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Patriots training camp Day 9: Jacoby Brissett throws last-second TD, Drake Maye’s 2-minute drill stalls

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Patriots training camp Day 9: Jacoby Brissett throws last-second TD, Drake Maye’s 2-minute drill stalls


FOXBORO — It’s hard to square how a quarterback with two interceptions and a sack in one practice could strengthen his grip on a starting job.

Here’s how Jacoby Brissett did so Saturday.

Brissett went 9-of-14 with a pick during competitive 11-on-11 periods, including another two-minute drill he capped by firing a touchdown pass in the final 10 seconds. Following Friday’s late, dramatic strike to DeMario Douglas, Brissett snapped the ball outside the 5-yard line with a second left on a running clock Saturday, backed away from pressure and lobbed a prayer over the middle for Hunter Henry.

Touchdown.

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Brissett also hit Henry on two deep strikes during a previous hurry-up drive, when he uncorked a potential deep touchdown to Jalen Reagor. But Reaglor lost a battle at the catch point to Azizi Hearn whose deflection inside the end zone triggered a tip-drill interception for roaming safety Jaylinn Hawkins. That interception was the only blemish for Brissett during the Patriots’ most telling, pressure-packed series, during which he finished 6-of-7 with a pick.

Meanwhile, Drake Maye’s final two-minute drill went nowhere. Literally, thanks to some bad luck, bad help and missed chances.

On his final drive, Maye fired a throwaway, overshot Javon Baker on deep incompletion, then watched his third-down pass sail by a slipping JuJu Smith-Schuster and his final pass get batted down at the line. Earlier in practice, Maye went 2-of-4 – hitting a tight end in the flat and rookie Ja’Lynn Polk on a comeback route that nearly sailed wide – to set up a 50-plus yard field goal.

Overall in full-team periods, Maye went 3-of-9 with four sacks and one pass drop. All day, he played behind third-string tackles, while most of his receivers synced up to have some of their worst and/or quietest practices of the summer. But Maye, around a productive 7-on-7 period in the red zone with two sweet touchdowns, looked sometimes hesitant and other times harried.

He double-pumped, whipped a checkdown out of reach, got lucky on his longest completion and had a presence about him that was absent virtually all of spring and last week. Not that Maye is facing any pressure behind him on the depth chart (fellow rookie Joe Milton finished 2-of-8 with a sack), or wouldn’t benefit from a healthy supporting cast. But Brissett entered Saturday’s practice – a humid, padded session lasting more than two hours – with a sizable lead.

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That lead grew by the time Brissett left the field.

Elsewhere at practice, Matthew Judon fully participated again, an unknown defensive tackle dominated, the running game continued to stall, a speedy receiver was missing and the kicking competition continued.

Here are the Herald’s complete practice observations:

Attendance

Tyquan Thornton makes a catch during New England Patriots training camp action on July 26 in Foxboro. He’s expected to miss at least four weeks with a shoulder injury. (Nancy Lane/Boston Herald)

Absent: OT Calvin Anderson, S Joshuah Bledsoe, TE Jaheim Bell

Non-participant: S Marte Mapu, DB Marcus Jones, WR Tyquan Thornton

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Limited: OT Chukwuma Okorafor

Non-contact jersey: CB Shaun Wade

PUP: WR Kendrick Bourne, LB Sione Takitaki, OL Cole Strange, C/G Jake Andrews

Notes: Thornton was the only surprise absence from this group, but the former second-round pick is not expected to be out long-term, per a source. Thornton has a rough injury history, losing several games to broken bones each of the last two summers; something the team has been mindful of during camp.

Anderson missed his first practice after suffering a lower-leg injury Friday, when he returned to action. Jones and Bledsoe missed their second straight practices, respectively, while Mapu and Bell haven’t suited up in more than a week. Okorafor participated in initial stretching, but sat out all team periods for reasons unknown.

