10.01.15

In the garden or the studio, Emma Young isn’t the sort to look for shortcuts.

By Erin Ryerson

10.01.15

It is a singular variety of good fortune to dwell in one place that you love for many years. To watch the mail-order twigs you and your best friend planted grow into mature creatures. For that is what plants are – creatures – when you live with them for ten or twenty years. Or more. If you don’t believe it, you have not cohabited with a wisteria.

By Paul Schneider

10.01.15

A good craftsman never blames his tools. Especially if he makes them himself.

By Alison L. Mead

10.01.15

An unusual mid-century home with an unusual mid-century story gets a facelift.

By Beth Edwards Harris

10.01.15

There are dog people, and cat people, and horse people, and bird people. And then there are the people who never saw a pet they didn’t love. Or at least try to love.

By Shirley Mayhew

10.01.15

By Paul Karasik

10.01.15

On a seemingly food-obsessed Island, is it any surprise that there are more winter cooking classes than you can shake a frozen fish stick at?

10.01.15

Small is beautiful. The New Small House, by Katie Hutchison.(The Taunton Press)

10.01.15

You reap what you sow, but not what you sew – which may explain what happened to Andrew Woodruff’s shirt in this classic portrait of classic farmer style at Whippoorwill Farm.

10.01.15

If all goes well, local biologists will soon be growing gold in local waters. Scientists with the Martha’s Vineyard Shellfish Group and the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) have been breeding golden mussels, a unique-hued version of the common mussel that they hope will boost the Island’s nascent farmed mussel industry.

By Sara Brown

10.01.15

When I arrived at the beach on November 3, 1979 this message was scratched into the dirt of the parking lot: LUCIANO WAS HERE, 22, 28, 36.

By Kib Bramhall

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