Writer of Madoff book with new details coming to Palm Beach Book Store

When Bernard “Bernie” Madoff swept into Palm Beach homes, businesses and private clubs — some of the most exclusive rooms with some of the wealthiest people in the world — he brought with him promises of big returns on exclusive investments.Those promises proved too alluring for some — leaving many on the island devastated both finally and personally in the wake of Madoff’s 2008 arrest for charges including wire fraud, money laundering, securities fraud and investment adviser fraud.Until recently, the story of Madoff’s $68 billion fraud was told in piecemeal form, said Richard Behar — which is why the investigative journalist dedicated 15 years to researching and writing “Madoff: The Final Word,” released in July by Simon & Schuster’s Avid Reader Press.Behar will discuss his book, which brings to light new details about the scope of Madoff’s crimes, from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 20, during a book signing at the Palm Beach Book Store, 215 Royal Poinciana Way, Palm Beach.“We are looking forward to hosting author Richard Behar here at the Palm Beach Book Store,” store owner Candice Cohen said. “So many people in Palm Beach were impacted by Bernie Madoff, and this book is important because it includes new pertinent information that will be published for the first time.”Behar has worked for publications including Forbes, Time and Fortune. He turned his investigative eye to Madoff’s story after discovering that his aunt, Adele, had lost all of her money in Madoff’s massive Ponzi scheme.Madoff died in prison at age 82.His list of victims features celebrities and socialites including director Steven Spielberg, actors Kevin Bacon and John Malkovich, Holocaust survivor and author Elie Wiesel, and Major League Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher Sandy Koufax — and many Palm Beachers.Madoff owned a home on North Lake Way, and he was a member of the Palm Beach Country Club, where he played golf and met people who would be among those who lost billions to the man.After his arrest, Madoff’s Palm Beach home became a target for vandals, with one incident in January 2009 leaving the massive tree in front of the home’s gate draped with toilet paper — the work of teen boys who told the Daily News at the time that they lost their trust funds to Madoff.In the course of Behar’s decade-and-a-half digging into Madoff’s crimes, he said he uncovered information that revealed that the fraud extended back toward the beginning of Madoff’s career in the 1960s. He said he also found evidence that Madoff’s family was far more involved than previously reported.The type of long-term journalistic investigations to which Behar is accustomed led him to become “hooked” on certain stories, and he said that is what happened as he delved deeper and deeper into Madoff’s crimes, for which the con man was sentenced to 150 years in prison in 2009.Decades ago, Behar met in prison with the person who, at that time, was considered the king of the Ponzi scheme, Dennis Helliwell. Behar was tried to understand how Helliwell — who grew up in foster care, as did Behar — turned into someone who “took his whole family to the cleaners,” Behar said.“And then Bernie comes along,” he said. “I just wanted to get into his brain as much as possible and probe it.”Behar was especially shocked that his aunt fell victim to Madoff’s promises. “I thought she was so savvy,” he said, adding that he couldn’t believe “she was invested with this guy.”After years of having her business-reporter nephew look into possible investments for her, Behar’s aunt had kept mum about putting all of her money into Madoff’s so-called investment fund.“That was part of the mentality of dealing with Bernie,” Behar said. “You kept quiet. It was like a club. I likened it to standing outside of velvet rope in New York at a nightclub and hoping you get picked.”Behar’s aunt spoke with her nephew for “Madoff: The Final Word,” providing insight and humor into the mindset of those who gave the man their money.Behar also had the benefit of hundreds of hours of interviews with prosecutors and investigators close to the case — along with access to confidential FBI documents that revealed the never-before-reported depth of Madoff’s fraud, he said.Those confidential documents included summaries of interviews with the man Behar called Madoff’s “deputy in crime” — Frank DiPascali Jr.