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Play of the Day

Hunter Henry’s one-handed sideline snag

Hunter Henry #85 of the New England Patriots receives a pass during training camp on Tuesday in Foxboro, MA. (Matt Stone/Boston Herald) August 8, 2023
Hunter Henry #85 of the New England Patriots receives a pass during training camp on Tuesday in Foxboro, MA. (Matt Stone/Boston Herald) August 8, 2023

Jerod Mayo waved the play off, calling it a sack after the whistle had blown. But when a catch is this good, it can’t go overlooked.

Aligned in the left slot, Henry immediately gained a step on Kyle Dugger early in Brissett’s initial hurry-up drill. He angled left on a fade route, with Dugger now attached to his right hip. Realizing he had just enough separation, Henry looked back for the ball, flipped around 180 degrees toward the sideline and shot out his right arm as Brissett’s pass fell, snatching it for a one-handed grab.

The best catch of camp.

Player of the Day

TE Hunter Henry

What a practice.

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Henry scored the Patriots’ final touchdown to punctuate a successful two-minute drill, made a highlight-reel grab, added another catch on a deep crossing route and finished with four receptions on the day. He’s still got it.

QB Corner

Note: The passing stats below were tallied during competitive 7-on-7 and 11-on-11 periods only. The stats in parentheses represent the quarterbacks’ camp-long performance.

Drake Maye #10 of the New England Patriots looks down as Jacoby Brissett walks off during training camp at Gillette Stadium. (Photo By Matt Stone/Boston Herald)
Drake Maye #10 of the New England Patriots looks down as Jacoby Brissett walks off during training camp at Gillette Stadium. (Photo By Matt Stone/Boston Herald)

Jacoby Brissett: 11-of-18, 2 INTs, sack (75-of-111, 3 INTs, 12 sacks)

Drake Maye: 6-of-14, 4 sacks (67-of-110, 2 INTs, 11 sacks)

Notes: Let’s start with the good for Maye.

After getting swarmed for three sacks on his initial three dropbacks, he steered the offense toward a long field goal attempt over a two-minute drill. That possession featured a missed flat throw to Kevin Harris, flat completion to tight end Mitchell Wilcox, connection with Polk on a comeback route that Polk saved with a full-extension grab as he fell to the turf and a throwaway after firing a spike.

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Later, in red-zone 7-on-7s, Maye would have scored three touchdowns on four dropbacks had Wilcox managed to maintain possession on an inside throw that split two safeties. He also rifled a score to Polk on an in-breaking route during the same period and flashed anticipation when he found Javon Baker in the back left corner on a corner route.

Good stuff.

Then, trouble found Maye again in red-zone 11-on-11s. He dumped an easy shallow-cross pass to Osborn after several seconds in the pocket, took a “sack” courtesy of Keion White and a hand-off, which led to his 0-of-4 two-minute drill at the end.

Unlike prior practices, Maye dared to strike downfield Saturday, including his overthrow of Baker at the end. That’s encouraging, even if Brissett remains far ahead in this department thanks to his Henry completions, go-ball to Osborn and an opening deep cross to Wilcox. Downfield aggression, accuracy in the intermediate area and processing speed are the widest gaps between the two passers right now.

How Patriots’ defense responded to Jerod Mayo’s latest challenge

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Studs

DL Trysten Hill

Two run stuffs, a sack and a fourth-down batted pass in team periods is one heck of a day for any interior D-lineman, let alone one pushing for a roster spot. Hill was at the center of another excellent day of run defense, and one of the best practices by any defender to date.

WR K.J. Osborn

Osboron’s best practice as a Patriot featured a team-high five catches — three from Brissett and two from Maye — around a drop. The last of those catches was a 35-yard gain on a go route down the right sideline that carried the offense downfield during Brissett’s last hurry-up drive that started with just 56 seconds. Osborn beat rising second-year cornerback Alex Austin on the play.

