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The Readers Society

Since 2021
Read More Read Better Reading is sexy More than reading glasses Reading is independence Read to find inspiration
Read More Read Better Reading is sexy More than reading glasses Reading is independence Read to find inspiration
Read More Read Better Reading is sexy More than reading glasses Reading is independence Read to find inspiration
Read More Read Better Reading is sexy More than reading glasses Reading is independence Read to find inspiration
Read More Read Better Reading is sexy More than reading glasses Reading is independence Read to find inspiration
Read More Read Better Reading is sexy More than reading glasses Reading is independence Read to find inspiration
More than READING GLASSES

The Readers is more than just a brand of reading and blue-light glasses. We began with a clear idea: to make reading easier for the whole world. We aimed to create a community passionate about that idea. A community curious and creative by nature, where every reader can feel welcome.

Reading is independence
Reading is sexy for everyone

Read when you feel happy. Read when you feel sad.
Read to find inspiration, to get motivation.
Read to ask more questions and question the way you think.
Read to travel without moving or to find the exact words.
Read with your partner, your friend, your mom…
With whoever you want.
Read no matter what, no matter how, no matter where.
Read when you doubt everything.
Read just because.

The Readers*
Empowering people
TO CULTIVATE THEIR INTELLECTUAL WEALTH
“Show me a family of readers and I will show you the people who move the world.”
Napoleón Bonaparte
BooksRecommendation
MRS DALLOWAY
Virginia Woolf
Writing about taboo themes in the 1920s? Virginia Woolf did it fearlessly in this magnificent novel. Feminism, mental illness, bisexuality and depression are some of the topics she immortalized. The theme of depression was near and dear to Woolf, who suffered from bipolar disorder and made her first suicide attempt at 22 years old.
WAR AND PEACE
Leo Tolstoy
In this novel, Tolstoy lays out his opinion on history, war, philosophy and religion. He does it through five Russian aristocratic families during the Napoleonic invasion and by mixing fictional characters with historical ones like Alexander I, blurring the line between fiction and history to get close to the truth.
Frankens tein
Mary Shelley
Frankenstein came to be one summer in Geneva, when Mary Shelley and her husband stayed in a villa rented by the poet Lord Byron. Bad weather confined them there for days, and as a distraction, Byron challenged his guests to create a story about ghosts. A few months later, the author wrote one of the most acclaimed terror novels of all time, whose monster causes both terror and affection.
PRIDE AND PREJUDICE
Jane Austen
In this novel, Austen strays from the typical romance novels of her time and uses irony to poke fun at aspects of her society, giving a humorous touch that stands in contrast to the more formal tone then expected of romance novels. The author also creates a main character who is intelligent and rational while also being romantic and non-conformist—traits that were not typical in female romance novel characters.

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