Nobody can see into the future, but by studying the past, there are directions that politicians and experts should never be allowed to take our society in again.
Arts & Entertainment
Dine Out Maine: Cozy spot brings big German flavors to Portland
Schulte & Herr has become a popular spot for breakfast and lunch.
Signings, etc.
Elizabeth Peavey and Marguerite Robichaux will be at the Portland Public Library Wednesday to talk about their new book “Glorious Slow Going: Maine Stories of Art, Adventure and Friendship.”
NBC missed the boat, then ‘Downton Abbey’ sailed
Comcast Corp.’s NBC television network desperately needs more prime-time hits. But did it let one slip away?
Art Review: A rare look at the grumpy, elusive Degas
“Edgar Degas: The Private Impressionist” features a large number of canceled prints, many student drawings (he studied under Ingres), and a large and interesting group of works by his contemporaries. While the show is supposed to be the Robert Flynn Johnson collection punctuated with a few choice pieces from the PMA, the additions generally eclipse […]
MOVIE REVIEW: ‘Jeff’ takes relationship comedy to deeper, better place
“Jeff, Who Lives at Home” could be just another quirky, abrasive and unconventional relationship comedy, but it’s much better than that.
Joint Farmington exhibit evokes graffiti art
Aerosol artist Tim Clorius and graphic artist Matt W. Moore put on a colorful show at “Free Form Flow: A Celebration of Collaboration”.
Author Q&A: A Maine teacher’s adventures in Kabul
It’s hard for us to believe sometimes that our parents had lives before they started having children. Ann Boyce, of Arundel, was no different.
SOCIETY NOTEBOOK: Expressing Support
Friends of the Fiddlehead Center raise $7,500 to help fund its visual and performing arts and science programs.
BOOK REVIEW: Paradise dissolves, and flight backfires
Lauren Groff’s first book was a wonder and a delight. What a happy relief to discover Groff’s second novel is even better.