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PublishedApril 11, 2019
BUSHNELL ON BOOKS: ‘Victoria Falls’ and ‘Death by Chocolate Malted Milkshake’
James Hornor’s ambitious debut novel about modern male stereotypes and Sarah Graves’ second book in her new 'Death by Chocolate' mystery series
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PublishedApril 9, 2019
Portland’s Café Review marks 30 years of curating poetry from around the world
Founding editor Steve Luttrell is still the driving force behind the publication, which received recognition by the city on Monday.
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PublishedApril 4, 2019
OFF RADAR: ‘Refuge: Poems’
Dave Morrison's newest collection of poems is largely devoted to trying to answer, with characteristic wonderment, the elemental questions that go with his perplexing need to make art.
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PublishedMarch 28, 2019
BUSHNELL ON BOOKS: ‘Logging Towboats and Boom Jumpers’ and ‘Stay Hidden’
Roger Allen Moody writes about the fascinating history of Maine timber harvesting and Paul Doiron has released his ninth Mike Bowditch mystery
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PublishedMarch 27, 2019
Maine illustrator Melissa Sweet earns national children’s book honor
The Carle Honors celebrate her creative vision and dedication.
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PublishedMarch 21, 2019
OFF RADAR: Poems from Alice Persons and Peter Kilgore
“Be There or Be Square” is a pleasant poetic amble through what might be a day’s worth of unhurried reveries on the past and present, and “Quarry: The Collected Poems of Peter Kilgore” offers crisply imagistic poetry of the Maine coast.
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PublishedMarch 14, 2019
BUSHNELL ON BOOKS: ‘Now You See the Sky’ and ‘Bad News Travels Fast’
It is a rare book that makes the reader so uncomfortable that it is hard to read, but even harder to put down.
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PublishedMarch 7, 2019
OFF RADAR: ‘Li Bai Rides a Celestial Dolphin Home’
Tom Sexton’s poetic cosmos spans Eastport to Anchorage, and beyond
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PublishedFebruary 28, 2019
BUSHNELL ON BOOKS: ‘Maine Has Moxie,’ ‘How Do Fairies Have Fun in the Sun?’ and ‘Cinnamon Birds’
Books for young readers offer fun Maine history, fairy adventures and a story of friendship and conservation
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PublishedFebruary 21, 2019
OFF RADAR: The bent fictions of Jefferson Navicky
His fiction is like looking at a stick held half in and half out of the water. It’s straight going into the water. But under the surface, it appears to bend at a weird angle.
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