“Frank just shed enormous light on the evolution of the fraud,” Behar said.According to the documents, Madoff confessed to DiPascali that the fraud extended back to the 1960s, Behar said, adding that Madoff also shared that information in two meetings with federal investigators.But Madoff reversed himself on those admissions, Behar said, adding that he suspects that one of Madoff’s attorneys warned him that any profits from before the 1990s, when prosecutors said the con began, would not be able to go to his wife, Ruth.Behar visited Madoff three times in prison, spoke to him over the phone 50 times and sent hundreds of emails back and forth, Behar said.The writer’s first attempts to reach Madoff were met with silence. It was after Behar sent a heartfelt condolence note to Madoff following the suicide of Madoff’s son, Mark, in 2010 that Madoff finally responded.“He said, ‘You know, this story has not been told. Come on down,’ ” Behar said. “That was Bernie’s way.”As Behar began to uncover new information, he came across additional evidence that Madoff’s wife, Ruth, who FBI agents nicknamed “Ruthie Books,” had a much larger role than previously reported.“She was the bookkeeper for decades, reconciling the money in, money out of the Chase checking account that was used for the Ponzi,” Behar said. “But she claimed on ‘60 Minutes’ (in 2011) that she worked only two years at the company, in 1961 and ’63. And that is absolutely false.”Ruth Madoff’s work reconciling that account continued until the year before “it exploded,” Behar said.Behar decided to take his time with his research and not rush it, even as about a dozen books about Madoff and his crimes were published within just a handful of years of Madoff’s arrest.“I wasn’t going to jump into that mess,” Behar said. “I’d rather pick the bones, see what was missed and develop relationships with FBI and prosecutors, and just sort of methodically try to do something definitive to the best that I humanly can.”The result: a nearly 400-page tome that has received rave reviews, with Kirkus Reviews calling it, “A penetrating account of the web of lies that won the late con man Bernie Madoff his billions.”How was Madoff able to scam so many savvy people out of billions of dollars?A Ponzi scheme typically begins as affinity fraud, which is a type of investment fraud that targets a specific group of people, Behar said.In Madoff’s case, Behar said that was the Jewish community.Madoff was Jewish and was able to endear himself to members of clubs in well-heeled communities, including Palm Beach and Long Island.“But then it grew like a tsunami, and he had to increase it to keep the Ponzi going, and that’s when big feeder funds started getting involved and he took it overseas,” Behar said.Also Jewish, Behar said there is an element of Jewish culture where Jews tend to trust each other. “You don’t think you’re going to be burned,” he said.Wiesel is a perfect example of that, Behar noted. Wiesel’s best-selling book “Night” was based on his experiences in concentration camps during the Holocaust. Before his death in 2016, Wiesel won a Congressional Gold Medal in 1984, the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986, the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1992 and a National Humanities Medal in 2009.He also lost millions to Madoff. The Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity lost $15 million — one of many Jewish nonprofits bilked by Madoff — and Wiesel’s personal accounts also took a hit. In a 2009 New York Times interview, Wiesel said that “psychopath” was too nice a word for the man who nearly put his foundation out of existence.Madoff told Behar that he didn’t pursue Wiesel. Instead, Behar told the Daily News, Madoff claimed Wiesel’s friends “pressured” Madoff to accept Wiesel as a client.When Behar saw Wiesel at a charity event during his years of research for his book, Behar asked the Nobel laureate if there was any healing for the Jewish community in the wake of Madoff’s crimes.“No,” Behar said Wiesel told him. “But we’ve been through worse.”If you goWhat: Book signing with Richard Behar, author of “Madoff: The Final Word”Where: The Palm Beach Book Store, 215 Royal Poinciana Way, Palm BeachWhen: 5:30 to 7 p.m. Nov. 20Information: thepalmbeachbookstore.com, richardbehar.comKristina Webb is a reporter for Palm Beach Daily News, part of the USA TODAY Florida Network. You can reach her at [email protected]. Subscribe today to support our journalism.

