So Bryan Patrie's toilet seat with its warning lights receives a strong welcome,
among women readers especially.
Not exact matches
Among the
reader responses: «so basically, attractive
women are human pacifiers for grown ass men»; «I don't even know where to begin with my rage»; «Annnnnnd I'm done with Eli Roth.»
As the cards drop,
readers meet the occupants,
among them an elderly
woman who remembers the street in post-Blitz ruins, a Pakistani shopkeeper and his quarrelsome brothers and a 17 - year - old soccer prodigy.
I always imagined my typical
reader to be a
woman in her mid 40s - 60s, a high school / university graduate, in full - time employment or retired, a homeowner, on a median income, someone who liked shopping online, loved reading complex thrillers, and probably counted James Patterson, Dan Brown, James Rollins, and Clive Cussler
among her favorite authors.
A circle of bawdy elder
women and the smart and funny sisters Snow and Josette (
among the young characters who will fascinate advanced teen
readers) provide comic relief and covertly wise counsel, while Peter's extreme preparedness for the turn - of - the - millennium apocalypse offers a piquant reflection on questions of fear and faith.
Manga The latest poll of Japanese
readers shows the most popular manga
among both men and
women is — no surprise here — One Piece.
 The precedent setting new digital availability brings bestselling DC Comics and Vertigo periodical titles, including JUSTICE LEAGUE, BATMAN, SUPERMAN, DETECTIVE COMICS, ACTION COMICS, BATGIRL, WONDER
WOMAN, GREEN LANTERN, FABLES and AMERICAN VAMPIRE,
among many others, to an even broader audience of digital
readers.
Among device owners, the heaviest book
readers are
women, whites, and those over 40.
Among those who own tablet computers and e-book
readers,
women read more books than men (23 books on average in the past year vs. 19); whites read more books than minorities (23 books on average in the past year vs. 16); those who have owned the device more than a year read more books than newer purchasers (24 books on average in the past year vs. 20); and those over age 40 have read more books than those under 40 (22 books on average in the past year vs. 19).
Stephen has been quoted in
Reader's Digest,
Woman's Day, Psychology Today, bustle.com, Glamour, and Vice,
among others.