If you’re a jazz devotee eager for more of “America’s classical music” in your concert diet, you’re probably familiar with the so-called “jazz festival” with little to no jazz. For the past couple of decades, festivals once laser-focused on this distinct,... See more
The Kravis Center screens classics of Black cinema, Lynn ventures “Into the Woods,” and Palm Beach Opera goes fishing for a love triangle. Plus, Terence Blanchard on Malcolm X and more in your week ahead.
WEDNESDAY
What: “Declaration: The Story of America... See more
Walter Mosley started writing at age 34. It’s a late start, you might think, but one that allowed the political science graduate of Vermont’s Johnson State College to gain as much street smarts as book smarts—to look at Los Angeles, the turbulent city of ... See more
With a new year comes more new books, and new worlds to explore, both imagined and real, historical and present-day. In our first books blog of 2026, Mitch Kaplan of Miami literary institution Books & Books returns for his latest recommendations, all ... See more
Of the South Florida museums most likely to inspire moments of Zen in their exhibitions, the Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens stands front and center: From its meandering gardens to its teahouse to its art spaces, it has always been a place of peace a... See more