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Danbury childhood of best-selling author featured in a new memoir about a Candlewood Lake dream
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The front jacket of Eric Metaxas’ new memoir, “Fish Out of Water.”contributed imageShow MoreShow Less
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The back jacket of Eric Metaxas’ new memoir, “Fish Out of Water.”contributed imageShow MoreShow Less
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DANBURY - Eric Metaxas is the best-selling author who’s taken readers to the worlds of the Protestant reformer Martin Luther, the British abolitionist William Wilberforce and the anti-Nazi martyr Dietrich Bonhoeffer.
As such, it may surprise fans to learn that Metaxas has chosen a comparatively pedestrian setting for his latest history book - 1970s Danbury, where the author as his own subject recounts the seminal events of his childhood in “the only home I ever really had.”
International intrigue, big money and deathbed confessions, it sounds like the plot to a movie, but it s a true story and most of it takes place in Danbury, CT.
We have a feature on the Ethan and Lou Show called: The Place You Live featuring Mike Allen. Mike is the former I-95 News Director and a skilled communicator.
Every Tuesday morning he joins the Ethan and Lou Show to give us a deeper look into the Greater Danbury Area and parts of Putnam/Dutchess Counties in NY. On Tuesday s show (3/9/21) Mike did a segment we called Long Ridge. In it, we learned about the history of Long Ridge Road a man named Ed Wicks.
Jim Cameron Responds to Mark Boughton on Danbury Train Proposal
Journalist Jim Cameron and former Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton have been trading shots in the Danbury media over the Mayrbook Train Line Proposal and study. Cameron wrote an article in February called The Maybrook Rail Line Study is a Waste of $1 million.
Boughton has been a proponent of the Maybrook Line that could connect Danbury, CT and Brewster, NY train stations. Cameron criticized the plan in his article, writing:
Rather than crawling down the existing Danbury branch to Norwalk and then on the mainline to New York, Maybrook trains would go west from Danbury and connect with the Harlem branch of Metro-North, then head south through White Plains and into the city.