For over 20 years, Geoffrey Douglas has written feature-length pieces
for Yankee magazine that chronicle extraordinary stories that have taken
place in New England. Some have been about public events, widely
reported--a Maine town turning against itself under the weight of an
influx of Somalis, a fatal fire in Worcester MA, a Vermont reporter's
defense of marriage equality. Others, have been more private, the
stories of men and women surviving, facing choices, living life--a
small-time jockey scratching out an existence at county-fair racetracks;
the long, sad fall of a Maine lottery winner, a poet's love affair with
his town. The best of these, taken together, make for a rich and updated
collection of New England portraits: mostly ordinary lives, upended by
choice or chance, turned suddenly, unexpectedly remarkable.