Sure, Boston Globe TV critic Matthew Gilbert watches Orange Is the New Black and Mad Men by night, but by day he has written an utterly charming book about how his distaste for dogs morphed into love for his own dog, Toby, who taught him that it's okay for life, relationships, to get intimate and messy. OFF THE LEASH is his homage to Toby, and even non dog lovers will love such descriptions in his work as a pack of…
Find out more »Sure, Boston Globe TV critic Matthew Gilbert watches Orange Is the New Black and Mad Men by night, but by day he has written an utterly charming book about how his distaste for dogs morphed into love for his own dog, Toby, who taught him that it's okay for life, relationships, to get intimate and messy. OFF THE LEASH is his homage to Toby, and even non dog lovers will love such descriptions in his work as a pack of…
Find out more »Sure, Boston Globe TV critic Matthew Gilbert watches Orange Is the New Black and Mad Men by night, but by day he has written an utterly charming book about how his distaste for dogs morphed into love for his own dog, Toby, who taught him that it's okay for life, relationships, to get intimate and messy. OFF THE LEASH is his homage to Toby, and even non dog lovers will love such descriptions in his work as a pack of…
Find out more »Sure, Boston Globe TV critic Matthew Gilbert watches Orange Is the New Black and Mad Men by night, but by day he has written an utterly charming book about how his distaste for dogs morphed into love for his own dog, Toby, who taught him that it's okay for life, relationships, to get intimate and messy. OFF THE LEASH is his homage to Toby, and even non dog lovers will love such descriptions in his work as a pack of…
Find out more »Boston Poet Laureate Danielle Legros Georges is tasked with raising the status of poetry in the everyday consciousness of Bostonians, acting as an advocate for poetry, language, and the arts. What better place to be raising that status than right past the PULSE Cafe in the Quincy Market section of Faneuil Hall Marketplace. Come hear her and Carpenter Poets Joe Bergin and Bill Thibodeau entertain with poetry. You won't be sorry. The poems of Danielle -- a truly likable, approachable person…
Find out more »Boston Poet Laureate Danielle Legros Georges is tasked with raising the status of poetry in the everyday consciousness of Bostonians, acting as an advocate for poetry, language, and the arts. What better place to be raising that status than right past the PULSE Cafe in the Quincy Market section of Faneuil Hall Marketplace. Come hear her and Carpenter Poets Joe Bergin and Bill Thibodeau entertain with poetry. You won't be sorry. The poems of Danielle -- a truly likable, approachable person…
Find out more »Boston Poet Laureate Danielle Legros Georges is tasked with raising the status of poetry in the everyday consciousness of Bostonians, acting as an advocate for poetry, language, and the arts. What better place to be raising that status than right past the PULSE Cafe in the Quincy Market section of Faneuil Hall Marketplace. Come hear her and Carpenter Poets Joe Bergin and Bill Thibodeau entertain with poetry. You won't be sorry. The poems of Danielle -- a truly likable, approachable person…
Find out more »Boston Poet Laureate Danielle Legros Georges is tasked with raising the status of poetry in the everyday consciousness of Bostonians, acting as an advocate for poetry, language, and the arts. What better place to be raising that status than right past the PULSE Cafe in the Quincy Market section of Faneuil Hall Marketplace. Come hear her and Carpenter Poets Joe Bergin and Bill Thibodeau entertain with poetry. You won't be sorry. The poems of Danielle -- a truly likable, approachable person…
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.