The Reading Spa

The Reading Spa Curating Book Collections and Gifts since 2008

04/09/2026

During this period, the educational focus was rooted in social maturity, practical habits, and sensory exploration rather than the rigorous academic standards or literacy benchmarks common today.

Instead of testing, children were assessed on fundamental abilities like identifying their left and right hands, participating in nursery rhymes, and practicing basic cleanliness.

​Modern preschool and kindergarten programs often emphasize academic achievement, which can sideline traditional developmental milestones such as planting seeds, sewing, or learning to listen attentively.

Happy Easter Sunday! We hope you are celebrating with your loved ones, but remember to also reserve a little time for yo...
04/05/2026

Happy Easter Sunday! We hope you are celebrating with your loved ones, but remember to also reserve a little time for you and the Spa of your Mind!

Poldark series 1-12 is back in stock! Only a few arrived! Brand new paperbacks exactly as pictured!
04/02/2026

Poldark series 1-12 is back in stock! Only a few arrived! Brand new paperbacks exactly as pictured!

Own the complete 12-book saga of the sweeping historical epic Poldark — a richly layered story of love, rivalry, ambition, and survival in 18th-century Cornwall. This is the full Ross Poldark series, books 1–12, brand new and exactly as pictured. The complete long-form narrative in one collector...

02/25/2026

Our way to say Thank You! Free de luxe bookmark and gift wrapping silk paper and gift bag on all orders $150 and up! 🩷

02/14/2026

Working on….

Uncanny! 👀
02/06/2026

Uncanny! 👀

Anthony Hopkins couldn't find a book anywhere in London. Then he sat down on a subway bench.
It was 1973. Hopkins had just landed a role in a film called "The Girl from Petrovka," based on a novel by American journalist George Feifer.
Like any serious actor, he wanted to read the source material. He spent an entire day searching bookshops along London's famous Charing Cross Road.
Nothing. The book wasn't available anywhere in the UK.
Frustrated and defeated, Hopkins walked into the Leicester Square Underground station to catch a train home.
That's when he noticed something on a bench.
Someone had left a book behind.
He picked it up. Turned it over.
"The Girl from Petrovka."
The exact book he'd been searching for all day, abandoned on a subway bench in a city of eight million people.
Hopkins couldn't believe it. He took it home, read it, and noticed something strange. The margins were filled with handwritten notes in red ink. Annotations. Someone had marked up this copy extensively.
He didn't think much of it. He used the notes to help him understand his character, prepared for his role, and filed the coincidence away as one of life's unexplainable moments.
Months later, Hopkins traveled to Vienna where the film was being shot.
One day on set, he was introduced to a visitor.
George Feifer. The author of the book.
They talked about the film, the characters, the story. Then Feifer mentioned something that made Hopkins stop cold.
"I don't have a copy of my own book anymore," Feifer said. "I lent my personal copy to a friend a couple of years ago. It had all my notes in the margins. He lost it somewhere in London. I've never seen it since."
Hopkins felt the hairs on the back of his neck stand up.
"I found a copy," he said slowly. "On a bench in the Underground. It has handwritten notes throughout."
Feifer looked at him skeptically.
Hopkins retrieved the book from his things and handed it to the author.
Feifer went pale.
It was his copy. His handwriting. His annotations. The personal copy he'd lent to a friend years earlier, which had somehow ended up abandoned on a subway bench at the exact moment Anthony Hopkins, the actor who needed it most, happened to sit down beside it.
In a city of millions. Across thousands of streets. Among hundreds of tube stations.
The right book. The right bench. The right moment.
George Feifer got his lost book back. Anthony Hopkins got a story he would tell for the rest of his life.
Carl Jung called it synchronicity, the idea that meaningful coincidences aren't random but reflect some deeper pattern in the fabric of reality.
Hopkins has always been fascinated by the concept. He's spoken in interviews about learning to simply be amazed by life.
"I don't know if there's a master plan," he once said. "But sometimes things happen that are just too perfect to explain."
Maybe it was luck. Maybe it was fate. Maybe it was just the universe having a bit of fun.
Or maybe, just maybe, some books are meant to find their readers.
And some stories are meant to be told.
/

