Maine poems edited and introduced by Megan Grumbling.
Leslie Bridgers
Columnist
Leslie Bridgers is a columnist for the Portland Press Herald, writing about Maine culture, customs and the things we notice and wonder about in our everyday lives. Originally from Connecticut, Leslie came to Maine by way of Bowdoin College and never left. She joined the Portland Press Herald in 2011 as a reporter and spent seven years as the paper’s features editor, overseeing coverage of arts, entertainment and food.
Best-Sellers: ‘The Passenger,’ ‘Go-To Dinners’
The current top-selling fiction and nonfiction books at Nonesuch Books in South Portland.
Society Notebook: Children’s Museum & Theatre hosts adult costume party
The institution may start holding more After Dark events, so grown-ups can explore on their own.
Art review: ‘Morphing Medium’ will widen your view of photography
The show at the Maine Museum of Photographic Arts crams in examples of many variations of the art form.
‘The Banshees of Inisherin’: When old friendship goes violently awry
The Irish writer-director Martin McDonagh has earned an adoring audience for his ability to find grace amid the grotesque. With films like “In Bruges” and “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,” he’s been rapturously received for his auteurist signatures, which include extravagant profanity, wickedly caustic humor, and a penchant for putting his characters into alternately amusing […]
Movie review: ‘Weird: The Al Yankovic Story’ takes biopic myth and parodies it
It only makes sense that Al Yankovic’s biopic would be a parody of biopics. So “Weird: The Al Yankovic Story” is anything but the A-Z story of the song parodist who is perhaps not technically the best but arguably went on to become the most famous accordion player in an extremely specific genre of music. […]
Theater review: Portland Stage packs ‘Sherlock Holmes’ with action and comedy
The live show runs through Nov. 20 and also will be available online.
Indie Film: Crescent Beach stands in for Yosemite in Hulu series ‘Wild Crime’
The second season of the true crime series, produced by South Portland’s Lone Wolf Media, came out last week.
Society Notebook: Wayside pulls back the curtain on its food programs
A party at its Portland warehouse included tours of the facility.
Art review: Exploring the Black experience and the human condition at Cove Street
‘Stay Black & Die’ and ‘Worry Later’ are up at the Portland gallery for about another month.