As Baltimore struggles to reinvent itself as a player in the post-industrial future, we look back at how the city’s financial fortunes were made and ask experts about what lies ahead.
What do a painter, a reporter, a CEO, and a football coach have in common? Like most of us, they have too much work and too little time. Minute-by-minute accounts from four Baltimore workers’ nine-to-five. Web Exclusive: Three more of Baltimore's workers give us a day's rundown: Lt. Samuel Cogan, Pastor Cathy Oatman, and Councilwoman Rikki Spector.
In photographer Dan Magus' neighborhood of Butchers Hill, Halloween is like a block party: Neighbors open up their houses, share food and drink, and watch trick-or-treaters parade up and down the sidewalks. Last year, Magus wanted to capture the night's festivities in a formal way. He set up a backdrop and asked the kids (and a few adults) to pose for his camera.
Stephen Dixon is the author of fifteen novels and twelve collections of short stories. His latest novel, Meyer, published in September, is the first since his retirement from Johns Hop