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Harvard Book Store plans to expand beyond its longtime Harvard Square home with the opening of a new bookstore in downtown Boston later this year.
The independent bookseller announced Monday that it will open a 3,500-square-foot store at 33 Union Street (located in the historic Yankee Publishing building) near Faneuil Hall and Quincy Market. Construction is already underway, with the new location expected to welcome customers this fall.
The Boston store will offer books, gifts, a dedicated children’s section and space for author events and community programming. A 1,500-square-foot café operated by Lakon Paris Patisserie will adjoin the bookstore.
“We are delighted to bring Harvard Book Store to Boston, while continuing our long tradition of independent bookselling, author talks, and community engagement at our flagship store in Harvard Square,” Lisa Jayne, general manager of Harvard Book Store, said in a news release.
Jayne said the company hopes to build on Boston’s existing literary culture by offering the same programming and customer experience that have made its Cambridge location a destination for readers and writers.
A spokesperson for Lakon Paris Patisserie said the new café will introduce exclusive menu offerings created specifically for the Boston location while maintaining the bakery’s signature approach to pastry-making, according to the release. Lakon Paris Patisserie currently has location in Boston’s Brighton and Seaport neighborhoods, as well as in Brookline and Newton.
The building sits within Boston’s Blackstone Block, widely recognized as the city’s oldest commercial district, according to the building’s owners, Cypress Realty Group.
The Boston opening marks Harvard Book Store’s second attempt in recent years to establish a major presence outside Cambridge. In 2022, the independent bookseller announced plans for a nearly 30,000-square-foot store in the Prudential Center.
However, the company abandoned those plans in February 2024 after a series of delays and supply-chain disruptions tied to the Covid-19 pandemic. At the time, Harvard Book Store said it would focus instead on improving its flagship Harvard Square location.
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Politics makes strange bedfellows.
Former State Senator Dianne Wilkerson and President Donald Trump are not natural political allies. But they both have issues with Mayor Michelle Wu and could find themselves connected by a common issue:
Opposing the Blue Hill Ave center lane bus project.
A coalition of residents, merchants, and community leaders has now taken the extraordinary step of asking U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy to withdraw approximately $80 million in federal funding for the project. According to the coalition, more than 2,200 residents signed a petition to stop the project. Their letter argues that after years of meetings, public hearings, and attempts to engage City Hall, they have run out of options to stop or redesign the project.
The project goes back to what was called 28X in Gov. Deval Patrick’s day. When there was community opposition, state officials withdrew an application for federal funding for the project.
The plan has been discussed for years.
Mayor Wu has proposed the project again. I told Stephen Gray of Grayscale Collaborative that they needed to understand the history of the project. He said, “They wanted to start with a clean slate.” Starting with a “clean slate” sounded good but translated into an attitude and an action that resulted in years of prior feedback being discarded.
What would happen to the cars that double parked along Blue Hill Ave, for church on Sunday, the loss of parking, and the resulting business impact?
Instead of incorporating prior feedback i.e. we have heard your prior concerns, and this is how we are going to address them, they simply ignored them to the peril of the project. Grayscale was taken by surprise, but shouldn’t have been, when the first community meeting became contentious, because so many people opposed the project from the beginning. City officials were asking what residents wanted, but many residents felt they had already answered that question; “Not this project.”
I noticed that the report the consultants put together for the city explained the process and recorded many comments from the residents but none of the comments were negative or critical of the project. That was not a true reflection of the community.
When candidates were running for State Legislature seats and were asked their position on the project ,they all said no with the exception of Rep. Nika Elugardo, and when they said no, large crowds cheered. People were writing editorials against it and when you went to the city’s website on the project, you could only infer from all of the positive comments that the community was 100% behind this. They weren’t.
I knew opposition was getting serious when campaign signs opposing the project started appearing in the windows of businesses. When a petition to oppose the project gathered thousands of signatures, that should have been a warning. But none of this feedback seemed to make it to the mayor’s office, or perhaps it did. Which is why we are where we are.
That feels very similar to the White Stadium project, where a number of people felt their concerns weren’t being addressed, and wanted stop the project in its current form.
Former State Senator Dianne Wilkerson has framed the issue in even broader terms. White Stadium is the largest public investment to take place in Boston’s Black community in decades, yet many Black community leaders (residents and businesses owners) argue they were never granted a meeting with the mayor to discuss their concerns (around the loss of business, parking, economic and environmental harm.) The same issues that prompted the mayor to attend multiple meetings with the residents of Charlestown, who had concerns about the proposed Everett soccer stadium.
