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We never quite mastered the naming issue on this thing, and it left a bad taste in my mouth.



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* The protagonists of "The Old Swap Shop", published in ''Jingle Jangle Comics'' #34, are Curly, a bespectacled bookworm with a grad cap who lives inside a book, and Ambrose, a living centauroid table lamp. Curly decides to test a newly acquired and supposedly magical candle by lighting it. Its glow bring the Grandfather Clock to life. Tired of its simple existence, the clock leaves the store, necessitating Curly and Ambrose to go after him and convince him to return home.

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* The protagonists of "The Old Swap Shop", a series published in ''Jingle Jangle Comics'' #34, starting #25, are Curly, a bespectacled bookworm with a grad cap who lives inside a book, and Ambrose, a living centauroid table lamp. Curly decides to test a newly acquired and supposedly magical candle by lighting it. Its glow bring the Grandfather Clock to life. Tired of its simple existence, the clock leaves the store, necessitating Curly and lampbase. Between them, Ambrose to go after him is the levelheaded one, while Curly is smart but impulsive and convince him fond of eating. At night, they roam freely through the store and interact with the other living items and entities in the shop, going so far as to return home.on occasion enter books and pictures, where Curly is at home too.
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* The protagonists of "The Old Swap Shop", published in ''Jingle Jangle Comics'' #34, are Curly, a bespectacled bookworm with a grad cap who lives inside a book, and Ambrose, a living centauroid table lamp. Curly decides to test a newly acquired and supposedly magical candle by lighting it. Its glow bring the Grandfather Clock to life. Tired of its simple existence, the clock leaves the store, necessitating Curly and Ambrose to go after him and convince him to return home.
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* ''Word Rescue'' has a green, bespectacled worm named Benny Bookworm as one of the protagonists. The player character has to help him steal back all the words stolen by the Gruzzles and return them to their books. In the sequel, ''Math Rescue'', he becomes Benny Butterfly, meaning Benny was a caterpillar in the first game.
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* ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures'' has Bookworm, a small, cute, green, bespectacled bookworm who loves reading books as well as eating them as they are his primary food source.

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* The original Bookworm from the ''Sniffles'' shorts returns in ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures'' has Bookworm, as the librarian of the Looniversity. There's also a student counterpart of him who shares his name. This Bookworm is a small, cute, green, bespectacled bookworm who loves reading books as well as eating them as they are his primary food source.source. Sweetie regularly attempts to eat him, but always fails one way or another.
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* The Globglogabgalab of ''WesternAnimation/StrawinskyAndTheMysteriousHouse'' takes things to uncomfortable new heights. Not only does he sing about books, he also depends on them for sustenance, eating their thoughts and ideas by shrinking and absorbing himself into the books, and upon emerging, caresses himself and giggles with glee from these feeding sessions. He used to be a handsome elf, but exposure to books turned him into wormly humanoid blob.
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* The ''WesternAnimation/{{Plasmo}}'' episode "Plasmo and the Bookworm" features a large bookworm that has bored through various books at the library, in an attempt to gain their knowledge. All he's gained instead is a bad case of indigestion, and has trouble using the books to learn how to read, as he's now forced to used "the abridged version".
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* Among the many {{pun}}-based enemies in the library of VideoGame/CrayonChronicles are Arrogant Book Worms. They're green worms with glasses and a grad cap sticking out of an apple.

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* Among the many {{pun}}-based enemies in the library of VideoGame/CrayonChronicles ''VideoGame/CrayonChronicles'' are Arrogant Book Worms. They're green worms with glasses and a grad cap sticking out of an apple.

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* ''VideoGame/{{Bookworm}}''

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* ''VideoGame/{{Bookworm}}'' ''VideoGame/{{Bookworm}}'':


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* Among the many {{pun}}-based enemies in the library of VideoGame/CrayonChronicles are Arrogant Book Worms. They're green worms with glasses and a grad cap sticking out of an apple.
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* One ''[[ComicBook/LooneyTunes Mary Jane and Sniffles]]'' comic in Four Color Comics #402 sees the two protagonists come to the aid of a spelling bee and his hive, which is under attack by bumblebees. The trio escapes capture and finds sanctuary with a bookworm, Chopper J. Binding, inside the M-volume of an encyclopedia. He buys them time to come up with a plan.
* ''ComicBook/{{Shazam}}'': Pre-Crisis Mister Mind is one of the Marvel Family's greatest archfoes... and yet he's an alien worm whose initial design borne of this trope. He's a cartoonish green worm with spectacles and a voicebox around his neck. Though he's not directly linked to literature, as his name indicates, his greatest power is his mind in contrast to the Marvel Family of {{Physical God}}s.

