Sheds, hotel rooms and residential libraries: we wrote a novel in the places where famous authors did to find out which was best.
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Sheds, hotel rooms and residential libraries: we wrote a novel in the places where famous authors did to find out which was best.
First the good news: we're halfway through the second lockdown. Now the bad news… some people are struggling. Here's how to get through it in one piece.
I know you’ve seen the pictures. The bikini-clad woman sat on the edge of an infinity pool with her laptop, effortlessly earning a six-figure income with a coconut held aloft in her hand. You’ve probably spent many a dreary commute fantasising about jacking it all in to join her before reluctantly admitting to yourself that the #digitalnomadlife we see on Instagram can’t possibly be reality.
Turkish garbage collectors in the country’s capital city of Ankara have opened a public library that is full of books that were originally destined to be put into landfill. The workers began collecting discarded books and opened the new library in the Çankaya district of Ankara. News of the library has spread and now people have begun donating books directly to the library, rather than throwing them away. As CNN reports, the library was originally created for the use of the employees friends and family but, as it grew in size, the library was officially opened to the public in September of last year. “We started to discuss the idea of creating a library from these books. And when everyone supported it, this project happened,” said Çankaya Mayor Alper Tasdelen, whose local government spearheaded the opening of the library.