Surveying literature, art & culture from an altitude of 5,000 feet while traveling at 53 miles per hour
Close
  • New
  • Popular
  • Longform
Main Menu
Previous New Favorite Timewaster: The TV News Theme Archive
Previous
Next 2nd Hand Brands: Lilly Pulitzer
Next
Book Sword: Ginsberg, Marlowe, and Ephron
By Kate Gavino

Everyone from Galileo to Jim Morrison to countless Scrabble wordsmiths have played around with letters to form their perfect anagrams. We take literary-minded words and anagram them to find ... well, that's up to you. A deeper meaning? A hidden truth? Or just a happy coincidence?

80.jpg
81.jpg
82.jpg
83.jpg
84.jpg
Credit: Flickr user janetgalore. Used with a Creative Commons license.

Next : R.L. Stine gets Nil Rest.

Previous: Vladimir Nabokov is a Vivid, Amoral Knob. 

Newsletter
Sign up for The Airdrop, our weekly newsletter full of book giveaways, interesting article round-ups and fun event notices! We promise to never, ever spam you or give away your email address.

 

Thanks for signing up for The Airdrop! We'll be seeing you next Thursday.

 
Featured
Eat Prey Drug: Summerland
Eat Prey Drug: Summerland
The Biggest Little-Known Influence on H. P. Lovecraft
The Biggest Little-Known Influence on H. P. Lovecraft
The Sun Don't Shine on a Moonshine Still
The Sun Don't Shine on a Moonshine Still
  • About
  • Shop
  • Privacy Policy
A Black Balloon Publication ©