D'Entremont, a writer and photographer for Lighthouse Digest and webmaster of New England Lighthouses (http: //lighthouse.cc), has meticulously updated this dramatic, romantic history. For lighthouse fans and lovers of New England lore, it is a must. Edward Rowe Snow. It is a name we have been forced to reckon with in five years of building Commonwealth Editions as a publisher of nonfiction books about New England and its historic places. Edward Rowe Snow. Everywhere we heard the namefrom readers, from booksellers, from historians, from other authors. Nowhere we saw the books. Not new books, anyway. New editions of Snow werent anywhere to be found. Snows out of print, we were told. Hasnt been in print for fifteen years. Love to see him in print, booksellers told us. People ask for his books all the time. We found fan clubs devoted to Edward Rowe Snow and catalogs and web sites filled with used copies of his books. More than once we heard the joke that a first edition of his work is more valuable unsigned than signed: Snow was such a tireless promoter of his own work, so willing to sign books anywhere on any occasion, that the unsigned book is rare indeed. We could not find his books, but we found his legend everywhere. It seemed to us that half of New England had grown up "at the feet" of Edward Rowe Snow, taking in his tales like mothers milk or a good bowl of chowder on a cold, stormy day. And booksellers virtually begged us to reissue Snows books. Ken Gloss of the legendary Brattle Book Shop in Boston was typical: "Not a week goes by," he told us, "that I dont get a request for a book by Edward Rowe Snow." Or maybe he said day. It was Gloss who finally tipped us off to the whereabouts of the one person on earth who literally grew up at the feet of Edward Rowe Snow. Dorothy Snow Bicknell, an extraordinarily kind and gentle woman known to what must be countless friends as "Dolly," is Snows daughter and only child. On a cold November day, we met Dolly at the South Shore Mall, where a model "Lighthouse Santa" still pays tribute to Snow. She charmed us with her devotion to her fathers memory. And I like to think she recognized Commonwealth Editions as a publisher that could do justice to that memory. With Dolly we met Jeremy DEntremont, who proved to be much more than a passionate fan of Edward Rowe Snow (we already knew plenty of those). As knowledgeable as he is dedicated, Jeremy provided the key to this new centennial edition of Snows workby respectfully updating and, here and there, gently correcting the masters work. It is too bad there are no lighthouse keepers anymore, because Jeremy DEntremont was born for the work. At the end of each chapter are Jeremys notes, which bring Snows text to the present day. A beacon kept lit with his discernment and devotion would keep vessels safe in the severest weather, on the craggiest shore. Snow partisan Bob Jannoni provided encouragement for this new edition, and designer Judy Barolak gave it grace and dignity. Steve Csipke developed a new, thematic index. One other person is worthy of note. Our managing editor, Penny Stratton, pulled together with Dolly and Jeremy and the many talented contributors and, against all odds, brought this new edition of Edward Rowe Snow to port. All involved been invigorated by the spirit and legend of Edward Rowe Snow. Webster Bull Commonwealth Editions Summer 2002 Commonwealth Editions is proud to reissue The Lighthouses of New England, one of Snow s most enduring classics, in recognition of the centennial of Snow s birth in August 1902. First published in 1945 and then updated in 1973, it relates the histories of over fifty of the region s lighthouses in rich detail. Snow gives special emphasis to the story of heroine Abbie Burgess at Maine s Matinicus Rock Light, to the rich histories of Boston Light and Minot s Ledge Light, and to the legendary Ida Lewis of Newport s Lime Rock Light. Modern-day lighthouse expert Jeremy D Entremont has provided extensive annotations to Snow s chapters, bringing the information about each lighthouse up to date. Edward Rowe Snow (1902-1982) was descended from a long line of sea captains. He sailed the high seas, toiled aboard oil tankers, and worked as a Hollywood extraall before attending college. Later he worked as a teacher and coach, and as a reconnaissance photographer during World War II. His education and work prepared him well for his legendary writing career, which was part maritime history, part show business. The Islands of Boston Harbor, his first book, was published in 1935. In all, Snow wrote nearly one hundred books and pamphlets, illustrated with many of his own photographs. He also contributed newspaper columns to the Quincy Patriot Ledger, the Boston Herald, and the Brockton Enterprise. In the 1950s his radio show "Six Bells" was heard on dozens of stations, and he made many other appearances on radio as well as on television. Snow is fondly remembered as