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* One ''[[ComicBook/LooneyTunes Mary Jane and Sniffles]]'' comic in Four Color Comics #402 sees the two protagonists come to the aid of a spelling bee and his hive, which is under attack by bumblebees. The trio escapes capture and finds sanctuary with a [[SmartPeopleSpeakTheQueensEnglish Queen's English-speaking]] bookworm, Chopper J. Binding, inside the M-volume of an encyclopedia. He buys them time to come up with a plan.
* ''ComicBook/{{Shazam}}'': Pre-Crisis Mister Mind is one of the Marvel Family's greatest archfoes... and yet he's an alien a Venusian worm whose initial design borne of this trope. He's a cartoonish green worm with spectacles and a voicebox around his neck. Though he's not directly linked to literature, as his name indicates, his greatest power is his mind in contrast to the Marvel Family of {{Physical God}}s.
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* ''VideoGame/KingsQuestVIHeirTodayGoneTomorrow'' has Alexander meeting a green, bespectacled bookworm on the Isle of Wonder, where pretty much everything is based on a pun. He lives in what can only be described as a junkyard of books and acts a bit rude at first, but when Alexander returns his "Dangling Participle", he gives him a special, rare book.

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* ''VideoGame/KingsQuestVIHeirTodayGoneTomorrow'' has Alexander meeting a green, bespectacled bookworm on the Isle of Wonder, where pretty much everything is based on a pun. He lives in what can only be described as a junkyard of books and acts a bit rude at first, but when Alexander returns his "Dangling Participle", he gives him a special, rare book.
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* There are two puppet bookworms named Aristotle and Horace in ''Series/HiFive House''. They're part of the cast of The Chatterbox segment, which aims to teach the audience the English language.

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* There are two puppet bookworms named Aristotle (yellow with a bowtie) and Horace (blue with glasses) in ''Series/HiFive House''. They're part of the cast of The Chatterbox segment, which aims to teach the audience the English language.
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[[folder:Live Action TV]]
* ''Series/BarneyAndFriends'':

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* ''Series/BarneyAndFriends'': There are two cases, one an instance in Season 1 and the other a recurring character starting Season 5.



* ''[[Series/HiFive Hi-5 House]]'' has two puppet bookworms named Aristotle and Horace.

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* ''[[Series/HiFive Hi-5 House]]'' has There are two puppet bookworms named Aristotle and Horace. Horace in ''Series/HiFive House''. They're part of the cast of The Chatterbox segment, which aims to teach the audience the English language.
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** In Mother Goose's debut episode, unseen bookworms of this sort are heard eating all the pages in her book. she asks Barney and the children to help her remember the rhymes which were in the book so she can write them all down (again).
** Booker T. Bookworm is an orange worm with blue glasses and a green plaid bowtie that works as an imaginary librarian at the school library.

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** In "Let's Help Mother Goose's debut episode, Goose!", unseen bookworms of this sort are heard eating all the pages in her Mother Goose's book. she She asks Barney and the children to help her remember the rhymes which were in the book so she can write them all down (again).
** Booker T. Bookworm Bookworm, who debuts in "It's Time for Counting", is an orange worm with blue glasses and a green plaid bowtie that works as an imaginary librarian at the school library.
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* ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory3'': The keeper of a library of instruction manuals in Sunnyside Daycare is a green bookworm with glasses and a bow tie whose name is Bookworm.

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* ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory3'': The One of Lotso's (possibly strong-armed) henchmen is Bookworm, a booklight in the shape of a bookworm. He's the keeper of a library of instruction manuals in within Sunnyside Daycare is a green bookworm with glasses and a bow tie whose name is Bookworm.the one who gives Lotso and later Barbie the Buzz Lightyear instruction manual.



* In ''Film/TheHuggaBunch'', Bridget Severson seeks a [[FountainOfYouth youth medicine]] for her grandmother and visits the elderly Bookworm in Hugga Land because he is supposed to know everything. While not sympathetic to Bridget's plight, because aging is a part of life, he tells her about the Youngberry Tree in the Country of Shrugs. If Bridget gives her grandmother one of the tree's fruits, she'll become young again. However, the Country of Shrugs is a dangerous place and the Bookworm is confident Bridget won't ever return from it.

