By Eric Jaffe
"Journalist and first-time author Jaffe travels the fabled stretch of road connecting New York and Boston.The Boston Post Road, writes the author, is best envisioned as "a lasso tossed from Manhattan toward the Bay, its knot landing at New Haven, wrangling southern New England." With a purpose larger than pinpointing a particular path, he tells a three-pronged tale about transportation, commerce and communication that stretches over four centuries. Jaffe examines the ancient Indian footpaths followed by colonial messengers who wore a trail through the wilderness sufficiently established to support regular mail service by 1673. The muddy, rutted paths had by 1789 become a "loosely pebbled splendor" later trumped by turnpikes and expressways. The "King's best highway," once the conduit for quill-penned letters and newspapers that galvanized the American Revolution, by the 1990s featured cell-phone towers above and fiber optic wires beneath." (Kirkus Reviews)
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"So Many Books...So Little Time"
Some of the Library's newly-acquired books that have been highlighted on Colonie's Cable Channel 17 show called "So Many Books..So Little Time."
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