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Library Lovers Day

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Library Lovers Day

Library Lover Day is February 14th every year. This is a day to honor libraries, librarians, bookworms, and library lovers. A library is a collection of information sources that a defined community can access for reference or lending. Library holdings can include books, periodicals, newspapers, manuscripts, films, maps, prints, documents, microfilm, CDs, tapes, videotapes, DVDs, Blu-ray Discs, e-books, audio, and databases. Librarians serve libraries by finding and organizing information and explaining information needs. This day is mainly celebrated across Australia.

The founder of Library Valentine’s Day has yet to be found. On the other hand, the formation of the library is a huge history. The first library dates back to 2600 BC and contains archives of the earliest written forms. In the early Middle Ages, monastic libraries developed in which books were often locked on shelves, reflecting the fact that manuscripts created by hand reproduction were valuable property. The 17th and 18th centuries are known as the golden age of libraries, during which many important libraries were established in Europe. In the early 18th century, libraries became more and more public, and libraries were borrowed more frequently. The 18th century saw the transition from a closed parish library to a lending library. In the early 1800s, there were few public libraries—libraries that were federally funded and freely available to all. Later, the concept spread all over the world.

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Laid stars Stephanie Hsu and Zosia Mamet reveal the worst gifts their romantic partners gave them | Exclusive

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Laid stars Stephanie Hsu and Zosia Mamet reveal the worst gifts their romantic partners gave them | Exclusive

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Stephanie Hsu and Zosia Mamet talk about their new series Laid, and some of the horrors of dating as millennials.
Imagine a scenario where anyone and everyone you have ever been intimate with begins to die one by one. Is it a curse? If yes, then who is cursed? These are questions that Stephanie Hsu‘s Ruby battles with in the new zany comedy, Laid. Ahead of the show’s release, Stephanie and co-star Zosia Mamet spoke exclusively with HT about their roles, the show’s unique premise, and the horrors of dating as millennials. (Also read: Dune: Prophecy star Emily Watson on working with Tabu: ‘She is a true treasure’)

Stephanie Hsu on her character’s flawed morality

Laid, created by Nahnatchka Khan and Sally Bradford McKenna, is the story of Ruby (Stephanie Hsu), who discovers that all her sexual partners are dying one by one, and she must warn them. Helping her in this unique quest is her best friend AJ (Zosia). The fun thing about Laid is that the protagonists are not the usual likeable characters. “She is totally an anti-hero of our story. I really love that,” says Stephanie, referring to Ruby’s moral greyness. “I am not a perfect person and I love playing flawed characters. But it was difficult. The creators told me that she is a total narcissist. But narcissists don’t think they are one, so I had to figure out a way to love her. For me, playing Ruby was about getting into her psychology and finding the innocent part of her – which is that she just wants love,” the actor adds.

While sitcoms usually add the best friend as the voice of reason trope, Laid diverges from that, with AJ even zanier and more morally ambiguous than Ruby. Talking about playing such a colourful character, Zosia Mamet says, “When you play not-so-likable or zany characters, people don’t believe they are that way. I don’t think AJ wakes up every morning and thinks, ‘I am absolutely crazy’. It’s about trusting the writing and finding an organic way into these characters to make them seem grounded, real, and relatable.”

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Stephanie, Zosia reveal the worst gifts they received from partners

In Laid, Ruby gives the gift of death to the men she is with, even if that is inadvertent. Ask the women about the worst ‘gift’ a partner has ever given them, and the discussions veer into the unusual horrors of modern-day dating. “I got a vintage wooden duck decoy from someone. It was broken, and I thought, ‘What does this say about our relationship?’. They didn’t know me well enough to know if I’d want this but also that they gave me something old and ailing,” Zosia says with a laugh.

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