Preview: Marvel Comics ‘Free Comic Book Day 2025’ Titles

Publisher Description.  Free Comic Book Day is on May 3 this year, and once again, Marvel Comics celebrates this exciting day for the industry with something for every fan.  Readers can look forward to the entry points for all-new eras of Fantastic Four and Amazing Spider-Man, a prelude to an upcoming X-Men saga, and a glimpse at the very first event set in the new Ultimate Universe!For the second year in a row, Marvel also presents a Star Wars Free Comic Book Day title which explores the what’s to come in the galaxy far, far away.  Plus, see creators and characters from different cultures, communities, and identities spotlighted in a special Free Comic Book edition of Marvel’s Voices.  And last but not least, you’ll find the perfect first comic book for the young ones in your life with an all-new Free Comic Book Day: Spidey & His Amazing Friends.
Free Comic Book Day 2025: Fantastic Four/Giant-Size X-Men #1Written by Ryan North, Collin Kelly, Jackson Lanzing & Chip ZdarskyArt by Humberto Ramos, Edgar Delgado, Chip Zdarsky & Iban CoelloIn advance of Marvel’s First Family arriving on the big screen this summer, Ryan North and Humberto Ramos craft an unusual story in which the FANTASTIC FOUR respond to a most unusual interdimensional summons!  And on the eve of the birth of the ALL-NEW, ALL-DIFFERENT X-MEN, there is one extra mutant in attendance.  WHO is it?  Only Collin Kelly and Jackson Lanzing can tell you!  Plus, another surprise from Chip Zdarsky!  We’re simply too good to you!
Free Comic Book Day 2025: Amazing Spider-Man/Ultimate Universe #1Written by Joe Kelly, Deniz Camp & Cody ZiglarArt by John Romita Jr. & Jonas ScharfJoe Kelly and John Romita Jr. remind us who Peter Parker and SPIDER-MAN are! Plus, an exclusive prologue to this summer’s blockbuster ULTIMATE event from Deniz Camp, Cody Ziglar & Jonas Scharf!
Free Comic Book Day 2025: Star Wars #1Written by Alex Segura, Charles Soule & Marc GuggenheimArt by Phil Noto, Luke Ross, Stefano Raffaele & Madibek MusabekovCelebrating the new era of Star Wars comics!  Luke Skywalker finds himself in a wretched hive of scum and villainy facing off against pirates!  Jedi Knights Qui-Gon Jinn & Tensu Run are on the hunt for the villainous Corlis Rath!  Who is the mysterious VANEE and what is his connection to Darth Vader & Kylo Ren?
Free Comic Book Day 2025: Ironheart/Marvel’s Voices #1Written by Justina Ireland & MoreArt by Julian Shaw & MoreCelebrating a year of Marvel’s Voices with a brand-new story starring Ironheart!  Bestselling writer Justina Ireland blasts Ironheart into Chicago’s past for a story of Black innovation through the ages!  And explore the past year of Voices anthologies with selections from Mystique and Destiny’s star-studded wedding issue, Patriot’s explosive return to super-heroing, the introduction of a brand-new Ghost Rider and more!
Free Comic Book Day 2025: Iron Man & His Awesome Friends/Spidey & His Amazing Friends #1Swing into this year’s free comic book day special with new and favorite characters from two Disney Jr. shows!  First, armor up with Iron Man and his Awesome Friends, Iron Heart and Iron Hulk, in this not-to-be-missed all-new comic featuring characters from the forthcoming Disney Jr. show!  Then the web-slinging fun continues with everyone’s favorite heroes from Marvel’s Spidey and His Amazing Friends!  There’s no shortage of baddies creating mischief in New York and Spidey, Ghost-Spider, and Spin need help keeping the city safe through thrilling activity pages and easy-to-read stories.Click Gallery below for full-size images.

The Power Of Where: How Business Leaders Can Leverage Spatial Data

Don Murray is cofounder of Safe Software and has spent his career helping organizations bring life to data to make better decisions.

How many times a day do you think about the word “where”? It likely happens more often than you may realize.

In our personal lives, location is foundational. We are always somewhere, everything is always somewhere and every event happens somewhere. We want to know where our favorite brand just opened a store, where we’re going out for dinner or where our child is going for their playdate. The “where” is everywhere. However, when it comes to embracing data-driven strategies, businesses are only just starting to leverage the power of “where.” Until now, most spatial data has been a missing piece in data strategies.

Spatial data—also referred to as location data—uncovers new information that empowers businesses to be more efficient, save costs and better serve their customers. In other words, spatial data can help reveal new trends and relationships that can ultimately inform business decisions.

Beyond supporting business success, spatial data is definitely not a missing piece when it comes to facing some of the major challenges we are facing on the planetary level. Societal issues such as lack of housing, food shortages and climate change all have a huge spatial component.
Spatial data has become increasingly available to businesses and government bodies alike, and there is much more that can be done to leverage its power. As we continue to experience the explosive rise of spatial thinking, how can we best take advantage of it? Let’s explore.

What It Means To Embrace Spatial Data
Adding spatial data into your data and analytics strategy can be as easy as embracing some of the information that’s already in your databases. You can start with your customer addresses, for instance. Each address represents a location. There is nothing like seeing your data spatially for the first time. Are your customers clustered? Without looking at the locations, you would likely never know. If they are clustered, then why?

You get the idea. Seeing things spatially results in a whole new set of questions. Now, you’re not just aware of the who, what, when and why—you also get visibility into the where. Visualization is just the beginning of your spatially powered, actionable insight journey.

