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Author Talk: Travels Through the Heart and Soul of New England with Ted Reinstein/ Wednesday, September 18 | 7 pm Lynnfield Meeting House/ Since 1995, Ted Reinstein has been a reporter for Boston/WCVB’s celebrated “Chronicle,” the nation’s longest-running, locally-produced nightly newsmagazine. His first book, New England Notebook: One Reporter, Six States, Uncommon Stories, was selected by National Geographic Traveler as one of its “Best Picks.” Left side of the image is the image of the bookcover, an aerial photograph of a dirt road winding through a forest of fall foliage, with the book title and author superimposed over it. In the upper right corner is the author's headshot, a white man in glasses and a purple button-down shirt sitting in front of a wall of bookshelves. The Lynnfield Public Library logo, a tree growing out of a book, is at the bottom of the page.

Journalist and Author Ted Reinstein at the Lynnfield Library!


by Marita Klements, Assistant Director

Please join us on Wednesday, September 18, at the Lynnfield Meeting House to welcome journalist and author Ted Reinstein for a book talk about his latest work, “Travels Through the Heart and Soul of New England: Stories of Struggle, Resilience, and Triumph.  

Ted Reinstein is a longtime broadcast-journalist and author. A reporter based in Boston and a full-time correspondent for the city’s celebrated nightly news magazine, “Chronicle,” he has covered sports, politics and especially human interest stories all over Boston and across New England. He has reported all around New England for 25 years, telling the colorful stories of this historic yet ever-changing corner of America. Now, he condenses his countless travels into a single, unique labor of love: a journey through the heart and soul of New England, meeting the most memorable people—and their unlikely stories—all along the way. People whose struggles, toughness, triumphs, and humor not only define the very essence of New England, but represent the timeless best of America as well.

In all six states, in their own words, the stories unfold. From a stalwart surfer on New Hampshire’s tiny seacoast, to Maine’s “Slim” Andrews and his one-man museum, to the Vermonter who builds extraordinary havens in the trees for those without hope of reaching them. Meet a couple in the Berkshire Hills determined to save a place they were told doesn’t exist, and a cartoonist in Rhode Island who found an ingenious way for an entire city to say goodnight to those who need to hear it most.

It’s a legendary part of America that’s often caricatured, but rarely caught with such real-life candor and intimacy. Indeed, the Old Mainer in the tired-old joke was wrong: you can get there from here. And along the way, see New England in a whole new light, through the stories of some everyday Americans you’ll never forget.