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* In ''Film/TheHuggaBunch'', Bridget Severson seeks a [[FountainOfYouth youth medicine]] for her grandmother and visits the elderly Bookworm who resides within a mountain of giant books in Hugga Land because he is supposed to know everything. While not sympathetic to Bridget's plight, because aging is a part of life, he tells her about the Youngberry Tree in the Country of Shrugs.Shrugs, which one of his giant books is a gate to. If Bridget gives her grandmother one of the tree's fruits, she'll become young again. However, the Country of Shrugs is a dangerous place and the Bookworm is confident Bridget won't ever return from it.
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* One ''[[ComicBook/LooneyTunes Mary Jane and Sniffles]]'' comic in Four Color Comics #402 sees the two protagonists come to the aid of a spelling bee and his hive, which is under attack by bumblebees. The trio escapes capture and finds sanctuary with a bookworm, Chopper J. Binding, inside the M-volume of an encyclopedia. He buys them time to come up with a plan.
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They're a common face in children's entertainment: literal bookworms, tubiform bugs that live inside or surrounded by books. Their default depiction is that of keepers of knowledge, which is followed closely by another portrayal of insatiable book munchers. At times, the two versions overlap when the bookworm has the power to [[InstantExpert acquire knowledge]] by [[IngestingKnowledge eating books instead of reading them]]. The duality is reflected in the design choices. Purely destructive bookworms look like (stylized) regular insects, while it is a rarity for the knowledge-acquiring bookworm to not be a HalfDressedCartoonAnimal. NerdGlasses and neckties are the usual two attributes. Literal bookworms are AlwaysMale, possibly because BoysLikeCreepyCritters. They are prone to either having an {{Alliterative Name}}, or to simply [[ADogNamedDog be named "Bookworm"]].


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They're a common face in children's entertainment: literal bookworms, tubiform bugs that live inside or surrounded by books. Their default depiction is that of keepers of knowledge, which is followed closely by another portrayal of insatiable book munchers. At times, the two versions overlap when the bookworm has the power to [[InstantExpert acquire knowledge]] by [[IngestingKnowledge eating books instead of reading them]]. The duality is reflected in the design choices. Purely destructive bookworms look like (stylized) regular insects, while it is a rarity for the knowledge-acquiring bookworm to not be a HalfDressedCartoonAnimal.an AccessoryWearingCartoonAnimal. NerdGlasses and neckties are the usual two attributes. Literal bookworms are AlwaysMale, possibly because BoysLikeCreepyCritters. They are prone to either having an {{Alliterative Name}}, or to simply [[ADogNamedDog be named "Bookworm"]].

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* Boekhandel Huyser in Delft in the Netherlands has a bookworm of unusual design as store sign. The bookworm is [[MixAndMatchCritters a dapper human on top and a caterpillar below the waste]]. He's holding a book in his hands and a candle with his tail.

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* Boekhandel Huyser in Delft in the Netherlands has a bookworm of unusual design as store sign. The bookworm is [[MixAndMatchCritters a dapper human on top and a caterpillar below the waste]].waist]]. He's holding a book in his hands and a candle with his tail.
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[[folder:Films-Animated]][[folder:Films - Animated]]



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[[folder:Live-Action Film]][[folder:Films - Live Action]]
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They're a common face in children's entertainment: literal bookworms, tubiform bugs that live inside or surrounded by books. Their default depiction is that of keepers of knowledge, which is followed closely by another portrayal of insatiable book munchers. At times, the two versions overlap when the bookworm has the power to [[InstantExpert acquire knowledge]] by [[IngestingKnowledge eating books instead of reading them]]. The duality is reflected in the design choices. Purely destructive bookworms look like (stylized) regular insects, while it is a rarity for the knowledge-acquiring bookworm to not be a HalfDressedCartoonAnimal. NerdGlasses and neckties are the usual two attributes. Literal bookworms are AlwaysMale, possibly because BoysLikeCreepyCritters. They are prone to either having an {{Alliterative Name}}s, or to simply [[ADogNamedDog be named "Bookworm"]].


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They're a common face in children's entertainment: literal bookworms, tubiform bugs that live inside or surrounded by books. Their default depiction is that of keepers of knowledge, which is followed closely by another portrayal of insatiable book munchers. At times, the two versions overlap when the bookworm has the power to [[InstantExpert acquire knowledge]] by [[IngestingKnowledge eating books instead of reading them]]. The duality is reflected in the design choices. Purely destructive bookworms look like (stylized) regular insects, while it is a rarity for the knowledge-acquiring bookworm to not be a HalfDressedCartoonAnimal. NerdGlasses and neckties are the usual two attributes. Literal bookworms are AlwaysMale, possibly because BoysLikeCreepyCritters. They are prone to either having an {{Alliterative Name}}s, Name}}, or to simply [[ADogNamedDog be named "Bookworm"]].

