Readers’ Picks

For most Americans, Henry VIII is remembered for his six wives. But during Henry’s reign — 1509-1547, the state took on a new, oppressive meaning, beheadings and burnings signaled frequent shifts in royal interests, monasteries were closed and priests and nuns turned out to beg for survival. Against this background, English historian and lawyer C. J. Sansom has created five crime novels centered around Matthew Shardlake, a hunchback lawyer, whose skepticism, humanism and determined search for truth reflect the growing intellectual concerns of the period. In “Heartstone,” Sansom’s newest book, Queen Parr asks Shardlake to investigate the suicide of a young teacher, whose two pupils were orphans overseen by Henry’s notorious Court of Wards. Shardlake’s investigation takes place against the threat of a French naval invasion. Shardlake is splendid in his pursuit of justice: His body may be deformed, but he continues to climb John Donne’s “cragged and steep hill” where “truth stands.” In the Tudor world of duplicity, self-enrichment and state terror, he is singular. This is a terrific read. — Leon Graham We take the jet age for granted, forgetting how air travel has changed in our times, how not so long ago we climbed the exterior rolled-up stairways (as in clips of Western dignitaries visiting fledgling African states) to enter planes such as Lockheed’s beautiful Constellation, a huge and graceful plane with propellors and a triple tail that cruised at 300 bumpy miles an hour. But World War II drove jet technology into civilian life and Sam Howe Verhovek’s “Jet Age: The Comet, the 707 and the Race To Shrink the World”describes the people, the culture and the tragedies that shaped the way we fly today. The tale is packed with visonaries like Sir Frank Whittle, the British inventor of the jet engine (photographed examining his slide rule) and Boeing’s Tex Johnston, a skilled test pilot who sold the industry on his company’s 707 with daring stunts and cowboy charm. The story is hilarious, too, with an account of the first mile-high club duo, naked and unceremoniously dumped into icy waters, and considerable space is given to the ire of pilots’ wives at the notion of stewardesses accompanying their mates on every flight. Most dramatically, Verhovek follows the fateful course of the deHavilland Comet, the elegant and awfully flawed British jetliner that raised the hopes and the fears of adventurous and well-heeled travellers the world over. You may never fly again without thinking of these people and their vision and nerve. — Marsden Epworth

Latest News

Wake Robin Inn sold after nearly two years of land-use battles

The Wake Robin Inn in Lakeville has been sold for $3.5 million following nearly two years of land-use disputes and litigation over its proposed redevelopment.

Photo courtesy of Houlihan Lawrence Commercial Real Estate

LAKEVILLE — The Wake Robin Inn, the historic country property at the center of a contentious land-use battle for nearly two years, has been sold for $3.5 million.

The 11.52-acre hilltop property was purchased by Aradev LLC, a hospitality investment firm planning a major redevelopment of the 15,800-square-foot inn. The sale was announced Friday by Houlihan Lawrence Commercial, which represented the seller, Wake Robin LLC.

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Kent commission tackles Lane Street zoning snag
Lane Street warehouse conversion raises zoning concerns in Kent
By Alec Linden

KENT — The Planning and Zoning Commission is working to untangle a long-standing zoning complication affecting John and Diane Degnan’s Lane Street property as the couple seeks approval to convert an old warehouse into a residence and establish a four-unit rental building at the front of the site.

During the commission’s Feb. 12 meeting, Planning and Zoning attorney Michael Ziska described the situation as a “quagmire,” tracing the issue to a variance granted by the Zoning Board of Appeals roughly 45 years ago that has complicated the property’s use ever since.

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Kent P&Z closes High Watch hearing, continues deliberations

Kent Town Hall, where the Planning and Zoning Commission closed a public hearing on High Watch Recovery Center’s permit modification request on Feb. 12

Leila Hawken

KENT — The Planning and Zoning Commission on Feb. 12 closed a long-running public hearing on High Watch Recovery Center’s application to modify its special permit and will continue deliberations at its March meeting.

The application seeks to amend several conditions attached to the addiction treatment facility’s original 2019 permit. High Watch CEO Andrew Roberts, who first presented the proposal to P&Z in November, said the changes are intended to address issues stemming from what he described during last week's hearing as “clumsily written conditions.”

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Kent committee to review Swift House options

The Swift House in Kent has been closed to the public since the COVID-19 pandemic. A newly appointed town committee will review renovation costs and future options for the historic property.

Alec Linden

KENT — Town officials have formed a seven-member committee to determine the future of the shuttered, town-owned Swift House, launching what could become a pivotal decision about whether Kent should invest in the historic property — or divest from it altogether.

The Board of Selectmen made the appointments on Wednesday, Feb. 11, following recent budget discussions in which the building’s costs and long-term viability were raised.

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Kathleen Rosier

Kathleen Rosier

CANAAN — Kathleen Rosier, 92, of Ashley Falls Massachusetts, passed away peacefully with her children at her bedside on Feb. 5, at Fairview Commons Nursing Home in Great Barrington, Massachusetts.

Kathleen was born on Oct. 31,1933, in East Canaan to Carlton and Carrie Nott.

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Carolyn G. McCarthy

Carolyn G. McCarthy

LAKEVILLE — Carolyn G. McCarthy, 88, a long time resident of Indian Mountain Road, passed away peacefully at home on Feb. 7, 2026.

She was born on Sept. 8, 1937, in Hollis, New York. She was the youngest daughter of the late William James and Ruth Anderson Gedge of Indian Mountain Road.

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