For activists trying to save Sears from development, the clock is ticking.
Issues & Politics
By Richard HalletFrom our May 1960 issue A woman in so exclusive a...
The centerpiece of a sprawling new veterans’ memorial park and tourist attraction sparked a debate over the character of the community — and spurred fresh plans for the town’s future.
For more than 40 years, the tribes in Maine have had to play by different rules than other indigenous groups across the country.
When the owners of Songbird Farm called foul, Murray Plumb & Murray lent legal expertise.
Paddling to the newly renamed islands at the mouth of the Bagaduce River, one writer tugs on the frayed threads of Maine's Black history.
As Maine grapples with age-old, freshly relevant issues of livability, growth, and belonging, an inquisitive look at a complicated word.
And does it matter? A look at the red-listing of Maine’s iconic export — and the fallout.
A new book looks at how Bill Cohen’s 650-mile campaign jaunt became not only a success story, but also a Maine political tradition.
Centuries after their incorporations, York and Kittery still can’t agree where one ends and the other begins.
The state’s surprisingly visible CDC director has a complex relationship with ego, a mean waffle recipe, and...political ambitions?
Maine was the first state to eliminate the possibility of parole. Now, a hard-nosed state legislator and a once-incarcerated PhD student are making the case that parole deserves a second chance.