2026-01-16 00:00:00
Keeping your variables open is the best way to snag good flight deals and Dollar Flight Club has released data on your best cheap flight bets in 2026 from the USA. Internationally, besides the cities they list in Canada, Mexico, and Central America, you’ll probably find good prices to Madrid, Lisbon, and Medellin. Domestically, the top 5 are Ft. Lauderdale, Orlando, Chicago, Pittsburgh, and Dallas.
Got a friend living in a city that’s hosting World Cup matches? Hotel rates in the USA are up 50 to 100% in some cities around the event, but with so many international travelers skipping USA travel these days, Mexico is seeing price spikes that are in the stratosphere. According to this report, rates are up 405% in Guadalajara, 466% in Monterrey, and in properties not already sold out, 961% in Mexico City.
One of the most useful travel items you can buy yourself or someone else is a backpack holding 20 liters or so that scrunches down into a little pouch for packing. Once you get to where you’re going, it’s great for sightseeing, hiking, or grocery shopping. I’ve used many of them over two decades, but the available ones I’d give the highest recommendation to for important features (like a water bottle holder) and durability are from Osprey, Eddie Bauer, and this Chicobag one made from recycled plastic bottles.
Each year I update my blog post on the cheapest places to ski in Europe and even with a declining greenback, these places will still cost you a fraction of the lowest-priced options stateside. I’m heading to one in Slovakia in February that’s €49 per day for 50 kilometers of runs and I highlight others for that price down to €23 per day in locations stretching from Slovenia to Poland to Georgia. Prices off the slopes are great too, usually with better food and drink overall.
A weekly newsletter with four quick bites, edited by Tim Leffel, author of A Better Life for Half the Price and The World’s Cheapest Destinations. See past editions here, where your like-minded friends can subscribe and join you.
2026-01-15 00:00:00
I used to be a Teletubby and a Cyberman. Now I design AI personalities and characters. The link is creating fictional characters that can connect with audiences (and users). We are rapidly moving into a world where we talk to technology—I make those conversations more natural and intuitive.

“Now is the moment to explore these new tools and shape them for the future of storytelling.” — Darren Aronofsky (filmmaker, ‘Pi’ ‘Requiem for a Dream’) talking about AI
2026-01-14 00:00:00









Woody Guthrie and the Dust Bowl Ballads
by Nick Hayes
Harry N. Abrams
16, 272 pages, 8.6 x 8.6 x 1.2 inches
A graphic novel of the life and early career of singer Woody Guthrie, Woody Guthrie and the Dust Bowl Ballads is a sepia and dusty brown, linocut illustrated graphic novel. It begins with harrowing tales of his youth – his mother burning his father with coal oil, resulting in her being shipped off to the Hospital For The Insane, the collapse of his Pampa hometown as the plummeting price of wheat ruined the local and national economy, and Guthrie traveling roads and hopping trains during the Great Depression. His encounters with snake oil salesmen and carnival acts, hobos, and migrant workers, as well as his exposure to the music of Cajuns, Native Americans, Xit cowboys, and Appalachian folksong performances at barn dances ultimately inspire him to take up the fiddle and write original tunes.
Along with Woody’s story, the book provides a powerful backstory on the environmental conditions of the Dust Bowl region, including the displacement of Native Americans through the push of white settlers on native lands, agriculture techniques that resulted in the tearing up of the bluestem grasses to plant wheat, an unprecedented drought, and the glut of wheat causing the exodus of settlers to California. This all brings to life the tragic unraveling of the fragile Dust Bowl ecosystem and brings about the hardscrabble lives and dust-blown landscape that Guthrie integrates into his music. Drifting through America with his guitar and knocking on doors begging for work, he reluctantly stumbles into an uncomfortable fame with a radio show, leading to national recognition. The book ends with the creation of his masterpiece, “This Land Is Your Land”, with the now-redacted communist lyrics included, which became America’s unofficial National Anthem.
Woody Guthrie and the Dust Bowl Ballads is a somber, bittersweet tale of the singer/songwriter, and the harrowing tragedy of the Dust Bowl years. It’s a weighty, handsome book. Lovely, broad-stroked illustrations bring to life the desperate struggle of 1930s midwestern America. – S. Deathrage










Jane Austen: An Illustrated Biography and
Virginia Woolf: An Illustrated Biography
by Zena Alkayat (author) and Nina Cosford (illustrator)
Chronicle
2016, 128 pages, 6.2 x 6.2 x 0.8 inches
Virgina Woolf:
Jane Austen:
Hand-written text, whimsical illustrations and lots of fun facts are combined into Library of Luminaries’ new series of Illustrated Biographies. The series launches with small, foil-embossed hardcover books about two famous authors – Jane Austen and Virginia Woolf. (The series will release Coco Chanel and Frida Khalo in August.) This collection is an easy way to learn about the lives and careers of classic authors – it’s like Cliff Notes for literature lovers.
Through bits about family histories, friendships, inspirations, career highlights and low points, the reader gets a glimpse into Austen and Woolf’s worlds. I knew some stuff about both authors’ backgrounds, but wow! I still learned a lot! I had no idea that Austen only earned the meager sum of 140 British pounds in royalties for two years’ worth of the sales for Sense and Sensibility. And that once Austen’s identity was made public, the Prince Regent contacted her directly because he was a huge fan of her books. She went on to dedicate Emma to him. I also didn’t know that Woolf loved dogs and had a pet marmoset named “Mitz,” nor did I know that it took 15 years for the book The Voyage Out to sell 2000 copies. We know these women had tragic lives, but they had joys too. I finished these books with a sigh. – Carole Rosner
Books That Belong On Paper first appeared on the web as Wink Books and was edited by Carla Sinclair. Sign up here to get the issues a week early in your inbox.
2026-01-13 00:00:00