S Jaylinn Hawkins

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Hawkins followed his tip-drill interception by ranging over for a clean pass breakup during 11-on-11 red-zone work late in practice. The veteran has come on strong the last few days, especially with Marte Mapu still sidelined.

Duds

WR JuJu Smith-Schuster

JuJu Smith-Schuster #7 of the New England Patriots tries to get the crowd going during training camp at Gillette Stadium. (Photo By Matt Stone/Boston Herald)
JuJu Smith-Schuster #7 of the New England Patriots tries to get the crowd going during training camp at Gillette Stadium. (Photo By Matt Stone/Boston Herald)

Based on his nine practices to date, and physical struggles last season, I don’t see any path for Smith-Schuster to make this team. He dropped a touchdown pass from Milton and slipped on the only target Maye gave him. He can’t separate anymore or reliably catch the ball, the two biggest demands of any receiver.

TE Austin Hooper

During 7-on-7s, Hooper stopped running an in-breaking route when he felt Austin grab him from behind. That allowed Austin to jump the pass for Brissett’s second interception of the day, and the easiest pick of camp. Hooper went without a catch in team periods.

Offensive notes

  • Top targets in team drills: WR K.J. Osborn 5/6, TE Hunter Henry 4/5, WR Kayshon Boutte 3/4, WR Ja’Lynn Polk 2/3, TE Mitchell Wilcox 2/3
  • Drops: Boutte, Osborn, Smith-Schuster
  • Top offensive line: LT Vederian Lowe, LG Sidy Sow, C Dvaid Andrews, RG Mike Onwenu, RT Caedan Wallace

Quarterbacks

New England Patriots quarterback Joe Milton III, center, and running back Antonio Gibson, right, pause during an NFL football training camp, Tuesday, July 30, 2024, in Foxborough, Mass. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
New England Patriots quarterback Joe Milton III, center, and running back Antonio Gibson, right, pause during an NFL football training camp, Tuesday, July 30, 2024, in Foxborough, Mass. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
  • After getting shut out of team drills Friday, Bailey Zappe went 3-of-5 with a drop over a couple 11-on-11 sessions.
  • Rookie Joe Milton fared worse, completed just two of eight passes, including one drop, and took a would-be sack. Milton has performed far better in 7-on-7 settings than 11-on-11s, as has Maye.
  • Between them, Milton delivered the best completion, ripping a “touchdown” to Kayshon Boutte on an in-breaking route during red-zone 11-on-11s.

Running backs

  • A rough practice for this group, through little fault of their own.
  • Zero targets for Rhamondre Stevenson or Antonio Gibson in team drills. Both veterans got stuffed on inside hand-offs and struggled to find room outside.
  • Third-year bowling ball Kevin Harris caught one pass and was overshot on a checkdown throw.
  • Before practice, Jerod Mayo noted JaMycal Hasty’s skill set separates him from the rest of the group, as a smaller, shifty, pass-catching back.

Wide receivers

  • With Tyquan Thornton out, the Patriots started Jalen Reagor in his place opposite Osborn for the opening team period. Reagor failed to seize on that opportunity, securing one of three passes he saw.
  • Osborn outshone all the wideouts, winning at multiple levels and again playing inside and out. The ex-Viking looks like a lock for the 53-man roster.
  • DeMario Douglas followed up his breakout Friday practice (five catches and a touchdown) with just two grabs: a score in one red-zone period, and a catch in the flat from Brissett just before Henry’s dramatic touchdown.
  • Ja’Lynn Polk continued to build on his connection with Maye, nabbing a tough throw on a comeback route and a touchdown on a post; both during 11-on-11s. He went 2-of-3 on targets, including a Brissett overthrow.
  • Fourth-round rookie Javon Baker still looks dangerous downfield, but hasn’t produced quite like he did earlier in camp. He had one “touchdown” in a 7-on-7 drill and was overthrown during Maye’s two-minute drill.

