Maine

Lady in Maine Insists on Being Stubborn; Refuses to Return 'Obscene' Sex Book to Local Library

Overdue
via wmtw.com
Overdue

A 64-year-old woman named JoAn Karkos from Maine stole a book from the Lewiston Public Library and now she won't give it back because she's afraid it would fall into the wrong hands if she did. The book is It's Perfectly Normal: Changing Bodies, Growing Up, Sex and Sexual Health, which, according to Publishers Weekly, features "two characters—an easygoing bird and an apprehensive bee" and includes charming watercolor-and-pencil art that is "alternately playful and realistic (and occasionally graphic)." (This comes via Bookslut.)

Ms. Karkos has been critical of the book for a while: In September 2007, she checked out two copies of It's Perfectly Normal and refused to return them, paying the libraries for the cost of the books and including a note that read, "I have been sufficiently horrified of the illustrations and sexually graphic, amoral, abnormal contents.  read more »

Clinton Collapse in Maine Is the Worst of the Bunch

Hillary Clinton campaigning in Maine on Saturday.
Getty Images
Hillary Clinton campaigning in Maine on Saturday.

A bad weekend for Hillary Clinton just got a whole lot worse.

Along with her husband and her daughter, Clinton had campaigned aggressively in Maine, with an eye toward blunting the impact of Barack Obama’s expected Saturday night sweep of Louisiana, Nebraska and Washington and in an effort to avoid being shut out for the entire month leading up to the Ohio and Texas primaries.  read more »

Maine Madness

Maine Madness

An on-the-ground source (a.k.a. my sister) at the only caucus site in Maine's largest city reports that turnout is astronomically high, almost certain to shatter any previous record.

Caucus-goers began assembling outside Portland High School well before 2:00, when registration was to begin. Two separate lines on either side of the school snaked back at least several blocks. Organizers, my sister reports, seemed unprepared for the onslaught -- especially when wet snow began falling around 2:00, which agitated the already impatient masses.  read more »

This Weekend: Obama's Advantages, Hillary's Big Chance in Maine

This Weekend: Obama's Advantages, Hillary's Big Chance in Maine
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Four states will hold Democratic nominating contests this weekend. Overall, Barack Obama has the clear advantage in most of them, but Hillary Clinton’s campaign would dearly like to avoid a sweep—and has been working overtime to pull out a face-saving win in one state in particular.

Here’s what it looks like:

Saturday

Louisiana primary:

Even after Katrina, which may have reduced the overall influence of black voters in this state, Barack Obama is in a strong position here.  read more »

Public Financing Can Smash Wall of Money

John McCain.
Hai Knafo
John McCain.

After Congress passed a set of weak lobbying reforms following the Jack Abramoff scandal, Senator Jo  read more »

A Baseball Writer’s Day Job: 50 Years at The New Yorker

Roger Angell (b. 1920) has been proclaimed the greatest in the game.
John Henry Angell
Roger Angell (b. 1920) has been proclaimed the greatest in the game.

When I met him at the Times Square offices of The New Yorker, Roger Angell—who’s just pu  read more »

Madison Avenue Makeover: Star Chef Gives New Personality

Renewed shine at a reliable standby: There
James Hamilton
Renewed shine at a reliable standby: There

I’ve never really warmed to Eleven Madison Park.  read more »

Breaking Times Styles News: Bruce Pask Still Hasn't Shaved

On the downtown streets of New York, in the hipster hangouts of Los Angeles and on college campuses in between, the young and style-conscious are affecting a look that until recently could not claim to be either. In the few years since Luke Wilson sported a full beard as an anachronistic oddball in ''The Royal Tenenbaums,'' it has shaken off its fusty image as the badge of the out-of-date guy who refuses to make concessions to fashion.... ...And with their fully furry chins Ariel Foxman and Bruce Pask, the editor in chief and the style director, respectively, of Cargo magazine, the metrosexual manifesto, seem now to be endorsing a lumberjack ideal.
— Thursday Styles, March 23, 2006
On city streets, too, trends in scruff have reached new levels of unruliness, a backlash, some beard enthusiasts say, against the heightened grooming expectations that were unleashed with the rise of metrosexuality as a cultural trend. Men both straight and gay, it appears, want to feel rough and manly.... Bruce Pask, the style director of Cargo magazine, grew a beard on a vacation in Maine, "to blend in with the locals,'' he said. Back in the city he found that his mangy Maine growth needed tending."What I love about it is, the alarm goes off, I shower, dress and am out of the house in 20 minutes," he said. ''But zero maintenance is a lie.''
— Thursday Styles, April 28, 2005

Welliver Captured Nature’s Logic With a Serenely Intractable Vision

Neil Welliver
Private Collection, Chicago, Courtesy Alexandre Gallery, NY
Neil Welliver

Neil Welliver, the American artist who died last spring at the age of 75, was one hell of a painter,  read more »

Globe-Trotting Chef's Detour Not Too Far Off the Fast Lane

The two men in black loitering outside Richard Meier’s glass tower, hard by the West Side Highway,  read more »

Whatcha Readin'?: Summer Flings

After writing his memoirs, Bill Clinton has plenty of time this summer to read.
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After writing his memoirs, Bill Clinton has plenty of time this summer to read.

