Curiously, I can't find a word in either the Globe or the Herald about Christopher Lydon's return to the airwaves last night with "Open Source." Scroll down to the previous item to read my take; Dan Kennedy also posted on it in Medialog.
The Herald reports that Waltham educational publisher Brown Publishing Network (no relation) is moving into children's books with a poetic take on the Red Sox, "86 Years,"which it likens to "Make Way for Ducklings."
Also in the Herald, T.J. Medrek has an interview with Newton native, singer Aoife O'Donovan, 22, who'll sing with the Boston Pops this weekend in their "Celtic Odyssey" concerts. Her dad is Brian O'Donovan, host of WGBH-FM's "A Celtic Sojourn." So naturally she's trying to avoid being typecast as a Celtic singer.
The Herald's Terry Byrne talks to married actors Paula Plum and Richard Snee, who'll co-star in the Stoneham Theatre's "Mousetrap" beginning Thursday.
In the Globe, Sally Cragin reviews the Alarm Clock Theatre Company's chamber musical "Duplex" and finds it underwhelming. ... Names & Faces pumps rocker Cindy Bullens' new single, "7 Days," which features Sox knuckleballer Tim Wakefield on backup vocals.
The Lowell Sun reports that well-know local painter Janet Lambert-Moore was driven from her home and studio by a fire Sunday. She is best-known for a mural of the late Sen. Paul Tsongas in the arena that bears his name. No word on whether any of her work was damaged, but the Sun says Lambert-Moore was not seriously hurt.


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