The book, commissioned by the museum, focuses on what the art world lost in the 1990 theft.
Books
In ‘Our Beloved Kin,’ Lisa Brooks revisits the conflict between New England’s colonists and Native Americans
It raises the question – who were the real savages?
Book review: ‘Class Matters’ explores a power that has shaped our nation but is only lately being openly acknowledged
Historian Steve Fraser uses iconic events, documents and images from American history as his raw material for six essays on why class matters.
Book review: ‘Oriana Fallaci: The Journalist, the Agitator, the Legend’
Cristina De Stefano’s biography, translated from the Italian by Marina Harss, is a thorough, compelling portrait of the tenacious Italian writer.
Book review: ‘Fade to Black’ a can’t-put-it-down thriller from master of craft
Dave Rosenfelt and his heroic cop, Doug Brock, deliver a deliciously dark, sinister, twisty tale.
Ned Bachus’s memoir explores the challenges faced by first-generation community college students
Many non-traditional students have persevered through intense hardships – including immigration, homelessness, violence and financial pressures – to get to college.
Book review: Lloyd Weber is over the top in new memoir
Andrew Lloyd Webber, creator of ‘Cats,’ ‘Phantom of the Opera’ and more, reflects on a life in musical theater.
‘Maine in World War I’ is a worthy entry in history series
The participation of state historian Earle Shettleworth Jr. brings credibility to this photo-centric accounting.
From away and gone forever, Elaine Ford proves she knew Maine in posthumously published stories
The launch of ‘This Time Might Be Different’ will also celebrate Ford’s life.
Book review: How Picasso’s ‘she-devils’ changed art forever
In “Picasso and the Painting That Shocked the World,” by Miles J. Unger, explores the origins of the artist’s revolutionary painting of prostitutes that is credited with launching cubism.