Patriots’ DeMario Douglas playing it smart with training camp injury

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Tight ends

  • Hunter Henry is developing into one of, if not the most, trusted targets for Brissett and Maye. The quarterbacks look for him early in practice and clutch situations, as Brissett did on his final drive.
  • After leading the Patriots in catches through six practices, Hooper has cooled with three receptions over the last three days.
  • Mitchell Wilcox earned significant attention in team periods, but it’s his run-blocking that ultimately may give him an edge for the No. 3 job over La’Michael Pettway, who also didn’t earn a single target.

Offensive line

  • With Chukwuma Okorafor and Calvin Anderson out for team periods, the Patriots started Vederian Lowe at left tackle for a third straight day and promoted third-round rookie Caedan Wallace back to the first team at right tackle.
  • Behind them, Kellen Diesch, who signed two days ago, started at left tackle with Maye’s unit, and undrafted rookie Zuri Henry was at right tackle.
  • Overall, a tough day for the O-line. Allowing run stuffs on 33% of hand-offs and yielding six sacks kept every offensive unit from gaining a rhythm unless Brissett hit deep throws (as he did on both hurry-up drives).
  • Center David Andrews remains limited, but went deeper into 11-on-11 periods than recent days after he missed two practices.
  • Nick Leverett and Atonio Mafi remain the Patriots’ second- and third-string centers, respectively, but undrafted rookie Charles Turner got some run with the third-team offense.
  • Fourth-round rookie Layden Robinson took snaps at left guard after spending most of camp at right guard, his college position.
  • Backup guard Liam Fornadel took a penalty lap for false-starting early in practice.

Defensive notes

Matthew Judon #9 of the New England Patriots runs a drill during training camp at Gillette Stadium. (Photo By Matt Stone/Boston Herald)
Matthew Judon #9 of the New England Patriots runs a drill during training camp at Gillette Stadium. (Photo By Matt Stone/Boston Herald)
  • Starting and second-string personnel during team periods: defensive linemen Davon Godchaux, Deatrich Wise, Keion White, Armon Watts, Daniel Ekuale, Trysten Hill, Sam Roberts and Jeremiah Pharms Jr.; linebackers Matt Judon, Jahlani Tavai, Ja’Whaun Bentley, Raekwon McMillan, Josh Uche, Anfernee Jennings, Christian Elliss, Joe Giles-Harris, William Bradley-King and Oshane Ximines; defensive backs Kyle Dugger, Jabrill Peppers, Christian Gonzalez, Jonathan Jones, Alex Austin, Jaylinn Hawkins, Isaiah Bolden, Azizi Hearn, Marco Wilson, Dell Pettus and Brenden Schooler.
  • Interceptions: Austin, Hawkins
  • Pass breakups: Gonzalez, Hawkins, Hearn, Pettus
  • Would-be sacks: Team 3, Judon, Wise, White,

Defensive linemen

  • It bears repeating: Trysten Hill had a day. Should he make the team, the ex-Cowboys draft pick profiles as a backup nose tackle, but he practiced like an All-Pro force of nature Saturday.
  • Hill didn’t even start team periods, with Davon Godchaux and Daniel Ekuale again lining up in the middle with the first team. He combined with fellow defensive tackle Armon Watts on one run stuff.
  • Again, the Patriots’ defensive front built a wall against the run. Combined, all three defensive units stuffed 33% of all hand-offs.
  • Keion White was the only other D-lineman, aside from Hill, to record a sack and contribute on a run stuff.

Linebackers

  • Another padded practice, another full day from Matt Judon. Last year, Judon abstained from these practices, but has since returned after making a mini mess at Monday’s session.
  • It took two snaps for Judon to make an impact during 11-on-11s, setting a strong edge to force a run stuff early in practice. He later added a sack.
  • Outside linebacker Anfernee Jennings also notched a run stuff, a nice break from what has been a quiet camp for him.
  • Ja’Whaun Bentley and Jahlani Tavai continue to start most 11-on-11 periods, with Bentley manning the middle and Tavai flexing between inside and outside linebacker.