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They're a common face in children's entertainment: literal bookworms, tubiform bugs that live inside or surrounded by books. Their default depiction is that of keepers of knowledge, which is followed closely by another portrayal of insatiable book munchers. At times, the two versions overlap when the bookworm has the power to [[InstantExpert acquire knowledge]] by [[IngestingKnowledge eating books instead of reading them]]. The duality is reflected in the design choices. Purely destructive bookworms look like (stylized) regular insects, while it is a rarity for the knowledge-acquiring bookworm to not be a HalfDressedCartoonAnimal. NerdGlasses and neckties are the usual two attributes. Literal bookworms are AlwaysMale, possibly because BoysLikeCreepyCritters. They are either prone to have {{Alliterative Name}}s, or to simply [[ADogNamedDog be named "Bookworm"]].


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They're a common face in children's entertainment: literal bookworms, tubiform bugs that live inside or surrounded by books. Their default depiction is that of keepers of knowledge, which is followed closely by another portrayal of insatiable book munchers. At times, the two versions overlap when the bookworm has the power to [[InstantExpert acquire knowledge]] by [[IngestingKnowledge eating books instead of reading them]]. The duality is reflected in the design choices. Purely destructive bookworms look like (stylized) regular insects, while it is a rarity for the knowledge-acquiring bookworm to not be a HalfDressedCartoonAnimal. NerdGlasses and neckties are the usual two attributes. Literal bookworms are AlwaysMale, possibly because BoysLikeCreepyCritters. They are either prone to have either having an {{Alliterative Name}}s, or to simply [[ADogNamedDog be named "Bookworm"]].

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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They're a common face in children's entertainment: literal bookworms, tubiform bugs that live inside or surrounded by books. Their default depiction is that of keepers of knowledge, which is followed closely by another portrayal of insatiable book munchers. At times, the two versions overlap when the bookworm has the power to [[InstantExpert acquire knowledge]] by [[IngestingKnowledge eating books instead of reading them]]. The duality is reflected in the design choices. Purely destructive bookworms look like (stylized) regular insects, while it is a rarity for the knowledge-acquiring bookworm to not be a HalfDressedCartoonAnimal. NerdGlasses and neckties are the usual two attributes. Literal bookworms are AlwaysMale, possibly because BoysLikeCreepyCritters. They are either prone to have {{Alliterative Name}}s, or to simply [[ADogNamedDog be named “Bookworm”]].


to:

They're a common face in children's entertainment: literal bookworms, tubiform bugs that live inside or surrounded by books. Their default depiction is that of keepers of knowledge, which is followed closely by another portrayal of insatiable book munchers. At times, the two versions overlap when the bookworm has the power to [[InstantExpert acquire knowledge]] by [[IngestingKnowledge eating books instead of reading them]]. The duality is reflected in the design choices. Purely destructive bookworms look like (stylized) regular insects, while it is a rarity for the knowledge-acquiring bookworm to not be a HalfDressedCartoonAnimal. NerdGlasses and neckties are the usual two attributes. Literal bookworms are AlwaysMale, possibly because BoysLikeCreepyCritters. They are either prone to have {{Alliterative Name}}s, or to simply [[ADogNamedDog be named “Bookworm”]]."Bookworm"]].

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


They're a common face in children's entertainment: literal bookworms, tubiform bugs that live inside or surrounded by books. Their default depiction is that of keepers of knowledge, which is followed closely by another portrayal of insatiable book munchers. At times, the two versions overlap when the bookworm has the power to [[InstantExpert acquire knowledge]] by [[IngestingKnowledge eating books instead of reading them]]. The duality is reflected in the design choices. Purely destructive bookworms look like (stylized) regular insects, while it is a rarity for the knowledge-acquiring bookworm to not be a HalfDressedCartoonAnimal. NerdGlasses and neckties are the usual two attributes. Literal bookworms are AlwaysMale, possibly because BoysLikeCreepyCritters. They are either prone to have {{Alliterative Name}}s, [[ADogNamedDog or to simply be named “Bookworm”]].


to:

They're a common face in children's entertainment: literal bookworms, tubiform bugs that live inside or surrounded by books. Their default depiction is that of keepers of knowledge, which is followed closely by another portrayal of insatiable book munchers. At times, the two versions overlap when the bookworm has the power to [[InstantExpert acquire knowledge]] by [[IngestingKnowledge eating books instead of reading them]]. The duality is reflected in the design choices. Purely destructive bookworms look like (stylized) regular insects, while it is a rarity for the knowledge-acquiring bookworm to not be a HalfDressedCartoonAnimal. NerdGlasses and neckties are the usual two attributes. Literal bookworms are AlwaysMale, possibly because BoysLikeCreepyCritters. They are either prone to have {{Alliterative Name}}s, or to simply [[ADogNamedDog or to simply be named “Bookworm”]].

