Another way to find out what's going on in Falls Village: Check out its blog

FALLS VILLAGE — Want to know what the local children’s theater group is up to? How about your neighborhood library, Music Mountain or links and a calendar of events for the second smallest town in the state? For Falls Villagers and other onlookers near and far, those items and more are only a click away.

The Falls Village Blog (fallsvillageblog.blogspot.com) is the brainchild of freelance writer and editor Daniel M. Shaw, who bought a weekend home in Falls Village in 2000 and moved to the town full-time four years later. In 2002, Shaw wrote what he refers to as “the infamous†Escapes section article about his adopted hometown for The New York Times. That article is credited with attracting additional attention to the town on the part of weekenders and others intrigued by Falls Village’s quiet ambiance.

Shaw politely declined to be interviewed for this article.

“I don’t want the blog to be about me,†he explained during a brief conversation with this reporter in front of Town Hall.

Shaw may wish to remain in the background, but he has developed a legion of fans and regular readers since his first post in April about his “lottery fantasy†of buying the Falls Village Inn and turning it into a community gathering place and watering hole. Shaw noted that over lunch with his friend, Kimberly Rock, he learned she had the same fantasy.

“I thought this was a funny coincidence, a bonding moment for me and Kimberly,†Shaw wrote. “I thought maybe we should drive over to the Village Deli Mart and buy lottery tickets together.â€

That inaugural post elicited five comments from villagers who had a variation of the same idea.

“Maybe when the firemen move to their new location on Route 7 the old firehouse could house a pub?†replied one reader with a passion for question marks. “The town could make some income from rent? Flaming shots anyone?â€

There are several affectionate posts on the Falls Village Children’s Theater Company, an organization for which Shaw frequently volunteers his public relations skills. Music Mountain, the D.M. Hunt Library and Camp Isabella Freedman are prominently mentioned.  A post late last month on the fate of the town-owned 107 Main St. building elicited eight comments and a spirited debate about the future of downtown.

“What I like best about Dan’s blog is I never leave the site without a smile,†reader Denise Cohn said in an e-mail. “Dan is a brilliant writer and has a unique way of bringing out the best in every story and every one.â€

Furthermore, Cohn, who is the executive director of the children’s theater company, applauded Shaw for reporting the “overwhelming amount of good things happening in this little town.

“I think it comes naturally for Dan — has anyone ever seen him without a smile?â€

“Dan’s blog is highly aesthetic — beautiful pictures plus a nice layout,†added Peter Halle, who lives with his family just over the bridge in the Amesville section of Salisbury. “But mostly it is very informative.â€

Falls Village Town Clerk Mary Palmer is a regular reader who enjoys the “unique perspective of a former city dweller experiencing country life.â€

“I work in the Town Hall, so I stay informed, but for those who have left the area and those who work out of town all week, the number of comments to me about contacts and news from Dan’s blog is very impressive,†Palmer said. “I also love the photographs.â€

Palmer also loves the immediacy and the local flavor of Shaw’s enterprise: “He could be the modern day Town Crier, advising about an upcoming cultural event or impending storm.â€

Indeed, Shaw’s mix of gossip, culture, food, civics and “neighbors†would appear to be unique among Northwest Corner Web logs and online news sources. Cornwall has the Cornwall Chronicle, an independent general interest newsletter that is published electronically every month on the town of Cornwall’s Web site. The online Kent Tribune folded earlier this summer.

The Lakeville Journal maintains a prominent news site featuring this reporter’s blog, which includes a mix of opinion on politics, culture and local news. Journalist Gale Toensing started The Corner Report in 2005. For several months it featured local news, along with items pertinent to Toensing’s passions. Now most of the posts concern the situation in the Middle East.

“Dan is obviously an excellent and sensitive writer, and a good photographer,†said Toensing, a Falls Village resident and former reporter for The Waterbury Republican-American newspaper. “I love the combination of news, gossip and opinion, and the way all three can intermix in each story since it is a blog rather than a ‘hard news’ site.â€

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