This is by far the best guide ever written for designing games. All kinds of games, simple and traditional, but of course video games, too. This fat book is packed with practical, comprehensive, imaginative, deep, and broad lessons. Every page contained amazing insights for me. The more I read and re-read, the more important I ranked this work. I now view it as not just about designing games, but one of the best guides for designing anything that demands complex interaction. My 13-year-old son, who, like most 13-year-olds, dreams of designing games, has been devouring its 470 pages, telling me, “You’ve got to read this, Dad!” It’s that kind of book: You begin to imagine your life as a game, and how you might tweak its design. Author Jesse Schell offers 100 “lenses” through which you can view your game, and each one is a useful maxim for any assignment. — KK

Silly putty — even the newer varieties like the thinking putty here — has long been sold in small amounts in the classic plastic egg. But this stuff is best enjoyed in bulk. The technical name of this now generic substance is Dow Corning Dilatant Compound 3179. Five pounds of it is…. well, pretty silly. Ten pounds of the stuff is enough to transfer a whole page of comics, or to make a humungous superball, or to lighten up the dour faces in a boardroom after being parcelled out. The surprise for our family has been never ending amusement of watching a huge ball of this compound slowly melt over whatever you set it on, like the blob from outer space. Hand out some at your next birthday party. Don’t ask why. — KK
Once a week we’ll send out a page from Cool Tools: A Catalog of Possibilities. The tools might be outdated or obsolete, and the links to them may or may not work. We present these vintage recommendations as is because the possibilities they inspire are new. Sign up here to get Tools for Possibilities a week early in your inbox.
2026-01-12 00:00:00
Our subscriber base has grown so much since we first started nine years ago, that most of you have missed all our earliest recommendations. The best of these are still valid and useful, so we’re trying out something new — Retro Recomendo. Once every 6 weeks, we’ll send out a throwback issue of evergreen recommendations focused on one theme from the past 9 years.
Last year, Paul Graham, a renowned programmer, entrepreneur, and venture capitalist known for co-founding Y Combinator, wrote an essay titled “How to Do Great Work.” He covered a wide range of topics, from choosing what to work on to cultivating originality. This week, I came across Peter Schroeder’s terrific visual representation that maps out the main ideas from Graham’s essay. It’s useful even if you don’t read the essay. — MF
This 1-minute video by John Cleese is all you need to know about how to have productive (vs unproductive) meetings. One minute! Applies to zoom meetings, too. — KK
How to professionally say is a list of things you might feel like saying at work — along with a more professional alternative for how to express them. Example: Instead of saying “That sounds like a horrible idea,” you can say “Are we confident this is the best solution, or are we still exploring alternatives?” While some of the phrasing might not flow naturally for me, I’m inspired to adopt more neutrality and directness in my professional language. — CD
I am a big fan of YouTuber Ali Abdaal. In this video about Resumes he condenses a whole book of information presenting the best advice for applying for a job into 30 minutes. It’s the same advice I gave to my kids when they started working. Whether you are looking for a job, or hiring someone, this is worth your time. Forward it to a young person. — KK
This Two-Minute Burnout Checkup helped me understand the primary factors of chronic stress and burnout. I can sense physically when I am nearing burnout, but before this I didn’t understand that it’s more than just feeling exhausted. This checkup evaluates six sources of chronic stress: workload, values, reward, control, fairness, and community. You rate your level of stress from 0–10 for each one and add up the numbers to get a score out of 60. This could be especially helpful if you track your score over time. Here’s a link to the survey. — CD
Writer and entrepreneur Ryan Holiday has had a varied career, from Hollywood agent assistant to marketing director for American Apparel. He’s put together a list of 37 pieces of hard-fought career advice that’s useful for anyone who works. Examples:
— MF
2026-01-10 00:00:00

Drawing from neuroscience, evolutionary biology, and Buddhist philosophy, Arrow explores how storytelling became humanity’s defining superpower, and reveals how the stories we tell ourselves about ourselves can either liberate or imprison us.
Different cognitive faculties — consciousness, emotion, episodic memory, mental simulation, language, and theory of mind — converged in human evolution to create a new ability: storytelling. This capacity became a tool for communication, a mechanism for self-regulation, and a means of social connection that shaped who we are.
What we call our “self” is not an objective reality but a story we continuously tell ourselves. Our identity comprises interconnected narratives: our origin story, our present identity, and our anticipated future. As Gadea writes, “Story is a tool that became its inventor. What we call our Self is a Story.”
The book’s title references a Buddhist parable about a monk struck by a poisoned arrow. Like that arrow, our storytelling ability is dual-natured — it enables powerful human connection and meaning-making, but it can also foster discontent, self-deception, and suffering when we forget our stories are just stories.
Rather than abandoning stories entirely, Gadea suggests developing a different relationship with them — constantly remembering that they are constructions rather than fixed truths. This awareness opens a pathway to being steadier, stronger, more connected, and more content.
“The stories we don’t pay enough attention to are the stories we tell ourselves about ourselves. My practice isn’t about losing those stories — it’s about constantly remembering that they are just stories.”