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


They're a common face in children's entertainment: literal bookworms, tubiform bugs that live inside or surrounded by books. Their default depiction is that of keepers of knowledge, which is followed closely by another portrayal of insatiable book munchers. At times, the two versions overlap when the bookworm has the power to [[InstantExpert acquire knowledge]] by [[IngestingKnowledge eating books instead of reading them]]. The duality is reflected in the design choices. Purely destructive bookworms look like (stylized) regular insects, while it is a rarity for the knowledge-acquiring bookworm to not be a HalfDressedCartoonAnimal. NerdGlasses and neckties are the usual two attributes. Literal bookworms are AlwaysMale, possibly because BoysLikeCreepyCritters, and prone to have {{Alliterative Name}}s.

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They're a common face in children's entertainment: literal bookworms, tubiform bugs that live inside or surrounded by books. Their default depiction is that of keepers of knowledge, which is followed closely by another portrayal of insatiable book munchers. At times, the two versions overlap when the bookworm has the power to [[InstantExpert acquire knowledge]] by [[IngestingKnowledge eating books instead of reading them]]. The duality is reflected in the design choices. Purely destructive bookworms look like (stylized) regular insects, while it is a rarity for the knowledge-acquiring bookworm to not be a HalfDressedCartoonAnimal. NerdGlasses and neckties are the usual two attributes. Literal bookworms are AlwaysMale, possibly because BoysLikeCreepyCritters, and BoysLikeCreepyCritters. They are either prone to have {{Alliterative Name}}s.
Name}}s, [[ADogNamedDog or to simply be named “Bookworm”]].

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* ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory3'': The keeper of a library of instruction manuals in Sunnyside Daycare is a bookworm whose name is Bookworm.

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* ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory3'': The keeper of a library of instruction manuals in Sunnyside Daycare is a green bookworm with glasses and a bow tie whose name is Bookworm.

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[[caption-width-right:350:[[Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration Eat a good book lately?]]]]

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[[caption-width-right:350:[[Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration Eat a any good book books lately?]]]]
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[[quoteright:350:[[VideoGame/{{Tibia}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tibiammo_enragedbookworm.png]]]]
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->''"A bookworm! A bookworm! I'm nothing but a bookworm! I'm full of science and philosophy! A bookworm! A bookworm! I'm nothing but a bookworm! Nothing ever happens to me!"''
-->-- '''The Bookworm''', ''[[WesternAnimation/MGMOneshotCartoons The Bookworm]]''

They're a common face in children's entertainment: literal bookworms, tubiform bugs that live inside or surrounded by books. Their default depiction is that of keepers of knowledge, which is followed closely by another portrayal of insatiable book munchers. At times, the two versions overlap when the bookworm has the power to [[InstantExpert acquire knowledge]] by [[IngestingKnowledge eating books instead of reading them]]. The duality is reflected in the design choices. Purely destructive bookworms look like (stylized) regular insects, while it is a rarity for the knowledge-acquiring bookworm to not be a HalfDressedCartoonAnimal. NerdGlasses and neckties are the usual two attributes. Literal bookworms are AlwaysMale, possibly because BoysLikeCreepyCritters, and prone to have {{Alliterative Name}}s.

Outside of fiction, "bookworm" is in use as an umbrella term for any and all bugs that eat materials that go into books, such as paper, cloth, leather or glue, or the mold that'll grow on improperly stored books. The bugs are more elusive than the damage they leave behind, so while it's not just one pest that's responsible, it is easy to imagine it is. Among the real-life bookworms are beetles, silverfishes, booklice, cockroaches, moths, and bugs that normally go after wood such as may be incorporated in a bookcase. None of the aforementioned creatures are wormly beyond the larval stage, so the literal bookworm has little in common with them in terms of appearance. That is, the designs of literal bookworms range from earthworms to caterpillars to larvae-as-adults to indeterminable snakelike bugs. By far the most common color for the creature is green and earthworm pink makes for a good second. Literal bookworms may have {{Prehensile Tail}}s to hold their books but more likely are designed to have [[HumanlikeHandAnatomy hands]].

It's tempting to think that the "bookworm" as a literal book-devourer inspired the "{{bookworm}}" as metaphorical book-devourer, but the available evidence suggests it's the other way around. "[[PitifulWorms Worm]]" has a long history of being in use as an insult, particularly in the [[UsefulNotes/ElizabethI Elizabethan era]]. The earliest known mention of the term "bookworm" is in ''Three Proper and Witty Familiar Letters'' from 1580, where it serves as a pejorative reference to people who read a lot. It takes about a century more, in the ''Micrographia'' of 1665, for "bookworm" to refer to a bug. An illustrated entry for "silver-colour'd book-worm" describes and depicts the silverfish.[[note]]As an aside, a section earlier, Hooke relays his observations on a pseudoscorpion or "book scorpion". Pseudoscorpions are found around books because they dine on book-eating bugs. Today, pseudoscorpions may or may not be grouped with real-life bookworms depending on whether bookworms are defined by their occurrence or eating habits.[[/note]] So it would be that the insult "worm" inspired the insult "bookworm" which became a term in its own right that was picked up when a word was needed for book-eating pests. The insult "bookworm" shifted to a neutral meaning during the 19th Century and it seems the reader and the bug found each other thereafter. ''A Phenomenal Fauna'' from 1901 is the first work known to depict a reading worm.