Spatial Data In Practice
So what do spatially enabled insights look like in practice? Let’s look at a few examples.
Brick-And-Mortar Locations
One common use of spatial data in the retail sector is to inform the location of brick-and-mortar store locations. Retailers can use spatial data, such as customer addresses, to understand where potential customers are clustered or to analyze foot traffic to determine how best to set up a physical store. Similarly, they can use the addresses of online shoppers to determine the most cost-effective location for a warehouse or distribution center.
Detecting Fraudulent Insurance Claims
Insurance companies use spatial data to help detect fraudulent claims. For example, if a flood has taken place in a certain region of a city, they can leverage spatial data to create a boundary for the claims and quickly determine if a claimant’s address falls inside or outside of that boundary. Spatial data is also used to define “flood plains” as living in or out of a flood plain affects insurance premiums.
Improving CRM Lists
Many municipal services benefit from using spatial data. Take Waterford City and County Council in Ireland, for example. Recently, the organization, which is a customer of Safe Software, decided to spatialize its customer relationship management (CRM) list, giving them a much better understanding of where the ticket hotspots were. With this information, they have been able to better allocate their resources and be more proactive, increasing their ticket solve rate by 25%.
Election Information
Waterford City and County Council’s GIS and data transformation team has rolled out an election hub that will support citizens during election season, providing information such as directions to the nearest polling station and the local electoral map.
Other spaces that leverage spatial data include urban development and precision agriculture. In Vancouver, tall buildings strategically cluster near transit hubs, reflecting planned growth. Likewise, spatial data drives efficient, sustainable food production, crucial for addressing food security.
At the Gartner Data and Analytics Summit 2024, EY demonstrated how agrochemical providers used satellite imagery to detect corn rust early, enabling targeted treatment distribution. This ensured efficient resource use, timely access for farmers and minimized food supply chain disruption. Both examples showcase spatial data’s transformative power, improving urban planning and agriculture while enhancing sustainability and efficiency.
Taking Steps To Implement Spatial Data
You may only just be getting started with incorporating spatial data into your business model—but that shouldn’t make it overwhelming. Here are three things you can do in the early stages of your spatial data journey.
First, identify the spatial data that you currently have and explore how to leverage it. Every customer address in your database is a “location” that just needs a geocoder.
Second, follow up with a small focused use case that will deliver value. The first time you see your data on a map, you will likely have an “aha” moment as you uncover relationships and other information that was previously hidden.
Third, look up third-party resources. There is a wealth of free spatial data available, such as OpenStreetMap, USGS, U.S. Census, Natural Resources Canada and more. Many cities and governments also have open data initiatives available. Leverage these resources in ways that make sense to your business. Once you get started and have that initial success, you are well on your way to a spatial data future.
Final Thoughts
The applications for spatial data reach far, wide and deep. Applying spatial data to many of today’s problems can help bring new insights, revealing information that was previously hidden, and the world is just getting started.
Spatial data helps us understand things we wouldn’t have otherwise. In today’s hypercompetitive business landscape, I believe the organizations that are embracing the power of “where” have a great advantage.
Forbes Technology Council is an invitation-only community for world-class CIOs, CTOs and technology executives. Do I qualify?

Travelife Gold renewal highlights Kuramathi Maldives’ commitment to eco-friendly tourism

Kuramathi Maldives has renewed its Travelife Gold Certification, a globally recognised accolade that underscores its commitment to sustainability. Travelife, an industry-led program, emphasises social responsibility and environmental management, encouraging sustainable practices among tour operators and accommodation providers. Achieving this award reflects the resort’s consistent efforts toward corporate social responsibility (CSR) objectives, including preserving biodiversity, monitoring the marine ecosystem, implementing energy and water-saving measures, and collaborating with the local community on education and employment initiatives. A key aspect of this approach aligns with Travelife’s emphasis on employee welfare, ensuring fair wages, ethical working conditions, professional development opportunities, and adherence to health and safety standards. Furthermore, inclusive practices, such as providing equal employment opportunities and involving employees in sustainability efforts, contribute to a positive workplace culture where team members share a sense of ownership in CSR initiatives.
Central to these sustainability efforts is Kuramathi’s Eco Centre, managed by a team that includes a Sustainability Manager, Horticulturist, and Eco Centre Coordinator. This team works closely with the resort’s environment committee, which comprises members from various operational areas, to implement initiatives promoting environmental, social, and economic sustainability. By minimising environmental impacts, enhancing community benefits, and upholding human rights and fair labor practices, Kuramathi demonstrates responsible tourism, seamlessly integrating growth with conservation.