Defensive backs

  • The carousel continues in the defensive backfield. Several corners — Jonathan Jones, Marco Wilson, Isaiah Bolden and Azizi Hearn — rotated opposite Christian Gonzalez in team periods.
  • Hearn had the roughest go, allowing three catches on five targets, plus his pass breakup. Wilson didn’t allow a catch, while Bolden and Jones each yielded one, and Jones took snaps at free safety for a third straight practice.
  • The good news: Gonzalez looked more like himself, breaking up the only target in isolation he saw all afternoon; a pass intended for Jalen Reagor.
  • Brenden Schooler, a third-year special teamer, appeared to be at fault on a coverage bust that allowed Joe Milton to hit a touchdown pass in 7-on-7s.

Special teams

  • Joey Slye isn’t bowing out. The veteran journeyman drilled a field goal longer than 50 yards to cap Maye’s initial two-minute drill and went 5-for-5 overall, while Chad Ryland finished 3-of-4 with a missed 39-yarder.
  • So far in camp, Ryland remains ahead at 20-of-22 on field goal attempts, while Slye stands at 19-of-23.
  • Kick returners: Jalen Reagor, DeMario Douglas, Ja’Lynn Polk, K.J. Osborn, Isaiah Bolden
  • Kickoff team: Ryland/Slye, Brenden Schooler, Kyle Dugger, Anfernee Jennings, Christian Elliss, Jahlani Tavai, Jaylinn Hawkins, Kevin Harris, Raekwon McMillan, Marco Wilson, Javon Baker
  • Punt returners: Reagor, Douglas, Polk, Osboron, Bolden
  • Punt team: punter Bryce Baringer, long snapper Joe Cardona, Schooler, Tavai, Hawkins, McMillan, Harris, Bolden, Ja’Whaun Bentley, Oshane Ximines, Mikey Victor
  • Bolden’s addition to the returners group is notable because he led college football (FBS and FCS) with a 36.9 yards per return average in 2021.

Extra points

  • The Patriots are off Sunday and will return to practice Monday at 11 a.m.
  • DeMario Douglas, Kyle Dugger, Daniel Ekuale, Hunter Henry, Layden Robinson and Oshane Ximines met with reporters after practice.

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Green Line back open after closure to replace 1800s beams – Boston News, Weather, Sports | WHDH 7News

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Green Line back open after closure to replace 1800s beams – Boston News, Weather, Sports | WHDH 7News


BOSTON (WHDH) – Getting around the city was made easier Tuesday after the Green Line reopened after a two-week shutdown affecting all branches.

The MBTA needed the closure to replace underground beams dating back to the 19th century.

Service returned Tuesday on the B branch between North Station and Babcock, on the C and D lines from North Station to Kenmore, and North Station to Heath Street on the E branch.

(Copyright (c) 2025 Sunbeam Television. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

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Red Sox outfielder, veteran leader signs with Seattle after four-season run in Boston

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Red Sox outfielder, veteran leader signs with Seattle after four-season run in Boston


After four seasons in which he emerged as a veteran leader and key bench player for the Red Sox, Rob Refsnyder’s time in Boston is over.

Refsnyder has signed a one-year contract with the Mariners, the club announced. According to a major league source, the deal will pay Refsnyder a base salary of $6.25 million in 2026. It also includes $250,000 in incentives.

Refsnyder, who turns 35 in May, was a journeyman utility player when he signed with the Red Sox as a minor league free agent in December 2021. Over the last four seasons, he found a home in Boston, where he mashed left-handed pitching and became an important clubhouse voice. Along with Trevor Story and Alex Bregman, Refsnyder helped form a core of older position players who helped the Sox navigate treacherous waters in the fallout of the Rafael Devers drama (and subsequent trade) over the summer. On the field, he was plenty productive, too, as he hit .269 with nine homers, 12 doubles and an .838 OPS in 70 games in his limited role in 2025.