01/30/2026
01/13/2026

One way to travel is reading:-)

Her book has a place of honor on my shelf
01/01/2026

Her book has a place of honor on my shelf

In 1928, Louise Brooks was one of the most magnetic women in Hollywood. Her black bobbed hair became a worldwide trend. Her cool, detached charisma defined the flapper era. Studios wanted her. Audiences adored her. She was twenty-two years old with the world at her feet.
Then Paramount Pictures broke a promise.
The studio had agreed to raise her salary, but when it came time to deliver, executives refused. Louise had a choice: accept it or leave. Most actresses would have swallowed their pride. The studio system of the 1920s held absolute power over careers, and defiance meant professional death.
Louise chose defiance.
She left Paramount and sailed to Germany to work with director G.W. Pabst, who had seen something in her that Hollywood never understood. In Berlin, far from the studio machinery that treated actresses as interchangeable products, Louise made the films that would define her legacy.
Pandora's Box cast her as Lulu, a woman whose unself-conscious sexuality destroys the men around her. The role required something Hollywood rarely allowed: an actress who didn't perform emotion but simply existed on screen. Louise's naturalistic style bewildered audiences at first. People left theaters complaining that she wasn't acting at all, that she did nothing.
They were wrong. She was doing everything.
Pabst understood this. He cast her again in Diary of a Lost Girl, a story about a young woman seduced and abandoned by society. For this role, Louise drew on memories she rarely discussed: her own molestation at age nine, and her mother's cruel response that she must have led the man on. She later wrote that on that day she became one of the lost.
Pabst warned her not to return to Hollywood. He told her that her wealthy American friends would abandon her when her career stalled. He predicted she would end up in dire poverty, exactly like the tragic Lulu she had played on screen.
Louise didn't listen.
When she returned to America in 1930, Paramount demanded she come back to dub dialogue for her final silent film, The Canary Murder Case, which they were converting to sound. Louise refused. The studio retaliated by claiming her voice was unsuitable for talkies and hiring another actress to dub over her.
She was blacklisted.
Director William Wellman, who had worked with her before, offered her the female lead in The Public Enemy opposite James Cagney. It would have been a career resurrection. Louise turned it down to visit her boyfriend in New York. The role went to Jean Harlow, who became a star. Louise later called this decision the fatal blow to her career.
But the truth was more complicated. Louise had what she called a gift for enraging people. She found Hollywood stupid, petty, and dull. She refused to smile on command, refused to play the game, refused to pretend. Her independence, which should have been a strength, became the weapon used against her.
By the late 1930s, her film career was over. Her last movie was a B-western in 1938 opposite an unknown actor named John Wayne. She was thirty-two years old.
What followed were two decades of darkness.
Louise returned to her hometown of Wichita, Kansas, but found another kind of hell there. The citizens either resented her for having been a success or despised her for being a failure. She opened a dance studio that failed. She moved to New York and worked as a radio actress, a gossip columnist, a salesgirl at Saks Fifth Avenue.