Back when summer actually meant a few months of relaxing and down time to New Yorkers, one of the mo  read more »

Summer Flings

Heidi Klum
Getty Images
Heidi Klum

Back when summer actually meant a few months of relaxing and down time to New Yorkers, one of the mo  read more »

Two Wonderful Shows: Painter Alex Katz Having Big Summer

For the American painter Alex Katz (born 1927), this has been a remarkable summer.  read more »

Two Wonderful Shows: Painter Alex Katz Having Big Summer

Big plein-air ambitions: Alex Katz's Walking on the Beach, 2002
Farnsworth Art Museum
Big plein-air ambitions: Alex Katz's Walking on the Beach, 2002

For the American painter Alex Katz (born 1927), this has been a remarkable summer.  read more »

Laurent Tourondel's BLT Fish: A Seafood Lover's Paradise

"His name is Otto," said the waiter, setting down a two-pound red snapper in front of us.Otto drew s  read more »

Dining with Moira Hodgson

Fresh and Simple Cuisine IsGramercy Tavern's Winning Formula  read more »

At National Academy, Rather Calm Rendition Of Our Great Storms

Almost everyone has a story to tell about being caught in a storm, and accounts of storms are as var  read more »

Painter John Walker Evokes Maine Coast

For the many people, whether tourists or natives, whose favoritememories of paintings of Maine are l  read more »

Crime Blotter

Armed Robbers Hold UpTony Madison Ave. Boutique  read more »

Recipe for a Wrenching Novel: Comic Delivery, Somber Content

The Summer Guest , by Justin Cronin. The Dial Press, 369 pages, $24.  read more »

Son of Maine Pig Farmer Hams It Up in Hammy Thriller

Match , a comedy-thriller with an old queen who's not exactly underplayed by Frank Langella, has ope  read more »

A Commuter's Paradise Nudes in a Maine Garden

A couple of years ago, in the summer of 2001, the Caldbeck Gallery in Rockland, Me., mounted an exhi  read more »

A Commuter's Paradise Nudes in a Maine Garden

A couple of years ago, in the summer of 2001 Some of the snow pictures look so fresh they could've b  read more »

Fairfield Porter Gets Some of What Critics Owe Him

Sometimes it takes New York art museums an absurdly long time to recognize the importance of a major  read more »

Down With Down With Love!

Aw, shucks-I really wanted to like Down with Love.  read more »

Painter John Walker Captures the Light Of Maine's Coast

This is mud season in Maine, where not only ice and snow but earth itself seems to melt beneath one'  read more »

Painter Lois Dodd, Overlooked by Era, Finally Is Fêted

Let's face it: There's a class of highly accomplished American painters whose work has been consiste  read more »

Dining out with Moira Hodgson

A Fresh Face in TribecaLives Up to Its Name  read more »

Dodd's Enchanting Nudes: Manhattan Meets Maine

The American painter Lois Dodd (born 1927) has been afamiliar presence on the  read more »

Fried Chicken With Lavender? Clove Spikes Summer Tastes

"You want me to say, 'I love you?'" the elderly man at the next table asked the woman across from hi  read more »

Crime Motto of the Week: Take Time for Prep Time

The crook didn't display a weapon at any point during the incident; when you're that well prepared,  read more »

Expressionist Walker Takes on Maine and War

The English-born painter John Walker, whose work iscurrently the subject of a compelling exhibition  read more »

The $500 Question: Is Ducasse Really Worth It?

It's been just over six months since Alain Ducasse opened his restaurant in the Essex House, setting  read more »

Elegy for The $treet

On Dec. 7, the grim news came that Fox had canceled The Street –pardon me, The $treet .  read more »

Emily Nelligan Rescued From Charcoal Island

At the age of 76, the American artist Emily Nelligan has suddenly been "discovered." Ms.  read more »

Daring to Date on an Island of Survivors

"I think you should write about your dating life," my father told me the other night over dinner wit  read more »

A Tale of Two Operas: Puccini's Pop Hit, Sousa's Dud

In opera, as anyone who has ever tried to write for this slippery medium knows, the fundamental conf  read more »

Arguably Authentic Bellew Showcases Irish Cuisine

You never hear people say, "Let's have Irish food tonight" the way they might say, "Let's have Itali  read more »

Rudy Burckhardt, Artist, Kept to His Own Agenda

Sinclair Lewis once said that nobody ever got to be famous in America without wanting it very badly.  read more »

A Simple New NoHo Star With a Mediterranean Flair

Five Points, a bright blue and white outpost on a scruffy street in NoHo, is named after a notorious  read more »

A Boy's Life in Scotland … This Summer's Scream

A Boy's Life in ScotlandFrom a 20-hour, six-installment Chinese opera at Lincoln Center, to a stage  read more »

Newt, Bill Could Learn From Speaker Tom Reed

Public opinion poll results may be what they talk about on the Sunday morning yak-yak programs, but  read more »

Praising Marsden Hartley, Great American Painter

Of the artists who made up the first generation of American modernist painters in the early years of  read more »

The Rich Are Different: They're Shiftless Brutes!

Who, exactly, is it in those stretch limos, looking out at us from smoked glass windows as they turn  read more »