by Alex Thill | Sep 18, 2022 | Food & Drink, In Print
Concord now has three microbreweries, each with its own flavor Not so long ago, Concord was devoid of any New England-style double IPAs made right here in the city. Extra-hoppy lagers and fruity sour ales were exotic drinks made in far-away breweries that only arrived...
by MAX SCHEINBLUM | Sep 16, 2022 | Calendar, In Print
Welcome to autumn in New Hampshire, where the leaves star, visitors descend and the season of fairs and festivals is in full bloom. If you’re looking for a place to start your exploration of this iconic season, we suggest visiting the Warner Fall Foliage Festival One...
by Joseph Steinfield | Sep 16, 2022 | Arts, In Print
Essays in ‘Time for Everything’ by Joseph Steinfield bring readers on a personal tour of history and connection Time for Everything picks up where Joseph Steinfield’s first book, Claremont Boy, left off, with tributes to friends and heroes and essays on being Jewish,...
by Compiled by Sarah Pearson | Sep 16, 2022 | Arts, In Print
As summer fades and fall arrives, it’s perhaps time for a change of scenery in your reading selections. Turn the page with NH writers. Deep Water By Kenneth Sheldon In the waning days of World War I, William K. Dean was brutally murdered, his body hog-tied and dumped...
by Ray Duckler | Sep 16, 2022 | Home & Garden, In Print
In a Boscawen backyard that evokes images of Jack and the Beanstalk, farmer Steve Geddes is again growing a beast of a gourd that could top 2,500 pounds And you think kids grow up fast? Check out Steve Geddes’ baby, in his vast garden behind his house in Boscawen....
by Byron Champlin | Sep 15, 2022 | History, In Print
Not every act of heroism takes place in battle. Concord’s only 20th-century recipient of the Congressional Medal of Honor offers a case in point. On the afternoon of Aug. 29, 1916, Charles Willey was a 27-year-old warrant officer, a machinist aboard the armored...