5 Books To Empower The Next Wave Of Business Leaders

The United States is experiencing an unprecedented business formation boom. According to federal data released earlier this year, the past three years have seen more businesses founded in America than ever since official record keeping began.
The trend line remains steady, indicating new businesses will continue to rise.

Unfortunately, many of these businesses will fail within a few years, and fewer still will ever truly thrive. Those who survive and grow are likely to be led by innovative, fearless founders and executives who aren’t shy about learning and applying the best practices of those who came before them.

Some of those ideas are sure to come from current and former colleagues, bosses, and industry peers. Friends, family, and other non-business acquaintances may have some insights to share as well. But tomorrow’s leaders shouldn’t discount advice from total strangers, either—not when those strangers have built or helped scale thriving businesses of their own.

These five authors have done just that. They’ve learned quite a bit on their journeys. If you’re ready to join the next generation of leaders, you’ll want to hear them out.

1. Graci Harkema — Rising
Graci Harkema’s Rising: From a Mut Hut to the Boardroom — and Back Again is a memoir about one woman’s journey from abject poverty in central Africa to the heights of American business life.
Harkema’s story begins with her earliest memories, of a crowded orphanage in her native Congo, and proceeds to the leafy, lily-white streets of her adopted home in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Harkema’s childhood was one of wonder and learning, but also of repression and loneliness.

Harkema overcame, of course. Today, she is a nationally renowned business consultant who empowers her clients to think creatively about diversity, equity, racial justice, and gender equality in the boardroom and beyond. She is committed to making workplaces more safe, welcoming, and empowering for people from all walks of life.

And she is not shy about opening up, in real life and to her readers. Through the touching story of her reunion with her birth mother, Harkema reveals the truest parts of herself—while acknowledging that she, like all of us, remains a work in progress.
2. Tammy Heermann — Reframe Your Story
In Reframe Your Story: Real Talk for Women Who Want to Let Go, Do Less and Be More—Together, Tammy Heermann speaks directly to women leaders who feel gaslit, dismissed, or just plain ignored. As a leadership development expert with more than 20 years of experience empowering women to excel in business and life, her advice boils down to a simple but often overlooked directive: Keep it simple.
That’s a bit more complicated than it sounds, of course. Across more than 200 pages of insight-packed prose, Heermann draws on the latest sociological and psychological literature—as well as compelling stories from her clients’ lives and her own—to help present and future leaders break down internal and external barriers to achievement and craft a positive, powerful case for themselves.
3. Michelle Ray — Leading in Real Time
If you feel like you’re losing your bearings amid accelerating cultural and technological change, check out Leading in Real Time: How to Drive Success in a Radically Changing World by Michelle Ray.
Ray’s approachable book leverages years of successful leadership consulting work to demonstrate how to connect on an authentic level with your teams, foster transparency throughout your organization, strengthen collaboration and cross-functionality, and show that you really are accountable for your actions as a leader.
But most importantly, Ray acknowledges what we all know: that disruption will soon become the status quo and that “real-time leadership” is the only remedy for leaders who want to remain relevant.
4. John Doerr — Measure What Matters
In Measure What Matters: How Google, Bono, and the Gates Foundation Rock the World with OKRs, famed venture capitalist (and early Google investor) John Doerr details the now-famous measurement framework he developed as a young Intel engineer in the 1970s.
Known as Objectives and Key Results, or OKRs, it’s a high-velocity, high-fidelity approach for business leaders to analyze what works and what doesn’t. From corporate initiatives to personnel, OKRs help drive investment, prioritization, and promotion decisions with speed and accuracy, allowing leaders to “fail faster” and succeed sooner than the alternatives.
The advice in this book has been tested and proven. Doerr helped deploy the OKR method at more than 50 startups he backed as a venture investor. Including Google itself.
5. Matt Abrahams — Think Faster, Talk Smarter
If you relish the opportunity to get up on stage in front of hundreds, maybe even thousands of people and confidently talk your book, or have supreme confidence in your ability to bring others to your side in high-pressure situations, then Think Faster, Talk Smarter: How to Speak Successfully When You’re Put on the Spot might not be for you.
But if you’re like most leaders, you secretly doubt your ability to speak eloquently, forcefully, and convincingly on demand.
In that case, this Matt Abrahams book offers vital lessons for even the most anxious public speakers. His evidence-based approach focuses on techniques like mirroring the audience, simplifying content, and sharpening delivery to provide more compelling and memorable listening experiences.
These lessons apply not just in high-stakes speeches before large audiences, but in more mundane environments like boardroom presentations, job interviews, client meetings, and even informal office settings. Indeed, some of the book’s most valuable lessons center on engaging small-talk ideas, small-bore persuasive tactics, small-group etiquette, and effective techniques to deliver feedback within the chain of command—all without the benefit of extensive preparation.
Empowering Future Leaders
The leaders of tomorrow aren’t born. They’re taught.
This is true in every walk of life, but especially in the business world. In addition to smarts, ambition, and a fair bit of luck, launching and growing an enterprise requires deep curiosity, a willingness to learn, and the humility to learn from failure.
While these five books won’t save you from the occasional setback, they could help you avoid a few painful mistakes. They’ll equip you with insights and experience to help you spot and capitalize on opportunities before everyone else. They may even change how you see the world and, thus, how you engage with your teams, your peers, and even your competitors on your journey to success.