SubTrope of {{Bookworm}}; a literal bookworm is always wormly, so examples of other kinds of reading bugs go on the SuperTrope. Depictions of [[Administrivia/PeopleSitOnChairs real-life bookworms]] and the damage they do also don't qualify for this trope. Compare TermiteTrouble, another destructive bug, and TheShortGuyWithGlasses, who also tends to be short and studious.

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!! Examples
[[foldercontrol]]
[[folder: Advertising]]
* BW the Bookworm is the mascot of Half Price Books. He looks like a green alien caterpillar.
* Ed Word the Bookworm is [=CapEd=]'s Early Childhood Literacy Reading Ambassador. He's a blue-and-white {{muppet}} who visits schools and events to promote reading among children.
* Og the Bookworm is one of the mascots of Primrose Schools. He's a green worm with glasses and a hat and he promotes reading.
* An unnamed green worm with glasses [[https://www.bostoncentral.com/events/bookworm-wednesdays-showcase-cinema/p5652.php is the mascot for]] the ''Bookworm Wednesdays'' program held by American movie theater chain Showcase Cinemas.
* Boekhandel Huyser in Delft in the Netherlands has a bookworm of unusual design as store sign. The bookworm is [[MixAndMatchCritters a dapper human on top and a caterpillar below the waste]]. He's holding a book in his hands and a candle with his tail.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Art]]
* Since 2018, a 4-piece statue of a bookworm has adorned the entrance to the Casey Township Library in Illinois. The four pieces are arranged so that it looks like the bookworm emerges from the ground as if it eating through it.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]
* In "Alice in Bugville" of ''Alice: New Adventures in Wonderland'' #10, Alice finds a bookworm living in her dictionary. He introduces himself as Eustace R. Bookworm and invites her to come to Bugville with him to talk with the other bugs about the impending visit from the exterminator, shrinking her with his own insectisizer invention. With Bookworm's guidance, an agreement is reached that the exterminator will be called off and the bugs stop being pests.
* Merksmir Lettermampf ("Merksmir Lettermunch") from ''Diddl'' is a yellow-and-purple striped bookworm who wears a fez with built-in booklight, a pince-nez, and a bow tie. He lives in the library of Professor [=DiddlDaddl=] Bubblebang in Cheesecakeland, having moved there from Bibliotheca some time prior. He's very knowledgeable due to all the books he's eaten and the one thing he doesn't know, his date of birth, is a sore spot.
* ''ComicBook/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagicIDW'': In "[[Recap/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagicIDWIssue15To16 Ponies in Book Land]]", Twilight's library becomes infested by a bookworm resembling a fat green caterpillar, which begins eating its way through the stories in her books -- not the physical books, but the stories themselves. Twilight, Rarity, Pinkie and Rainbow Dash use magic to pursue it into the books, where they discover that it's devouring stories because none exist about itself and it wants to create a new one by devouring older stories.
* ''ComicBook/{{Shazam}}'': Pre-Crisis Mister Mind is one of the Marvel Family's greatest archfoes... and yet he's an alien worm whose initial design borne of this trope. He's a cartoonish green worm with spectacles and a voicebox around his neck. Though he's not directly linked to literature, as his name indicates, his greatest power is his mind in contrast to the Marvel Family of {{Physical God}}s.
* The Bookworm is an enemy of ComicBook/SpiderHam that appears in "TV or Not TV, [[EitherOrTitle Or... Read a Good Book Lately?]]". He's an earthworm whose parents were librarians and instilled him with a deep love for books. He became a librarian himself, but had to close down the library when television sets became a household standard. Some time thereafter, a book fell on his head and The Bookworm became a low-key RealityWarper with the skill to summon literary figures into existence, order them around, and dismiss them out of existence. In order, he summons [[Literature/TheThreeMusketeers The Three Muskrateers]], Literature/TheRaven, and [[Literature/TheHunchbackOfNotreDame Quasidodo]] to ruin the [[UsefulNotes/EmmyAward Eggy Awards]], destroy the state-of-the-art dish of a new television network, and kill Spider-Ham. Spider-Ham defeats The Bookworm by dropping another book on his head to remove his powers.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Films-Animated]]
* In ''Secret of the Wings'' of ''WesternAnimation/DisneyFairies'', Tinker Bell looks for information on why her wings sparkle in the Library. Specifically, she seeks out the book ''Wingology'', but the pages relevant to her question have just been eaten by a bookworm. Said bookworm quickly makes itself scarce.
