Whether you're venturing out into the world or hanging out on your porch, summer is better with a good book. On Friday mornings through August, we’ll feature an interview with an author from New England who’s got a new novel out for those lazy days in the sun. As the season progresses, you can hear each interview archived here and start your summer reading list.
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The Greenfield writer and retired lawyer started the novel, "Helen In Trouble," long before the reversal of Roe v. Wade
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Our summer fiction series continues with an interview with author Katie Hafner.
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In Talty's new collection of short stories, "Night of the Living Rez," readers encounter David, a Penobscot boy living on a reservation in Maine, in two periods of his life — as a mischievous kid and an adult grappling with trauma from his past.
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Vermont writer Archer Mayor wears many hats. After finishing more than 40 mysteries set in the Brattleboro area, Mayor says he will pause his writing to perform more death investigating for the State of Vermont. His forthcoming book, "Fall Guy" is due out in late September.
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Stinson's new e-book, "Venus of Chalk," adds a new twist to the classic road-trip novel.
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David Gillham's new novel, "Shadows of Berlin," tells the story of a Holocaust survivor who is working through the trauma she endured in Germany while she builds a new life in New York.
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West Hartford, Connecticut, author Ethan Rutherford says his latest collection of short stories, “Farthest South,” is about “the fever dream of…
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Bennington County, Vermont, is home to novelist Thomas Henry Pope. His latest novel is a spy thriller featuring a journalist on a quest for truth,…
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In "A Natural History of Transition," author Callum Angus writes a collection of short stories about transgender experiences through a magical realism…
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"Past Repair" is a new collection of poetry by Northampton, Massachusetts, resident Carol Edelstein. It's her third book, with more than 80 poems that…