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Screenshot of PostSecret with an example postcard. PostSecret is an ongoing community mail art project, created by Frank Warren in 2004, in which people mail their secrets anonymously on a homemade postcard. Selected secrets are then posted on the PostSecret website, or used for PostSecret's books or museum exhibits.
Secreta mulierum, also known as De secretis mulierum, is a natural philosophical text from the late thirteenth or early fourteenth century frequently attributed to Albertus Magnus, although it is more likely written by one of his followers. [1] Originally written in Latin, the title translates as The Secrets of Women or Of the Secrets of Women.
In April 2022 The Postcard won the first annual Choix Goncourt United states. [1] In November 2021 The Postcard won the Prix Renaudot des Lycéans. [8] The Postcard was one of Time Magazine's must-read books of 2023. [5] The Postcard was a finalist for the 2023 Book Club category and the fiction category for the National Jewish Book Award. [9]
Richard and Judy Book Club display at W.H. Smith, Enfield. The following is a list of books from the Richard & Judy Book Club, featured on the television chat show. The show was cancelled in 2009, but since 2010 the lists have been continued by the Richard and Judy Book Club, a website run in conjunction with retailer W. H. Smith.
This word often occurs in the phrase raz nihyeh, which can be translated as "the secret of the way things are". [2] The assumption behind The Book of Mysteries is that revelation, not reason, is the key to wisdom. The book is authored by an unnamed teacher who claims to be the recipient of such a revelation and is passing it along to his students.
The Secretum Secretorum or Secreta Secretorum (Latin, 'Secret of secrets'), also known as the Sirr al-Asrar (Arabic: كتاب سر الأسرار, lit. 'The Secret Book of Secrets'), is a treatise which purports to be a letter from Aristotle to his student Alexander the Great on an encyclopedic range of topics, including statecraft, ethics ...
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The title given by Abstemius to his story was "The man who told his wife he had laid an egg" (De viro qui uxori se ovum peperisse dixerat), with the moral that one should not tell a woman anything one wishes to keep secret. [3] Roger L'Estrange translated it two centuries later under the title "A woman trusted with a secret". [4]