* Pico from ''WesternAnimation/TheMagicVoyage'' is a woodworm, but he also functions as a literal bookworm. As much as he eats wood, he eats books and this is why he's so knowledgeable. He meets UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus when the latter wants to propose that the world is a cube rather than flat, at which point Pico jumps in to correct him that the world is an orb. It is the start of a beautiful friendship.
* ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory3'': The keeper of a library of instruction manuals in Sunnyside Daycare is a bookworm whose name is Bookworm.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live-Action Film]]
* In ''Film/TheHuggaBunch'', Bridget Severson seeks a [[FountainOfYouth youth medicine]] for her grandmother and visits the elderly Bookworm in Hugga Land because he is supposed to know everything. While not sympathetic to Bridget's plight, because aging is a part of life, he tells her about the Youngberry Tree in the Country of Shrugs. If Bridget gives her grandmother one of the tree's fruits, she'll become young again. However, the Country of Shrugs is a dangerous place and the Bookworm is confident Bridget won't ever return from it.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]
* The poem "Bookworm" is about a worm who used to eat two books a day until he found that reading them was more fun.
* The poem "Bookworms: How to Kill" by John Dovaston describes bookworms as voracious vermin which only true enemy are the readers that take the books from them.
* The worm, Will, in ''Bad Apple: A Tale of Friendship'' by Edward Hemingway likes to read. When he goes to live inside the apple Mac, he regularly reads him stories.
* There's the creature in the ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' known as the 0.303" Bookworm. This evolved in magical libraries and is capable of eating through a whole shelf of semi-sentient magical texts so quickly that they don't have a chance to respond. The ping and richochet of the 0.303" Bookworm is yet another thing that makes magical libraries a hazardous place to work.
* One entry of ''A Phenomenal Fauna'' by Carolyn Wells is dedicated to bookworms. It's one of the entries with an illustration, which depict bookworms with booklights on their heads. The entry suggests that [[{{pun}} (early) reedbirds]] are their natural enemies.
* In Creator/RichardScarry's book ''Literature/GreatBigSchoolhouse'', the scene in the school library has Lowly Worm looking on from behind books on the bookshelf.
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[[folder:Live Action TV]]
* ''Series/BarneyAndFriends'':
** In Mother Goose's debut episode, unseen bookworms of this sort are heard eating all the pages in her book. she asks Barney and the children to help her remember the rhymes which were in the book so she can write them all down (again).
** Booker T. Bookworm is an orange worm with blue glasses and a green plaid bowtie that works as an imaginary librarian at the school library.
* ''[[Series/HiFive Hi-5 House]]'' has two puppet bookworms named Aristotle and Horace.
* The Bookworm is the mascot and one of the hosts of ''Series/TheBookPlace''.
* One of the main characters of ''Series/WielieWalie'' is Bennie Boekwurm, an elderly bookworm who loves to read stories either in the quiet of his home or to others.
* Benji the Bookworm is the earthworm mascot of ''Series/YourChildCanDiscover'' and participates in various segments.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* ''TabletopGame/{{Cranium}}'': One of the four main characters in the game is Word Worm, a bookish worm who wears glasses and a mortarboard. His card challenges are word problems such as anagrams, spelling words backwards, and word definitions.
* The release of the ''Monster Manual II'' in 1983 introduced bookworms to the world of ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons''. They are tiny worms with {{Lamprey Mouth}}s and ChameleonCamouflage. While harmless to people, bookworms can prove to be the undoing of anyone dependent on books and scrolls, such as magic users. The bookworms' own bane is ink, which they can't digest and which stacks up in their bodies until it poisons them. On the plus side, the ink stored inside their corpses is a potent ingredient for AntiMagic.
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[[folder:Theme Parks]]
* In 1996, Ride/AltonTowers opened Storybook Land, in the middle of which stood a large animatronic bookworm emerging from a storybook. Visitors could press the button on a normal-sized bookstand to make the bookworm speak and move. Storybook Land was closed to be rebuilt into Cbeebies Land at the end of 2013 and the bookworm was sold into individual ownership.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Toys]]
* Professor B. Wormington is a bookworm plushie (knitting pattern) created by Alan Dart. He's an earthworm dressed in a tweed jacket, glasses, and graduate cap, and holding a book.
* The ''Laugh & Learn'' Storybook Rhymes by Fisher Price is an electronic book with a bookworm as spine. The bookworm can sing any of the six songs in the book and some more for numbers, the alphabet, and colors.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]