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In 309 games over the past four seasons, Refsnyder hit .276 with 27 homers, 119 RBIs, 48 doubles and an .804 OPS while serving as one of the best hitters in baseball against left-handed pitching. In 2025, he posted a .302 average, .560 slugging percentage and .959 OPS against southpaws, pairing with Romy Gonzalez to form a potent pair of right-handed platoon options for Alex Cora. Refsnyder’s .596 slugging percentage against left-handed starters was the fourth-best mark in baseball. Since the start of 2021, Refsnyder ranks third in the majors in on-base percentage against lefties (.405) among players with 300 plate appearances.

Refsnyder expressed strong interest in returning to the Red Sox in 2026 but in recent weeks, the writing has been on the wall for his departure. There aren’t many at-bats to go around in Boston’s crowded outfield/designated hitter picture and recent comments from manager Alex Cora made it harder to see Refsnyder returning in his role. Specifically, the club wants Wilyer Abreu — a platoon player to this point in his career — to get regular starts against lefties in right field, a position where Refsnyder logged 21 starts in 2025. Cora also praised the athleticism of Nate Eaton, who may take over Refsnyder’s role as a versatile, younger and cheaper version in 2026. Eaton had a .673 OPS against lefties in 49 big league plate appearances last year but the Red Sox think there’s more in his right-handed bat. Kristian Campbell is expected to focus on outfield work in spring training, too, further crowding a group that includes Abreu, Roman Anthony, Ceddanne Rafaela, Jarren Duran and potentially Eaton and others.

The Mariners will be Refsnyder’s seventh major league team, joining the Yankees, Blue Jays, Rays and Twins. He had previously signed two deals to remain in Boston, agreeing to avoid arbitration at $1.2 million for 2023, then signing a $1.85 million extension for the 2024 season that included a $2 million option for 2025.



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6 Boston writers share their go-to bars, cafes and restaurants

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6 Boston writers share their go-to bars, cafes and restaurants


One autumn evening in 2020, the late poet Louise Glück walked into the snug dining room of the Somerville Peruvian restaurant Celeste. Glück found her usual table — the one between the two air conditioning vents — and greeted her usual server, Gonzalo, who waited on her every time she stopped in for ceviche de pescado and an IPA. But this evening was different from the others.

Glück had been awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature the day before and, amid a wave of public attention, craved the normalcy of enjoying a meal at one of her favorite restaurants. Ahead of Glück’s standing reservation, Celeste’s founders Maria Rondeau and chef JuanMa Calderon had filled the dining room with friends to ensure the new Nobel Laureate could dine in peace. A tabletop bouquet was the only memento marking her achievement.

“All she wanted was to be at Celeste and not think about anything else,” said Rondeau. “At the same time, we were nervous. We’d waited on the same lady every day, but now she was something else. It was a moment of joyous togetherness.”

Glück’s connection to Celeste is uniquely intense — so intense, in fact, that Rondeau and Calderon’s new restaurant opening in Back Bay, Rosa y Marigold, shares a name with Glück’s last published work. It’s also a particularly profound example of how Boston writers have long found comfort, camaraderie and sometimes safety in the city’s bars, cafes and restaurants.

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From the bygone Harvard Square Spanish spot Irunåa where Robert Lowell hosted post-workshop office hours to the old Ground Round off Soldiers Field Road where reporters for The Boston Globe, Boston Magazine and the Boston Phoenix grabbed drinks after media-league softball games, local eateries have literally and figuratively fueled generations of Boston academics, journalists, novelists and poets. So, we asked some of these writers to tell us where they typically go for a coffee, a meal, a conversation, or a moment of peace.