What’s new this month in travel, accessories, art and more

A roundup of November’s most noteable updates from the Style deskWATCHESOpen this photo in gallery:Citizen: The Essence of Time by Jack Forster, US$195 at bookstores and online. For more, visit citizenwatch.com.SuppliedCitizen celebrates its 100th with a retrospective coffee-table book and a clutch of new watchesFor a 10th anniversary, it’s traditionally recommended that a couple exchange a gift made from aluminum or tin. For a 60th, anything in diamonds will do. There is no official material designated for a 100th anniversary, but for Japanese watchmaker Citizen, it might as well be titanium. Super Titanium, the brand’s proprietary alloy, to be precise.Titanium, the ultralight material used in spacecraft and Formula 1 cars, has become the “it” metal for a wide range of luxury watches in recent years, but at Citizen, it’s nothing new. In 1970, Citizen released the X-8 Chronometer, the world’s first watch with a titanium case, and the first of many titanium watches in the brand’s lineup. It’s just one of many notable firsts in the company’s century-long history.Citizen was founded in 1924 by Japanese clock and watch dealer Kamekichi Yamazaki with the goal of making affordable, reliable and stylish watches for the masses. Citizen has spent the past 10 decades working toward that goal, from the modest and reliable Citizen F wristwatches of the 1930s and ‘40s to modern bestsellers such as the oversized Ecozilla diver’s watch. Along the way, Citizen pioneered ultra-thin watches (the 1962 Diamond Flake, the world’s thinnest three-hand watch), light-powered models (the 1976 Crystron Solar Cell, the first sun-harnessing watch with an analog display) and precision timepieces (the 2018 Calibre 0100, the most accurate watch ever made).These and many other accomplishments are summed up in Citizen: The Essence of Time, a lushly illustrated retrospective coffee-table book from Assouline. A selection of new and archival watches released in time for the anniversary, however, illustrate the brand’s journey just as well, including a limited-edition reproduction of Citizen’s first pocket watch and the Satellite Wave X, which combines a light-powered Eco-Drive movement with a GPS timekeeping system in a case made, naturally, of Super Titanium.For more, visit citizenwatch.com.TRAVELInner Iceland’s supernatural beauty takes centre stage at the Blue Lagoon’s latest destinationOpen this photo in gallery:Stays from 50,500 kr in the winter and 68,300 kr in the summer.SuppliedIn the middle of Iceland’s Highlands is the geothermal valley Hveradalir, where small pools of water bubble and steam. Until very recently, only the most intrepid campers or visitors up for a very long day trip from the capital, Reykjavik, could get to this part of the country. That changed with the opening of Highland Base, a new resort from Blue Lagoon.Surrounded by the Kerlingarfjöll mountain range with views of two glaciers, Highland Base is a retreat for travellers who want to pitch a tent and adventurers who like to pair their hikes with a dip in private outdoor hot tubs overlooking the expansive terrain. The site was once home to a ski school, where young Icelanders would come to learn the sport during summer breaks from school. Receding snow levels meant the school had to close, but Blue Lagoon preserved that history and incorporated its accommodations into the new property, which includes a main hotel and individual lodges offering an added layer of privacy. Their walls are dotted with vintage shots of all-terrain vehicles navigating the unpaved gravel road that continues to be the only way to access this part of the country.Blue Lagoon has created accommodations that reflect the hotel’s surroundings. Wood exteriors and muted greys and greens in the interior mimic the natural environment. Oversized picture windows have benches underneath them, perfect for reading or catching the Northern Lights when they appear. Three pools shaped into the terrain are filled with geothermal waters from nearby Hveradalir hot springs. Hikers of all levels will find trails to suit their curiosity (e-biking is also an option) while in the winter, skiing and snowmobiling are available.For more, visit highlandbase.is.ENTERTAININGAustralia’s Non is disrupting dinner pairings with its alternatives to de-alcoholized bottlesOpen this photo in gallery:Non, a new liquid from Australia, aims to fill a gap with its line of “wine alternatives.”SuppliedZero-proofing your way through happy hour is no problem these days, thanks to the abundance of tasty alcohol-free cocktails. What comes after, though, is much, much harder, especially figuring out what to drink with dinner. Whether they’re too sweet or lacking in weight, vibrancy and complexity, few non-alcoholic wines can stand up to a rich meal, especially one with multiple courses.Non, a new liquid from Australia, aims to fill this gap with its line of “wine alternatives,” all of which have the depth of flavour and bright acidity to make temperance pairings with decadent meals a reality. The secret to its success is at least partly owing to the fact that the label’s founder didn’t set out to make non-alcoholic wine in the first place. “Non-alcoholic wine, or de-alcoholized wine, is wine that has had alcohol removed,” says founder Aaron Trotman. “Non isn’t trying to mimic any particular wine style. It’s an alternative with its own identity. It’s about balance and flavour, not faking something.”Despite that mission