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In this book, Naomi Klein shines a light on the path to a politically and economically just model of sustainability.
Read MoreTRIPTYCH (Eyes of One on Another) serves up a cool emotional package.
Read MoreMichel Layaz’s narrator is juggling much more than nostalgia — his traumas are overwhelmingly odd and disturbing, almost to the point of absurdity.
Read MoreAll told, The Topeka School is engaging — it’s a talented and kaleidoscopic story touching down just about everywhere in modern life.
Read MoreDramatist Tracy Letts’s new play is raw, funny, and intensely personal.
Read MoreNo one would classify the National as “arena rock,” but Matt Berninger and the group proved at Agganis that they’re quite capable of filling an arena and then putting on a show worthy of the space.
Read MoreThe audience members were as diverse as the cast, the show is not being staged in a traditional space in Boston, and the play is incredibly relevant.
Read MoreAt its best, Lauren Yee’s vibrant play with music offers a compelling exploration of survivor guilt, the urge for revenge, the deforming power of the past, and the impossibility of finding justice for crimes against humanity.
Read MoreSkylark continues to impress me with its distinctly beautiful sound, its dazzling control over dynamics and intonation, and its unusually compelling programming.
Read MoreThere can be little doubt that the urgency of the opera’s message about equality is as relevant as ever.
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Arts Commentary & CD Reviews: On The Kennedy Center, Ben Folds, & Gustav Mahler