By 1948, she had run out of options. She became what she later called a courtesan, taking wealthy men as clients. The fallen star who had once dined with William Randolph Hearst now survived on the margins of the world that had discarded her.
She contemplated su***de. She wrote about flirting with the fancies related to little bottles filled with yellow sleeping pills. She drank heavily. She lived as a recluse in a tiny New York apartment, her glory days fading into memory.
Then, in 1955, something remarkable happened.
French film archivist Henri Langlois was mounting an exhibition celebrating sixty years of cinema at the Cinémathèque Française in Paris. He hung two enormous banners outside the building: one of French actress Falconetti, the other of Louise Brooks.
Someone asked why he hadn't chosen Greta Garbo or Marlene Dietrich instead.
His answer became legendary: There is no Garbo. There is no Dietrich. There is only Louise Brooks.
The resurrection had begun.
Film historians in France and America started rediscovering her work. James Card, curator at the George Eastman House, tracked down the reclusive former star and was heartbroken by what he found. But he also recognized what still lived in her: a brilliant, difficult, utterly original mind.
Card encouraged Louise to write. At first she resisted, but eventually she began producing essays about her Hollywood years for film journals. Her prose was fearlessly smart, poison-filled, and startling in its honesty. The New York Times would later call her work among the best writing ever produced about the film industry.
In 1982, she published Lulu in Hollywood, a collection of autobiographical essays that stripped away every illusion about the studio system. She wrote about herself with brutal honesty, cataloging her failures as a dancer, actress, wife, mistress, and friend. I tried with all my heart, she wrote.
She also wrote about the casting couch, about the commodification of women in Hollywood, about the vicious grindings of producers who would reduce actresses to products as uniform and expendable as canned peas. She understood the system that had crushed her better than anyone.
Louise Brooks died of a heart attack on August 8, 1985, at age seventy-eight. By then, her face had become iconic again. Jean-Luc Godard modeled characters on her in his French New Wave films. Liza Minnelli recreated her look for Sally Bowles in Cabaret. Fashion designers still copy her bob.
She left behind seventeen silent films, a handful of talkies, and one slim volume of essays that captured the truth about an industry built on dreams and destruction.
Pabst had been right about almost everything. The wealthy friends did abandon her. The poverty did come. But he was wrong about one thing: Louise Brooks did not end up forgotten like Lulu.
She ended up immortal.
Not because Hollywood made her a star, but because she refused to let Hollywood define her. She walked away on her own terms, survived the consequences on her own terms, and told the truth on her own terms.
In her final years, confined by arthritis to a small apartment in Rochester, New York, Louise wrote: Looking about, I saw millions of old people in my situation, wailing like lost puppies because they were alone and had no one to talk to.
But people did want to talk to her. Film historians made pilgrimages to Rochester to hear her stories. She had become, in her old age, exactly what she had always been: a woman who refused to be what anyone else wanted her to be.
There is no Garbo. There is no Dietrich.
There is only Louise Brooks.

