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As rabbits fly off the shelves, buyers are warned: bunnies are a commitment By Therese Apel | April 1, 2021 at 5:46 PM CDT - Updated April 1 at 9:50 PM
JACKSON, Miss. (WLBT) - Lyndi Jones owns Strong River Rabbitry in the Johns Community. She says business really ramps up as Easter approaches.
“When we first started we had 54 babies and right now I have two left, so we’ve had a good season,” she said.
Rabbits aren’t just cute fuzzy additions to the Easter basket, though. They are a commitment.
“It is a big responsibility, it’s a living animal,” said Jones. “You have to take care of it, provide feed for it.”
While she said that the portrayal of a Chinese man in
Mulberry Street was âdeeply offensiveâ she didnât think if Geisel was alive today he would nail his colours to the mast of those titles. âHe was deeply intelligent and understood the human condition and the importance of representing it for children.â
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Thereâs no question of booksellers not stocking Dr Seuss books. Lindy Jones, former Miles Franklin judge and head buyer for Abbeyâs Bookshop in Sydney, was âhorrifiedâ by the decision to excise the six from the Seuss catalogue. âChildren donât actually have racial prejudice unless adults tell them to. Do the kids notice there are chopsticks [in the illustration in
Lapsed bookworm? How you can get back into the habit of reading
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Are you reluctant to curl up with a good book? Were you once an avid reader, but you’ve lost the habit? Is there always something more important to do, or more TV series to binge watch, or more social media to scroll?
You are not alone. A UK study in 2015 revealed that almost a third of the population, about 16 million people, were lapsed readers. They had not read since leaving formal education, or because their reading habits had been interrupted by illness or a major life event, such as having a child. Nearly half said that lack of time was the reason they didn’t read, or didn’t read more frequently. We can assume similar figures for Australia.