Zarlasht Niaz, novelist

Zarlasht Niaz, author of novel-in-verse “Unfurling,” at the Newsfeed Cafe at the Boston Public Library. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)

Zarlasht Niaz recently came to Boston from Minneapolis to begin her tenure as the Boston Public Library’s 2025-26 writer-in-residence. The Afghan American writer is managing an online literary journal that centers writing from and about Afghanistan while working on her debut novel-in-verse. Despite her newcomer status, she has already found some gastronomic staples.

Niaz regularly stops into BPL’s Newsfeed Café for arepas from the Somerville-based Venezuelan catering company Carolicious; lattes from a talented, unnamed barista — “When that person’s working, I get really excited,” said Niaz — and live public radio programming from the other NPR affiliate in town.

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She also frequents Anoush’ella’s South Boston location, whose Eastern Mediterranean flavors call to mind home food. “They have these salads with a lot of different herbs and they remind me of the salads I grew up eating,” said Niaz. Turmeric House in Braintree hits similarly. “A perfect cup of chai. A perfect kebab. Yeah, I can’t wait to go back.”


Stephen Greenblatt, literary historian

Author Stephen Greenblatt at Cambridge restaurant Giulia, on Massachusetts Ave. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)
Author Stephen Greenblatt at Cambridge restaurant Giulia, on Massachusetts Ave. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)

Having devoted decades to unpacking the work of Renaissance writers, particularly William Shakespeare, it’s no wonder that the National Book Award and Pulitzer Prize-winning literary historian Stephen Greenblatt gravitates toward cuisine that could’ve conceivably appeared in “Julius Caesar.”

The Cambridge Italian staple Giulia is his undisputed go-to. “I know Italian food quite well, because we spend quite a lot of time in Rome,” said Greenblatt. “Guilia is unusually creative.” He often orders the pappardelle with wild boar topped with black trumpet mushrooms and parmigiano.

“The chef, Michael Pagliarini, is extremely talented and alert to what really good Italian food is like,” he said.

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Greenblatt also ventures to the eastern edges of the Mediterranean basin when visiting Oleana (which recently received a Michelin Guide recommendation), but his dessert of choice there is decidedly American. “I like Oleana quite a lot, particularly for the wonderful baked Alaska, which is, I think, one of the great desserts that one can get,” said Greenblatt.


Golden, poet and photographer

Golden moved to Boston in 2018 following a celebrated poetry slam guest performance at Haley House in Roxbury and quickly became a fixture within the local literary scene. In the time since, the Black, gender-nonconforming trans writer and photographer has turned out two collections of poetry and images, served as Boston’s 2020-21 artist in residence, and earned a handful of high-profile fellowships. Golden is now relocating to their home state of Virginia to pursue an MFA, but they depart with close community ties, including connections to a couple of keystone Jamaica Plain restaurants.

Galway House, on Centre Street in Jamaica Plain, Boston. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)
Galway House, on Centre Street in Jamaica Plain, Boston. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)

“When I first moved to Boston, I lived on Centre Street by Jackson Square and we would always go to Galway House,” said Golden. “They have affordable, consistent food and a lot of community members I know love going there.”

The Haven, one of the Boston area’s only Scottish spots, is another JP essential for Golden. “I love the Haven Burger — it’s one of my favorites. And I love a good French fry and you can’t go wrong with that there,” Golden said. “I love filling food and food that you can enjoy with friends. That’s where my brain goes when I’m deciding where to eat.”

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Laura Zigman, novelist

The fiction of Laura Zigman often hinges on the heightened emotionalism that comes with navigating life’s highs and lows, beginning with her debut 1997 novel “Animal Husbandry,” which was optioned and became the basis for a romantic comedy starring Ashley Judd and a young Hugh Jackman. But when it comes to going out for a drink or something to eat, Zigman looks to avoid drama at all costs.

