http://www.usatoday.com/life/books/news/2004-08-02-literate-cities_x.htmThe man who does not read good books has no advantage over the man who can't read them, Mark Twain has been credited with saying.
A new study takes that principle a step further, ranking the USA's "most literate" cities not by how many residents can read, but by various measures of how many do. And by those measures, Minneapolis is the most literate, El Paso, the least.
The study examines the extent to which residents of the USA's largest 79 cities behave in literate ways — such as buying newspapers and books or checking materials out of the library.
Like Minneapolis, many top-ranked cities (Seattle, Washington, Boston and San Francisco) also boast some of the nation's most highly educated and affluent residents. In contrast, low-ranking cities, such as the Texas-Mexico border town of El Paso, tend to attract recent immigrants, many of them poor and with little schooling. Of the 20 cities at the bottom of the heap, Texas and California are home to 14.