* In the Living Books adaptation of ''Literature/TheBerenstainBears in the Dark'', clicking on one of the books in the library will cause a glasses-wearing bookworm to pop out, who rubs his tummy in satisfaction and says, "Mm! I love a good book."
* ''VideoGame/{{Bookworm}}''
** We have the titular bookworm Lex, who is an intelligent green bookworm with glasses and a red bowtie. The premise of the game is to feed Lex by creating words with the tiles given to you.
** The sequel, ''VideoGame/BookwormAdventures'', introduces Mirage Xel. Mirage Xel is an EvilCounterpart version of Lex (although Xel says Lex is the evil version) and also is real as a HollywoodMirage. Xel is [[PurpleIsTheNewBlack purple]], wears a black tie and black [[EvilIsAngular pointy]] glasses, and he's the boss of Chapter 7 of Book 2 as the guardian of the Robe of the Unseen.
* ''VideoGame/KingsQuestVIHeirTodayGoneTomorrow'' has Alexander meeting a green, bespectacled bookworm on the Isle of Wonder, where pretty much everything is based on a pun. He lives in what can only be described as a junkyard of books and acts a bit rude at first, but when Alexander returns his "Dangling Participle", he gives him a special, rare book.
* The ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'' Blipbug is based off a bookworm. Its eyes don't have pupils and have the appearance of glasses and its neck has pieces that resemble a bow tie. According to Pokedex entries, Blipbug is a constant collector of information and is very intelligent.
* Enraged Bookworms are enemies encountered in ''VideoGame/{{Tibia}}'' in Yalahar Library during the Shadows of Yalahar Quest. They're fairly weak and turn into fishing bait upon defeat.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Animation]]
* Om Nom and Om Nelle visit the library in "Bookworm" of ''WebAnimation/OmNomStories''. Om Nom is enthusiastic about getting to read a particular book, but upon opening it finds that it is mostly consumed by a pesky purple worm. Said worm proceeds to openly antagonize Om Nom and eat even more books until Om Nelle freezes the both of them.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Comics]]
* Professor Lexicovermus from ''WebComic/AwfulHospital'' is a hyperdimensional bookworm who lives in a book who was [[AndIMustScream once a man.]]
* Socrates's main friend in ''Webcomic/SocratesTheHousefly'' is Bookworm, who's always with his nose in the books and a tad haughty. Socrates regularly asks him for advice.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* Two WesternAnimation/MGMOneshotCartoons feature a literal bookworm, whose vast knowledge comes from him literally devouring books and who [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor wishes his life was more exciting]]. His friends and adversaries are the characters written about in books that are capable of stepping out of the pages.
** In "The Bookworm", the witches from ''Theatre/{{Macbeth}}'' want a bookworm to add to their brew, seemingly as the "blind-worm's sting" ingredient. They enlist the raven from "Literature/TheRaven" to catch the bookworm and are additionally assisted by the other villains of literature. However, the bookworm outsmarts the raven and when by luck the villains get the upper hand, the heroes of literature come to save the bookworm.
** In "The Bookworm Turns", the raven is convinced by Jekyll and Hyde from ''Literature/TheStrangeCaseOfDrJekyllAndMrHyde'' that he needs the bookworm's brain for an intelligence transplant. He captures him relatively easily this time and the transplant is a success, but Hyde wants to experiment further with the bookworm and makes him bigger. With new strength, the bookworm escapes to get revenge on the raven. Jekyll fixes Hyde's mistake by capturing both test subjects through a process that undoes the transplant. The raven settles for being tutored by the bookworm.
* ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'': Debuting in the short "Sniffles And The Bookworm", a worm with glasses is occasionally seen as a companion to Sniffles The Mouse.
* Bosley Bookworm of ''[[WesternAnimation/StrawberryShortcake Strawberry Shortcake's Berry Bitty Adventures]]'' is a bookworm and assistant of Blueberry Muffin at Blueberry Books, a book store and library located in Berry Bitty City. Whenever she needs advice, she knows to ask Bosley.
* Timon and Pumbaa visit the library in "Library Brouhaha" of ''WesternAnimation/TimonAndPumbaa'' with the express purpose of dining on a bookworm. The resident bookworm defends itself by coaxing the duo into making noise time and time again, for which the librarian kicks them out. Another attempt sees all three be crushed by a bookcase, causing them to temporarily be [[TrappedInTVLand transported to book land]] and thereafter be sent to the hospital. While all bandaged up, Timon and Pumbaa attack the bookworm and finally eat it.
* ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures'' has Bookworm, a small, cute, green, bespectacled bookworm who loves reading books as well as eating them as they are his primary food source.
[[/folder]]

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