statement, if someone handed you a glass of Non1 Salted Raspberry & Chamomile with no explanation, it’d be easy to assume it was simply a fresh and dry sparkling rosé with a maritime influence and some lovely fruit notes. The process Trotman developed to achieve this is proprietary, but we know the lively acidity comes from verjus (juice from underripe grapes) and the complexity is the result of playing with natural ingredients including tea, herbs, fruits and spices to strike the perfect balance. The first three NON expressions took two years of testing and tweaking, but Trotman is now at a point where he can launch at least one new addition to the line per year.At present, besides the aforementioned Non1, two other expressions are available in Canada: Non3, a light sparkler with cinnamon and yuzu and Non7, a darker, complex and full-bodied stewed cherry-coffee drink. All three are offered in a kit or individually through Acquired Taste (acquiredtaste.ca).For more, visit non.world.ARTJoyce Wieland’s multifaceted portfolio will soon make stops in Montreal and TorontoOpen this photo in gallery:Heart On opens Feb. 8, 2025. For more, visit mbam.qc.ca.SuppliedA lushly hued political commentary done in oil on canvas. A 16-mm film titled Rat Life and Diet in North America. A topical scope encompassing feminism, ecological concerns, race and civil rights. These are merely a few elements in the curriculum vitae of the iconoclastic Canadian artist Joyce Wieland.“Her work really stands the test of time,” says Anne Grace, curator of modern art at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, about Wieland, who died in 1998. The influential innovator, known for her multidisciplinary practice that included textile work, painting and film is the subject of an upcoming exhibition called Heart On, which will open at the MMFA in February.Curated by Grace and Georgiana Uhlyarik, the Fredrik S. Eaton Curator of Canadian Art at the Art Gallery of Ontario, the show will reveal the expansive purview of Wieland’s work over the course of her 30-year career. “[The show] is a true collaboration between the two institutions,” says Grace, adding that both teams involved in the process of putting the far-reaching show together were “very aware of the fact that presenting Wieland is different in Montreal from Toronto, because she’s much less known in Montreal – although certainly is beloved by artists.”Despite the lack of cross-Canadian recognition during her lifetime, Wieland’s oeuvre is marked by impressive feats including being the first living woman to have retrospectives mounted at the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa and the AGO. Such accolades, Grace says, certainly resonated with her personally. “I did my university undergrad in Toronto in the 1980s,” she says. “At that time, Joyce Wieland was the Canadian woman artist.” She says that the show will tap into the pan-generational appeal of Wieland’s work. “She really was prescient as an artist,” Grace says. “Both in terms of the materials she chose to work with, as well as the themes that she dealt with.”Heart On opens Feb. 8, 2025. For more, visit mbam.qc.ca.JEWELLERYFor its new high jewellery collection, Van Cleef & Arpels sets sail on a treasure huntOpen this photo in gallery:The jewellery pieces in Van Cleef & Arpels’s new collection will play on recurring themes from the French house’s almost-130-year history – notably nautical elements and literary inspirations.SuppliedEarlier this fall, a treasure chest appeared on the doorsteps of jewellery-world insiders. Inside, a kaleidoscope presented an under-the-sea view in a soft palette of rainbow hues, and a scroll, illustrated by French comic book artist and author David B. with a tropical scene of birds and greenery, invited the lucky recipient to Miami, where Van Cleef & Arpels would unveil its latest high jewellery collection, Treasure Island.The black-tie affair would take place in mid-November at the Vizcaya Museum and Gardens, a lushly landscaped Italianate villa that anchors the shoreline of Coconut Grove. The jewellery pieces promised to play on recurring themes from the French house’s almost-130-year history – notably nautical elements and literary inspirations – by distilling Robert Louis Stevenson’s adventure saga into bejewelled wonders. “Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island is a book laden with universal resonance and a powerful collective imagination,” noted Van Cleef & Arpels’ former president and CEO Nicolas Bos, who is now the Group CEO of house owner Richemont, in the announcement of the collection. “It has left its mark on millions of readers and influenced various artistic disciplines, including painting, poetry and the decorative arts.”The prelude to the jewellery collection’s story is Van Cleef’s embrace of vibrant colour in the stones it often selects for its pieces. The tale itself unfolds in three chapters. The first grouping focuses on maritime navigation and includes a schooner clip with sails that fan out in a sea of diamonds as well as a necklace that appears knotted together in yellow and white gold rope. The second chapter incorporates the flotsam and jetsam of the seaside into blockbuster bijoux including the Coquillage Mystérieux, a scallop shell clip inlaid with rubies, emerald and a cultured white pearl. The tale ends with the bounty of a treasure chest, pre-Columbian style coin bracelets and intricate jawbreaker rings that capture the exuberance of discovery.For more, visit vancleefarpels.com.

