By A Mystery Man Writer
In the last 97 years, the world has suffered the Great Depression, countless wars, the rise of tyranny, innumerable natural and man-made disasters and political scandals. We’ve mourned the rise of terrorism and celebrated the invention of the internet. We’ve put humans on the moon and explored that last frontier, oppressive regimes have fallen and human rights milestones have made history. Throughout it all, one thing has remained a constant of bathroom magazine baskets and rest home libraries: Reader’s Digest. Caitlin Salter talks to Australiasian group editor Louise Waterson about how this general interest publication has stood the test of time, and what the future holds.
Free Speech and Bad Meats: The Domestic Labour of Reading in Milton's Areopagitica — The Public Domain Review
Telegram Text Formatting: Tips, Font Tricks, and Shortcuts
Reader's Digest selected Articles softcover May 1987 large Type Edition
Ahalya Matthan - “It allows you to come close to precious historical textiles” - Hindustan Times
Slavery in ancient Rome - Wikipedia
Black Arrow Cyber Consulting — Black Arrow Cyber Threat Intelligence Briefing 15 September 2023
Recalling the Glory Days of Reader's Digest - The New York Times
Modern Look: Photography and the American Magazine @Jewish Museum
New Hampshire Magazine July 2023 by Yankee Publishing - New Hampshire Group - Issuu
Book Box: A Delhi Bookstore Crawl - Hindustan Times
Antibiotic resistance: Time of synthesis in a post-genomic age - Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal
2022 Home & Design Awards - San Antonio Magazine
Enter, tastefluencer: The rise of a curator economy
Five things you should be asking your data analyst, but probably
Caitlin Salter, Author at