedding, and marble bathrooms that add a lavish touch. Guests will also be treated to a wealth of extras, including a literature-focused themed afternoon tea and a book butler service that delivers new reads to your room if the selection provided doesn’t suit your style.

Address: 52-42 Regent St, Cambridge CB2 1AD, United Kingdom
Opening hours:
– Check-in time: 4PM
– Check-out time: 12PM

Tigharry Schoolhouse, Outer Hebrides

Photo Credit: Tigharry Schoolhouse

A former school dating back to the 19th century, Tigharry Schoolhouse in the Outer Hebrides is a paradise for anyone with an affinity for books. Why? It has a library of up to 1,000 texts, all neatly arranged to create an eye-catching display and plenty for guests to dive into.

Photo Credit: Tigharry Schoolhouse

When you’re not flicking through the collection, which covers topics like travel, science, design, and more, you’ll likely be relaxing in the Scandinavian-themed communal spaces. These come complete with pendant lighting, grooved walls, and a wood burner.

Address: Tigharry Schoolhouse, Isle of North Uist, Outer Hebrides HS6 5DE, United Kingdom
Opening hours:
– Check-in time: 4PM
– Check-out time: 10AM

Gladstone’s Library, Deeside

Photo Credit: Jason Fair (Nomadic Nerd Project)

How does spending a night in the only prime ministerial library in all of the UK sound? That’s what you have the opportunity to do at Gladstone’s Library at Deeside. With 26 clean, modern rooms on site, readers can stay over and make use of all the library’s facilities, including the reading and theology rooms and communal lounges.

Photo Credit: Sam Warrenger

In Gladstone’s Library, there’s a wealth of items waiting to be discovered, such as a collection belonging to Gladstone himself. Even though the building dates back to 1902, it’s a spectacular sight to behold with its dark wooden beams, imposing arches, and cozy reading corners. Plus, the money earned from bookings goes directly towards maintaining the site, so you know it’s being put to good use.

Address: Church Lane, Hawarden, Flintshire CH5 3DF, United Kingdom
Opening hours:
– Check-in time: 2PM
– Check-out time: 10AM

The Boatman’s Reading Rooms, Deal

Photo Credit: Planet of Hotels

The Boatman’s Reading Rooms were originally created as a refuge for sailors working in the area. Today, it’s a calm and refreshing escape with impressive views of the English Channel, giving bookworms a quiet place to unwind for a few nights in Kent.

Several thoughtful details make the Boatman’s Reading Rooms stand out, including a library set aside for visitors and a few pieces honoring the great Charles Dickens himself.

Address: 23 The Strand, Walmer, Deal CT14 7DX, United Kingdom
Opening hours:
– Check-in time: 4PM – 10PM
– Check-out time: 10AM



Angels

 




The Wells, Caergwrle Spa. Postcard from 1916.

 





Bull Terriers

 




Life

 


Reading

I believe you should always reread your favorite books at different stages of your life. The plot never changes, but your perspective does.

Edgar Allan Poe

 




He made nine dollars from the most famous poem in American history.
A dead drunk nobody invented modern detective fiction, horror literature, and science fiction. All while earning almost nothing.
Edgar Allan Poe was 40 years old when he died.
Broke.
Alone.
Found delirious on the streets of Baltimore.
Everyone said he was a failure.
“Just a drunk who wrote weird stories.”
“Never made any real money.”
“Died in a gutter like a nobody.”
They couldn’t have been more wrong.
Here’s what Poe built that no one saw coming:
He was orphaned before age 3. His foster father disowned him.
He got kicked out of West Point.
He watched his young wife die slowly of tuberculosis while he couldn’t afford to keep her warm.
Every door slammed in his face.
But Poe had something no one could take from him.
The ability to see darkness clearly. And turn it into words that burned into people’s minds.
When everyone else was writing polite poetry about flowers and nature, Poe wrote about murder. Madness.
The terror hiding inside ordinary people.
Editors rejected him constantly.
“Too dark.”
“Too strange.”
“No one wants to read this.”
He didn’t listen.
He kept writing.
Kept submitting.
Kept getting rejected.
Kept going anyway.
Then came “The Murders in the Rue Morgue.”
The first detective story ever written.
The template that every crime novel, every mystery show, every procedural drama still follows today.
Before Poe, detective fiction didn’t exist.
He invented it.
Then came “The Raven.”
It made him famous overnight.
People memorized it.
Quoted it everywhere.
It spread across the country.
And Poe made about nine dollars from it.
Nine dollars.
For a poem that’s been read by hundreds of millions of people.
He died poor.
Alone.
Unknown by most of the world.
But here’s what happened after.
Arthur Conan Doyle read Poe and created Sherlock Holmes.
Said Poe’s detective was the model for everything that followed.
H.P. Lovecraft read Poe and built cosmic horror on his foundation.
Stephen King read Poe and called him the father of American horror.
Every detective show you watch.
Every horror movie that makes you check the locks at night.
Every psychological thriller that gets inside your head.
Poe built the blueprint.
Today his work is translated into every major language.
Taught in every school. Referenced in every corner of popular culture.
All from a man who died thinking he was a failure.
He never saw any of it.
Never got rich.
Never got recognition.
Never got to see his influence spread across the entire world.
But he kept writing anyway.
Because he understood something most people don’t.
Your work doesn’t have to pay off in your lifetime to matter.
Your impact doesn’t have to be visible to you to be real.
Sometimes you plant seeds you’ll never see grow.
What story are you not telling because you think no one wants to hear it?
What work are you abandoning because it’s not paying off fast enough?
What creative risk are you avoiding because the world says it’s too dark, too weird, too different?
Poe watched his wife die.
Lost every job he ever had.
Got paid almost nothing for his best work.
Died alone in the street.
And still became one of the most influential writers in human history.
Because he never stopped doing the work.
He never let rejection silence him.
He never let poverty stop him.
He never let anyone else’s opinion define what he created.
Your circumstances don’t determine your legacy.
Your consistency does.
Your commitment does.
Your willingness to keep going when everyone says quit.
That’s what separates people who change the world from people who just complain about it.
Poe had every excuse to give up.
He used none of them.
Stop waiting for permission.
Stop waiting for payment.
Stop waiting for recognition.
Do the work.
Tell your story.
Let the world catch up later.
Think Big.