They argue that the same pattern occurred with the Blue Hill Avenue center lane bus project. Regardless of whether one supports or opposes either project, both would have significant impacts on predominantly Black neighborhoods. To many residents, the question is not simply the outcome but whether those most affected were given an opportunity to have their concerns heard at the highest levels of City Hall.
When thousands of residents sign petitions, community organizations mobilize, and elected representatives raise concerns without securing that direct engagement, some begin to conclude that participation is being managed rather than valued.
Whether one agrees with the opponents or not, both controversies reveal the same underlying challenge: once residents believe decisions have effectively been made before community concerns are fully considered, trust begins to erode. The recently presented parking plan for White Stadium will only further worsen the mayor’s relationship with the Black community.
The challenge for government is that trust is cumulative. Every time residents feel their concerns are dismissed, skepticism grows. Eventually people stop distinguishing between individual projects and begin judging the entire process. At that point, opposition is no longer about bus lanes, stadiums, bike lanes, housing, or development. It becomes a referendum on whether public engagement is genuine or merely procedural. Once that trust is lost, rebuilding it is far harder than winning any single policy debate.
Public engagement is not measured by the number of meetings held. It is measured by whether participants believe they were heard.
Today the debate has escalated from neighborhood meetings to the desk of the Secretary of Transportation of the United States.
That should concern everyone.
The ultimate lesson of Blue Hill Avenue is not about bus lanes.
It is about trust.
When people believe their voices are being ignored, they eventually stop talking to City Hall and start looking for someone else who will listen.
Ed Gaskin is Executive Director of Greater Grove Hall Main Streets and founder of Sunday Celebrations
Firefighters responded to a boat fire off Dorchester Sunday afternoon.
The incident occurred around 1 p.m. in the waters off Savin Hill Yacht Club, according to Boston Fire Department.
The passengers on the boat got off safely, BFD said. But the boat did have to be towed to shallow waters.
Images posted by the department show other boats responding to put out the flames right next in front of the Rainbow Swash mural.
The MBTA Police responded to a call last week of a man urinating on the bus.
The call came in around 11 a.m. Wednesday that a male passenger was peeing in front of others on the bus near the Mass Ave. at Harrison Ave. stop, T Police said in a post on X.
After removing the man, officers said they discovered he had “14 warrants for his arrest for various [offenses] from numerous courts,” according to the T Police. The man was arrested.
BPD responded to 245 incidents in the 24-hour period ending at 10 a.m. Sunday, according to the department’s incident log. Those included two robberies, two aggravated assaults, two residential burglaries, four larcenies from a vehicle, and 31 miscellaneous larcenies.
All of the below-named defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty.
— Roman Lora, 24 Sumner St., Revere. Assault and battery with a dangerous weapon.
— Maryann Valeyron, 31 Albion St., Lowell. Operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license.
— Irini Papa, 4 McDewell Ave., Danvers. Assault and battery on a police officer.
— Yaseen Ahmad, no address listed. Sexual conduct for a fee.
— Matthew Fitzpatrick, no address listed. Sexual conduct for a fee.
— Darren Francisque, 58 Gold St., Randolph. Sexual conduct for a fee.
— Angelo Furtado, no address listed. Sexual conduct for a fee.
— Rev. Mahayaye-Vineetha Thero, 145 College Ave., Somerville. Sexual conduct for a fee.
— Sundararahan Vaidyanathan, 13264 Middleton Farm Ln., Herndon, VA. Sexual conduct for a fee.
— Justice Wallace, 150 Ellington St., Dorchester. Unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle.
— Jessica Hazard, 190 Mountain Ave., Malden. Trespassing.
— Julio Cortez, no address listed. Disorderly conduct.
What to know about MLB’s ABS robot umpire strike zone system
MLB launches ABS challenge system as players test robot umpire calls in a groundbreaking season.
The 2026 MLB season has surpassed the quarter mark, and after each team’s first 40 games, there’s plenty of reasons to tune in all summer long.
Chicago White Sox slugger Munetaka Murakami has already proven doubters wrong by launching 17 home runs, Pittsburgh’s Paul Skenes consistently looks like the best version of himself on the mound and Milwaukee ace Jacob Misiorowski is throwing harder than any starter in the majors.
The MLB action continues on Sunday as the Texas Rangers visit the Boston Red Sox.
Here’s everything you need to know to tune in for the first pitch.
See USA TODAY’s sortable MLB schedule to filter by team or division.
First pitch between the Boston Red Sox and Texas Rangers is scheduled for (ET) on Sunday, June 14.
All times Eastern and accurate as of Sunday, June 14, 2026, at 6:32 a.m.
Watch MLB all season long with Fubo
MLB regional blackout restrictions apply
MLB scores for June 14 games are available on usatoday.com . Here’s how to access today’s results:
See scores, results for all of today’s games.
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