Thursday June 18th 6:30 South Boston Public Library 646 East Broadway 617-268-0180.Free and Open to the Public
Find out more »Thursday June 18th 6:30 South Boston Public Library 646 East Broadway 617-268-0180.Free and Open to the Public
Find out more »Thursday June 18th 6:30 South Boston Public Library 646 East Broadway 617-268-0180.Free and Open to the Public
Find out more »Thursday June 18th 6:30 South Boston Public Library 646 East Broadway 617-268-0180.Free and Open to the Public
Find out more »Need some serious inspiration for your next road trip? Join the Tannery Series and award-winning author Andre Dubus III, as we take a turn on America’s storied byways, meandering from the glamour of Hollywood boulevards to the gritty streets of Massachusetts mill towns. Dubus will read and discuss the role of travel--from epic migrations to summer road-trips--in […]
Find out more »Need some serious inspiration for your next road trip? Join the Tannery Series and award-winning author Andre Dubus III, as we take a turn on America’s storied byways, meandering from the glamour of Hollywood boulevards to the gritty streets of Massachusetts mill towns. Dubus will read and discuss the role of travel--from epic migrations to summer road-trips--in […]
Find out more »Need some serious inspiration for your next road trip? Join the Tannery Series and award-winning author Andre Dubus III, as we take a turn on America’s storied byways, meandering from the glamour of Hollywood boulevards to the gritty streets of Massachusetts mill towns. Dubus will read and discuss the role of travel--from epic migrations to summer road-trips--in […]
Find out more »Need some serious inspiration for your next road trip? Join the Tannery Series and award-winning author Andre Dubus III, as we take a turn on America’s storied byways, meandering from the glamour of Hollywood boulevards to the gritty streets of Massachusetts mill towns. Dubus will read and discuss the role of travel--from epic migrations to summer road-trips--in […]
Find out more »Certain books were “banned in Boston” at least as far back as 1651, when one William Pynchon wrote a book criticizing Puritanism.