FARMINGTON – A more than century-old barn burned to the ground after a fire broke out early Thursday morning in Farmington, killing a horse and leaving the family-owned farm operation in ruins.
December 2011
Fire damages Whitefield home; man escapes with minor burns
WHITEFIELD – The lone occupant of a Rockland Road home heavily damaged by fire Thursday night escaped the burning building with minor burns and smoke inhalation.
Police pursue leads in missing girl case
It’s been two weeks since 20-month-old Ayla Reynolds disappeared. Her mother went on TV on Thursday and said she has questions only Ayla’s father can answer.
TRAVELIN’ MAINE(RS): Good grub, Great pub . . . Who needs the post office?
If Luke Duplessis could turn every post office location that is closing into a Mainely Brews, people would happily forget about the mail.
After several friends and readers of this column told us how much they like Mainely Brews Tavern, in Waterville’s old post office, we scheduled a visit last week. This is a fun place with a great pub atmosphere, superb micro-brews, and a surprising (and enticing) menu.
Poll: Americans optimistic about 2012
78 percent of Americans are hopeful for what 2012 will bring for their families and the country, according to a new Associated Press-GfK poll, though most say 2011 was a year they would rather forget.
“MICRO”: A thriller about science gone wrong
“Micro” is a new, posthumous story from the late Michael Crichton, who died in 2008, and finished by Richard Preston, author of the non-fiction best-seller “The Hot Zone.” It’s a thriller about a biotech company in Hawaii and a group of students who end up stranded and endangered in a rain forest.
Local writer to sign new book at Augusta motorsports show
George Campbell of Turner will be signing copies of his new book, “Busch North Scene: The Busch Years 1987-2007,” at the Northeast Motorsports Expo being held Jan. 6-8 in Augusta.
“SALVAGE THE BONES”: Clinging to hardscrabble dreams in Mississippi
If it had not caught the attention of a handful of important readers, Jesmyn Ward’s “Salvage the Bones” would most likely have quietly faded into obscurity; many worthy books do. Now, however, this novel about a poor Mississippi family in the weeks leading up to 2005’s Hurricane Katrina has a prominent place in bookstores and boasts the gold medallion that comes with winning the 2011 National Book Award.
BOOKS: The Best Mysteries of 2011
The best crime fiction offers equal parts entertainment and social commentary — stories that we remember long after the final chapter.