Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:56 pm
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:50 pm
‘Could have been avoided’: Defunct sprinklers, empty tanks blamed for death in high-rise fire in Mum
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:49 pm
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:46 pm
‘…dil ko behlane ke liye…khayal accha hai’: Tharoor quotes Ghalib, slams Budget as ‘carefully create
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:43 pm
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:41 pm
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:40 pm
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:38 pm
India is set to get two new telescopes and upgrade one in Ladakh. Here’s how it will be a game-chang
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:36 pm
Woman notices wrong prices on Walmart items. Then she gets them for free: ‘What is label accuracy la
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 01:00 pm

Some countries take price accuracy more seriously than others. In Canada, for example, retailers voluntarily operate under the country’s Scanner Price Accuracy Code (SPAC).
The code requires retailers to give an item for free if it rings up higher than the posted price and costs under $10. For items priced above that, customers usually receive a bonus discount on the lowest advertised price. Many shoppers take advantage of the law, specifically scouring grocery aisles for pricing errors.
Recently, Canada-based TikToker Theandra (@theandrah250) posted a video showing how the code works in real life while shopping at two local Walmart locations. Her video has garnered over 93,000 views.
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 08:06 am
In 2005, my family went on a three week trip to Australia and New Zealand, on which I embarked determined to bring back gems of antipodal literature.
Unfortunately, I was not very internet savvy at that point, so I didn’t successfully manage to search for the titles of these gems. Presumably I could have asked the booksellers, but this literally didn’t occur to me until I was writing this post, so clearly that was a non-starter.
So mostly I purchased the complete works of Isobelle Carmody, plus some of Lynley Dodd’s Slinki Malinki books (happy to report that my niece now enjoys them). But I did consider Randa Abdel-Fattah’s Does My Head Look Big in This?, before concluding that this book would obviously make it to the United States before long.
I was correct! The book made it to the United States within a year or two after that trip. I proceeded not to read it for another twenty years.
But finally I have read it. At this point it’s kind of a period piece of my own youth. CDs! DVDs! Young people who use their cell phones to actually call each other! Be still my beating heart.
But also, the character who is so relentlessly fat-shamed by her mother and her classmates that she informs our heroine that she wishes she could become anorexic. Unable to achieve this fatal disease, she instead takes up smoking. She ultimately gives it up when she gets a boyfriend who likes her curves, but still. Oh, 2005, how I don’t miss you. What an awful year. Awful decade in fact. Sometimes I feel like an old curmudgeon shaking my metaphorical cane at The State of the World These Days, so it’s cheering in a way to be reminded that I hated the world when I was a teenager, too.
“But Aster,” you complain. “The actual book? Do you have any thoughts about Does My Head Look Big in This?”
Well, to be honest, the book also reminded me that I had a tortured relationship with contemporary YA even before its Twilightification. It also seemed to me that the move from children’s literature to YA echoed the arc of Fern’s character growth in Charlotte’s Web: at the start she saves Wilbur the runt pig and spends hours listening to the talking animals, but at the end all she cares about is some stupid boy who took her for a ride on the Ferris wheel. It’s a shift from wonder and possibility and talking animals to boring romance and clothes and makeup (or boring sports if the main character is a boy).
As an adult I have more tolerance for this sort of thing, but I suspect that in my youth I would have been horrified that our heroine starts wearing the hijab full-time and still spends most of her time thinking about clothes and makeup and boys. To my seventeen-year-old mind, the chief benefit of wearing the hijab would be never having to think about any of those things ever again! Or at least until you’re ready to get married. (I recognize that this is not how it actually works, but it’s still what I would have thought.)
So in fact it’s a good thing that I waited 20 years to read the book, because I probably would not have much appreciated the book in 2005. But in 2026, it’s given me a nice wander down memory lane.
Unfortunately, I was not very internet savvy at that point, so I didn’t successfully manage to search for the titles of these gems. Presumably I could have asked the booksellers, but this literally didn’t occur to me until I was writing this post, so clearly that was a non-starter.
So mostly I purchased the complete works of Isobelle Carmody, plus some of Lynley Dodd’s Slinki Malinki books (happy to report that my niece now enjoys them). But I did consider Randa Abdel-Fattah’s Does My Head Look Big in This?, before concluding that this book would obviously make it to the United States before long.
I was correct! The book made it to the United States within a year or two after that trip. I proceeded not to read it for another twenty years.
But finally I have read it. At this point it’s kind of a period piece of my own youth. CDs! DVDs! Young people who use their cell phones to actually call each other! Be still my beating heart.
But also, the character who is so relentlessly fat-shamed by her mother and her classmates that she informs our heroine that she wishes she could become anorexic. Unable to achieve this fatal disease, she instead takes up smoking. She ultimately gives it up when she gets a boyfriend who likes her curves, but still. Oh, 2005, how I don’t miss you. What an awful year. Awful decade in fact. Sometimes I feel like an old curmudgeon shaking my metaphorical cane at The State of the World These Days, so it’s cheering in a way to be reminded that I hated the world when I was a teenager, too.
“But Aster,” you complain. “The actual book? Do you have any thoughts about Does My Head Look Big in This?”
Well, to be honest, the book also reminded me that I had a tortured relationship with contemporary YA even before its Twilightification. It also seemed to me that the move from children’s literature to YA echoed the arc of Fern’s character growth in Charlotte’s Web: at the start she saves Wilbur the runt pig and spends hours listening to the talking animals, but at the end all she cares about is some stupid boy who took her for a ride on the Ferris wheel. It’s a shift from wonder and possibility and talking animals to boring romance and clothes and makeup (or boring sports if the main character is a boy).
As an adult I have more tolerance for this sort of thing, but I suspect that in my youth I would have been horrified that our heroine starts wearing the hijab full-time and still spends most of her time thinking about clothes and makeup and boys. To my seventeen-year-old mind, the chief benefit of wearing the hijab would be never having to think about any of those things ever again! Or at least until you’re ready to get married. (I recognize that this is not how it actually works, but it’s still what I would have thought.)
So in fact it’s a good thing that I waited 20 years to read the book, because I probably would not have much appreciated the book in 2005. But in 2026, it’s given me a nice wander down memory lane.
Rs 20,000 a month for junior advocates: Centre places Bar Council of India’s stipend plan in Lok Sab
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:30 pm
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:29 pm
‘He was just lying in pain for two days’: Vinod Khanna’s wife Kavita details actor’s multiple cancer
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:25 pm
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:25 pm
Today News Headlines for School Assembly, February 11, 2026: Opposition moves to oust LS Speaker, pr
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:24 pm
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:21 pm
Colombo weather update today, Pakistan vs USA T20 World Cup 2026: Will rain affect crucial encounter
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:19 pm
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:19 pm
Tuesday, February 10th, 2026 12:19 pm