The holidays shine a light on marine workers’ hidden talents and passions.
Arts & Leisure
Opinions, advisories, and musings from the length and breadth of Maine
In Catherine Armsden’s Dream House, an architect dissects her childhood home to make sense of her past.
From “Farmstead at the Crossroads,” by John Lovell, in our December 1979 issue.
A new documentary reveals the man long at the helm of WoodenBoat magazine, who helped revive a dying craft.
Donn Fendler was 12 years old in July 1939, when a storm separated him from his group on top of Mount Katahdin. After Donn's recent passing, we asked John Thurlow to share his memories of his friend.
An unconventional sculptor (and a marine biology student) on bridging the art-and-science divide.
We asked our contributors to throw skepticism out the window and float a few moonshot proposals that’d impact Maine for the better.
From the essay “Aroostook Yesterdays,” by Anne Hannan, in our November 1956 issue.
A longtime sportsman faces down illness — and heads out into the field one last time.
On her third record, Portland singer-songwriter Sorcha Cribben-Merrill gets intimate.
The longtime New Yorker writer butchered his takedown of the Polar Bears’ cafeteria. Here’s how.