Bar Enza, located in the Charles Hotel near Harvard Square, is her ideal venue for meeting friends. “They have really nice wine and cocktails, even though I really don’t drink anymore,” Zigman said. “When you come in for a drink, they’ll give you a velvet banquette that’s beautiful where you can talk and actually hear each other and I just love it.”

The entrance to George Howell Coffee and Lovestruck Books, in Cambridge, Mass. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)
The entrance to George Howell Coffee and Lovestruck Books, in Cambridge, Mass. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)

For coffee, Zigman prefers George Howell Coffee nestled inside the nearby Lovestruck Books. The location itself is freighted with Cambridge cafe history, standing not far from where Howell’s original Coffee Connection once operated between 1975 and 1996 before Starbucks acquired and rebranded it and its 18 local sister stores.

“Coffee Connection was one of those places that I just lived in when I was a teenager,” said Zigman. “They had French roast, French presses, and big barrels of coffee beans with burlap covers. The new George Howell inside Lovestruck is great — it’s cozy, smells like coffee, and it’s pink and red inside.”

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Paul Tremblay, novelist

Author Paul Tremblay, by the Hamilton Restaurant and Bar, near Coolidge Corner in Brookline, Mass. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)
Author Paul Tremblay, by the Hamilton Restaurant and Bar, near Coolidge Corner in Brookline, Mass. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)

Brookline Booksmith near Coolidge Corner is a key location for the multi-time Bram Stoker Award-winning horror novelist Paul Tremblay. He visited the shop for the first time early in his writing career to attend a Stewart O’Nan reading and, in the years since, has gone back numerous times to do readings of his own and participate in author events.

Virtually every trip Tremblay makes to Brookline Booksmith goes hand-in-hand with a stop at Hamilton Restaurant and Bar, whose distinctive red awning with a silhouette of its namesake Founding Father casts a shadow on Beacon Street less than a block away.

“Invariably, before the event starts, usually at 7 p.m., all the writers involved and sometimes their family too will meet at Hamilton,” said Tremblay. “It’s such a relaxed vibe — a pub-style place with friendly staff, good food and drink, and, when the weather is warm, a nice outdoor space.”

When Tremblay is nearer to home in the Greater Boston suburbs, he regularly visits Northern Spy, a Canton-based restaurant from the owners of Loyal Nine that serves New England cuisine and operates out of Paul Revere’s historic Rolling Copper Mill.

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“It’s a newer restaurant and it’s got a beautiful interior,” he said. “For people who dare trek outside of Boston and want to meet, it’s a go-to place.”


Megan Marshall, biographer

Biographer Megan Marshall looks across Belmont Street from the window of Praliné French Patisserie's location in Belmont, Mass. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)
Biographer Megan Marshall looks across Belmont Street from the window of Praliné French Patisserie’s location in Belmont, Mass. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)

Megan Marshall arrived in the Boston area in 1973 and has since seen slews of writer-saturated restaurants come and go. She remembers meeting the eminent editor Justin Kaplan at the long-defunct Harvard Square fondue place, Swiss Alps, to get guidance on her biography of Elizabeth, Mary and Sophia Peabody, which eventually earned her the Pulitzer Prize. And she recalls grabbing coffee and cinnamon toast from a drugstore with an old-fashioned soda fountain that once stood on Boylston Street in between research sessions at the Massachusetts Historical Society.

These days, Marshall often finds herself at the Cambridge French patisserie Praliné. “They’re such lovely people there and they speak French, which makes me feel cosmopolitan and their croissants are, I think, the best in the Boston area,” said Marshall.

She also enjoys Praliné’s imported French loose-leaf tea, Mariage Frères. “I get little boxes of it to give as presents. People I know who have spent time in Paris say, ‘Oh, you must be just back from Paris,’ because there’s this impression that you can only get Mariage Frères there,” she said. “But you can get it at Praliné and impress anybody you know who’s Parisian.”

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