When a die is this beautiful....
12/30/2025

When a die is this beautiful....

Have you explored our gaming section lately?
12/30/2025

Have you explored our gaming section lately?

One of the owners of The Reading Spa is an avid D&D avid gamer.... guess who? (hint, he's also a master of Physics!)

12/28/2025

She was Hollywood's biggest star, trapped in a secret marriage. He was the swashbuckling hero, married to someone else. Their affair should have destroyed them both. Instead, they built an empire.
1909, New York. Sixteen-year-old Mary Pickford walked into Biograph Studios looking for work. She'd been performing since childhood—supporting her family after her father's death—but Broadway wasn't paying enough.
Director D.W. Griffith took one look at her and saw something special. Within months, Mary Pickford became the most recognizable face in early cinema.
But there was a problem: movie studios didn't credit actors by name. They feared if performers became famous, they'd demand more money.
Mary decided she was worth more money anyway.
She did something unprecedented for 1910: she negotiated her own contract. She demanded to be credited. She insisted on choosing her roles. She asked for a percentage of profits.
The studios said no one would pay that much for an actress.
Mary proved them wrong.
By 1916, she was earning $10,000 per week—over $300,000 in today's money—making her one of the highest-paid people in America, male or female. She'd become "America's Sweetheart," the most beloved actress in the world.
But her personal life was a secret disaster.
In 1911, Mary had eloped with actor Owen Moore against her mother's fierce objections. The marriage was troubled from the start—Moore drank heavily, and they fought constantly. But divorce carried enormous stigma, especially for America's wholesome sweetheart.
So Mary stayed trapped in a marriage that made her miserable, while projecting perfection on screen.
Then in 1916, she met Douglas Fairbanks.
Fairbanks was everything Moore wasn't—charming, athletic, optimistic, wildly successful. He was Hollywood's ultimate action hero, performing his own death-defying stunts and captivating audiences with his swashbuckling roles.
He was also married.
Mary and Douglas tried to stay professional. They really did. But the chemistry was undeniable. They fell deeply, completely in love.
And they tried desperately to hide it.
Both were at the peak of their careers. Both were married to other people. An affair could destroy everything they'd built. Hollywood's moral clauses were brutal—studios could cancel contracts over scandal.
For two years, they conducted their relationship in secret, meeting quietly, communicating through coded messages, terrified of discovery.
In 1918, Fairbanks' wife found out. She filed for divorce, naming Mary as the reason.
The scandal exploded.
Newspapers condemned them. Religious groups called for boycotts. Their careers hung by a thread.
This is where the story takes an unexpected turn.
Instead of destroying them, the scandal transformed them into something bigger.
Gossip columnists—newly powerful in 1910s Hollywood—began spinning a different narrative. This wasn't sordid adultery. This was TRUE LOVE. Star-crossed lovers fighting against impossible circumstances. Hollywood royalty destined to be together.
The public, it turned out, loved a romance.
Mary divorced Moore in 1920 (a Nevada divorce that caused more scandal). Fairbanks' divorce was finalized. On March 28, 1920, Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks married.
Their honeymoon became a global event. Crowds mobbed them in Europe. Fans literally tore at their clothes trying to touch them. They were the first modern celebrity couple—bigger than royalty, more famous than politicians.
But Mary and Douglas weren't just famous. They were smart.
In 1919—even before their divorces were final—they'd made a business decision that would change Hollywood forever.
Movie studios controlled everything: what films got made, who starred in them, how much actors were paid. Even megastars like Mary and Douglas were essentially employees.
So they formed their own company.
On February 5, 1919, Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, Charlie Chaplin, and D.W. Griffith founded United Artists—a studio owned by the artists themselves.
The existing studios were furious. "The inmates are taking over the asylum," one executive sneered.
But United Artists succeeded. For the first time, actors and directors controlled their own work, kept their own profits, and made creative decisions without studio interference.
It was revolutionary.
Mary wasn't just an actress-turned-mogul. She was a financial genius. She negotiated distribution deals, managed budgets, and built a business empire while still starring in films.
She became one of the richest self-made women in America.
Mary and Douglas reigned as Hollywood royalty throughout the 1920s. They lived in "Pickfair," a Beverly Hills mansion that became the most famous home in America. Hosting presidents, royalty, and celebrities, they essentially invented Hollywood glamour as we know it.
Their marriage lasted until 1936—16 years of genuine partnership, though eventually they grew apart as their careers evolved and talkies replaced silent films.
But what they built together—both the romance and the business empire—changed entertainment forever.
Mary Pickford proved that actresses could be businesswomen. That women could negotiate, build companies, and control their own destinies in an industry built to exploit them.
She showed that scandal could be survived, that public opinion could shift, that talent and savvy could overcome almost anything.
And she demonstrated that the biggest stars could take power from the studios and build something better.
When Mary died in 1979 at age 86, she'd lived through Hollywood's entire golden age—from silent films to modern cinema. She'd been there at the beginning, helping create the industry itself.
"America's Sweetheart" who was actually a ruthless negotiator.
The scandal-plagued actress who became Hollywood royalty.
The woman who looked at an industry designed to exploit her and said: "I'll own it instead."
She was Hollywood's biggest star, trapped in a secret marriage. He was the swashbuckling hero, married to someone else.
Their affair should have destroyed them.
Instead, they negotiated their divorces, married each other, co-founded a studio, and ruled Hollywood for two decades.
Because Mary Pickford understood something that changed everything:
Scandal is temporary. Power is permanent.
And if you're talented enough, savvy enough, and beloved enough—you can survive anything and build an empire.

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