The Winter Reading Issue 2020

Dec 23-29, 2020 / Vol. 26 / No. 13
In ‘Soul,’ Poet and College Student Devyn Thompson Faces Fear and Embraces Freedom; Writer Howard Norman and Artist Annie Bakst Partner on a Graphic Novel; Burlington Poet Stephen Cramer Pays Homage to Chilies and Hot Sauce

New England Culinary Institute to Close Its Doors

Updated December 28, 2020. New England Culinary Institute has announced that it will discontinue all credit-bearing programs, effectively closing the 40-year-old Montpelier-based culinary school after its current students complete their degrees. The undated website announcement signed by NECI president Milan Milasinovic states that no specific closing date has been set, but that the school expects…

Book Review: ‘In My Unknowing,’ Chard deNiord

What happens as we reach closer to the veil and cross over? This question has tortured poets, philosophers and spiritual seekers for millennia. And while great thinkers and faithful devotees tend to use logical systems and religion to answer this eternal question, the poets revel in doubt and speculation. Chard deNiord, Vermont’s poet laureate from…

Soundbites: Rubblebucket to Perform at Highlight House Party

Here we are, on the precipice of a New Year’s Eve like none we’ve ever experienced. I know I’m getting ahead of myself a smidge, because the big night isn’t until next week. But next week’s music section will be dedicated solely to recapping the year’s best local albums. I’m particularly pleased with this year’s…

Letters to the Editor (12/23/20)

Smoking Gun? [Re “Weinberger Knew of Burlington Police Chief’s Anonymous Twitter Account,” December 15]: There is one way to get to the bottom of the mayor’s apparently false account of the actions he claims to have taken when he learned of the chief’s online activities. If he took the chief’s gun and badge, there would…

Western Terrestrials, Back in the Saddle of a Fever Dream

(Self released, digital) I love when a record has a big mood. And if the two overriding themes driving that mood are outer space and the lonesome West? Yippee ki-yay, parental fornicator! Vermont’s oddball alt-country outfit Western Terrestrials deliver the peanut butter and jelly of genre tropes on their newest album, Back in the Saddle…

Jenny Jaron, ‘Up and Down’

(Self-released, digital) In 2017, music critic Ann Powers published an essay introducing “Turning the Tables,” an NPR series honoring influential women in American popular music. Powers noted in her piece that “the general history of popular music is told through the great works of men, and that without a serious revision of the canon, women…

Voters in Burlington Will Consider a Major Overhaul to Police Oversight

In March, voters in Burlington will consider a ballot measure that would set up a powerful police oversight board with the authority to directly punish city officers for misconduct. The seven-member “independent community control board” could suspend, demote and even fire cops accused of wrongdoing, including the chief of police. The new model would require…

From the Publisher: Hear Them Sing

The outgoing president has called the press the “enemy of the people.” So naturally that became the name of the Seven Days house band — an occasional ensemble composed of musical employees plucked from the paper’s production department. Pre-COVID-19, our designers worked together in a pod, surrounded by dogs and great music. They’re already a…

Free Will Astrology (12/23/20)

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): The birds known as red knots breed every year in the Arctic regions. Then they fly south — way south — down to the southern edge of South America, more than 9,000 miles away. A few months later they make the return trip to the far north. In 1995, ornithologists managed to…

‘Seven Days’ Reviewers Share Some Favorite Vermont Reads From 2020

The dozens of books that arrive at the Seven Days offices over the course of a year span a wide range of genres, topics and moods. We get tiny poetry chapbooks bound with thread stitches, as well as critically acclaimed novels, meandering memoirs and folksy self-help guides. We acknowledge as many as space allows —…

Vermonter Hides Cash on Store Shelves to Spread Holiday Cheer

Melissa Squires knows a thing or two about tough times during the holidays.  Back in December 2012, the Manchester mom of three learned her father had terminal cancer. Hoping to honor him, she decided to perform “26 acts of kindness,” a national movement created that month after the murders of kids and staff at Sandy…

The Winter Reading Issue — 2020

Nothing beats curling up with a good book somewhere cozy in the winter. That should be especially true this winter as we collectively hunker down and wait our turn for the coronavirus vaccines and for warmer, hopefully pandemic-free days ahead. But many of us have already plowed though our nightstand stacks over the past nine…

When Well-Worn Cookbooks Offer What the Web Doesn’t

Cookbooks, at their simplest, are collections of pages filled with ingredients and instructions. But if we return to them often enough, they transform from prescriptive steps and grocery lists into something special. Sure, it’s easy to google a recipe and pick the one touting its “quick, easy steps” — especially this year, when cooking can…

Ten Cookbooks That Inspire Vermont Chefs and Food Experts

Chefs rarely follow recipes, but many of them find plenty to savor in cookbooks, nonetheless. They read for inspiration, education, context and community. They earmark pages that reveal fresh approaches to technique. They scribble down notes of promising flavor combinations. We asked three chefs, one cookbook author and one plant nursery owner to share the…


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