This isn’t the first time I have written about geraniums. Perhaps because they
symbolize New England. I love seeing them hanging from pots, filling window
boxes, adding color to a
Host Elizabeth Howard talks with poet and performer Kyle Ducayan, executive
director of the Poetry Project at St. Mark’s Church in the Bowery, about the
purpose of poetry
Grover’s Corners, New Hampshire, located “just across the Massachusetts line:
latitude 42 degrees 40 minutes; longitude 70 degrees 37 minutes,” is the setting
for “Our Town,” Thornton Wilder’s Pulitizer winning
Book sales are up, but indie bookstores are struggling. In this podcast, Lauren
Cerand suggests ways to promote new titles, particularly those published by
independent presses or written by emerging authors.
Host Elizabeth Howard talks to Fred Turner and Mary Beth Meehan about their book
Seeing Silicon Valley: Life Inside a Fraying America, a photographic study of
income disparity.
Podcast host Elizabeth Howard talks to the curator who helped conceived of the
powerful exhibition “Grief and Grievance,” in which Black artists bear witness
to decades of their own challenging experiences.
New podcast host Elizabeth Howard talks to Neal Goren about contemporary opera:
the trends, attracting new audiences, and how opera can be adapted for the
internet.
While many people are reading the cyberpunk, speculative fiction author William
Gibson to gain an insight into how one might imagine the future, why are we
reading Mark Twain’s The
Sorting through a box of letters and photographs, I discovered a rectangular
card with blue text, punched holes and a satin string so it could be hung from a
doorknob.
It’s difficult to imagine living in an environment that doesn’t have a cycle of
seasons. The sense of a beginning and the sense of an ending – the quartet of
Indian lore is enchanting and part of our heritage living in the Lakes Region.
If you want to feel the smile of the Winnipesaukee Spirit, visit the Ellacoya
Barn and