-
The acclaimed conductor Seiji Ozawa died Tuesday. For 29 years he was the music director for the Boston Symphony Orchestra. His tenure brought global attention to both the orchestra and to Tanglewood, where Ozawa was once a student.
-
The late author-illustrator, creator of Pierre and Where the Wild Things Are, loved whistling, Mozart, and Mickey Mouse curios. His trademark whimsy can be found in the new book Ten Little Rabbits.
-
Some of those tips: people should focus on reading books about topics they’re interested in, put less pressure on themselves, and, if they’re bilingual, try to find books of another language online.
-
The new regulations for the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, or NAGPRA, require institutions like museums and schools to obtain "free, prior, and informed consent" before exhibiting human remains and cultural objects, or giving people access to them or conducting research on them.
-
Queerlective, which uses art as a tool for community building, organized the event at the New Hampshire Audubon’s Massabesic Center.
-
M.T. Anderson counts on the portion of him that is still childlike to write books that capture young readers' imaginations.
-
Chefs from Milford and Exeter were also nominated for the prestigious culinary honor.
-
"The Sister Detectives" is a bilingual storybook, in Chinese and English, penned and illustrated by two sisters from Orange, Massachusetts, with guidance from their elders.
-
“Our Feet Began to Pray” by the Afro-Semitic Experience releases Jan. 19.
-
At a meeting Monday, some Littleton residents hoped for an apology after months of turmoil over public art projects and the local LGBTQ+ community.