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TRAVELIN’ MAINE(RS): Head to New Gloucester and have yourself a Merry Shaker Christmas

Q: What do people from Georgia, Rhode Island, Iowa, Colorado, Wisconsin, California, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and New Jersey know that you don’t?

A: They know that Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village in New Gloucester is an amazing place. There were people at Shaker Village from each of those states, as well as England, on the October morning we visited.

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BOOK SIGNING in Augusta: Donn Fendler

AUGUSTA — Lithgow Public Library will sponsor an event with Donn Fendler as he gives a presentation on his newest book, “Lost Trail: Nine Days Alone in the Wilderness,” along with co-author Lynn Plourde and the graphic novel’s illustrator Ben Bishop.

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TRAVELIN’ MAINE(RS): Room with a View: Pamper yourself at the Camden Harbour Inn

Our online dictionary defines “splurge” this way: “to indulge oneself in some luxury or pleasure, especially a costly one.” The dictionary’s example is perfect for this review: “They splurged on a trip to Europe.”
The Camden Harbour Inn and its restaurant, Natalie’s, is a luxurious splurge with many amenities that reminds us of Europe, but it’s a whole lot cheaper than traveling to Europe!
Our plan was to write a single column about the inn and restaurant, but we couldn’t stop writing once we got started. So today you get the inn — next week the restaurant.

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“AUGUST GALE: A Father and Daughter’s Journey Into the Storm”

“August Gale: A Father and Daughter’s Journey Into the Storm” by Barbara Walsh reads like a suspense-filled work of fiction. Instead, it’s a gripping family saga in which Walsh connects the dots between a long-ago storm at sea and her grandfather’s abandonment of her father.
Walsh is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who lives in Winthrop. Her new, thoroughly researched book of personal nonfiction is so intriguingly readable that it’s likely to be a chart-topper in this state and elsewhere.
“August Gale” begins with an incident that, like others in this book, seems to border on the supernatural.

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TRAVELIN’ MAINE(RS): Dining at DaVinci’s is definitely delicious

The Travelin Maine(rs), George and Linda Smith of Mount Vernon, have spent their lifetimes enjoying all that Maine has to offer. Now they’ll tell you all about it — their favorite inns, restaurants, trips, activities, experiences, and travel books and websites — in their own personal style. They’ll be offering anecdotes, tips and all the […]

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BUSHNELL ON BOOKS: New books describe a Maine of the past, designing the ‘Virginia’

SALT & PINES: TALES FROM BYGONE MAINE
Edited by Jeanne Mason and D.L. Soucy
The History Press, 2011, 192 pages, $19.99
ISBN 978-1-60949-368-4

Jeanne Mason and D.L. Soucy have a good idea. They are collecting stories about “what it was like to live in Maine’s bygone days,” capturing vivid memories while aging folks are still around to tell tales of logging, fishing, farming and growing up in the 1920s-50s.