Travel is unpredictable, but travel insurance can protect your wallet

Seasoned travelers know to expect the unexpected. From canceled flights to food poisoning, travel plans can go awry for a number of reasons.  A way to safeguard yourself from financial loss when your trip doesn’t go as planned is by having travel insurance.  It’s exactly what it sounds like: insurance for the investment you’re putting into your trip, from the costs of your flight to your hotel stay. Travel isn’t cheap, and it would be unfortunate to see your money go to waste. “Travel insurance may help you recoup money for unexpected events and inconveniences like being stuck on the tarmac, a trip delay, medical emergencies, lost bags and more,” said Christina Tunnah, general manager of global marketing and brands at World Nomads. “Travel insurance can’t necessarily prevent stressful things from happening to you, but it can help ease the financial and logistical blow.” Travel insurance claims denials up 33%:Here are 5 reasons why you may not get reimbursedEnjoy your worry-free vacation: Best travel insurance policiesAbout 38% of travelers purchase travel insurance, according to a December 2023 survey by INSIDER and Momentive AI Audience. The main reason behind the purchase was due to fear of flight delays or moved reservations. However, this is only the tip of the iceberg that travel insurance can do for you on your travels.  Here’s what you need to know about travel insurance.  Do I need travel insurance? “I could make a case for anybody for any trip that they should consider travel insurance,” said Stan Sandberg, co-founder of TravelInsurance.com, a travel insurance comparison site. “The big question to ask yourself is, would it really hurt if I had to cancel this trip at the last minute because I get sick – or for a number of reasons – and I were to lose all the money on the trip?” Travel insurance is meant to protect you and your trip from unforeseen events, ranging from medical emergencies to lost baggage, flight delays and more. “You can think of travel insurance as providing coverage for three main buckets: your trip investment, your health and your stuff,” said Tunnah. Your typical comprehensive travel insurance is broken down into two parts: pre- and post-departure. Pre-departure includes circumstances like weather disruptions (before a storm is named, so keep that in mind) or if you get sick before your trip starts and you need to cancel it. Post-departure spans whatever happens on the trip, such as your luggage being stolen and you need to buy toiletries and clothes at your destination, or you end up in the hospital.  “Most people will find the standard list of covered reasons to be comprehensive enough to be suited for their needs,” Sandberg said. However, those with pre-existing medical conditions or planning to do more adventurous activities like scuba diving or hiking in remote areas may want to consider looking at add-ons for the most protection.  What’s not covered by travel insurance? Travel insurance doesn’t cover everything that can happen on your trip, so make sure you read your full policy or talk to the travel insurance company’s customer service to get a full understanding.  “Some of these exclusions can include pre-existing conditions, undertaking certain adventure activities, or getting injured while under the influence (of narcotics),” Tunnah said. “Your policy will also have coverage limits to the amount that will be paid for lost baggage, medical expenses, emergency evacuation, etc.” For example, some travel insurance will only cover a flight delay if it hits a certain number of hours.  Can I cancel my trip with travel insurance for any reason? No, not unless you specifically pay for it. Buying travel insurance doesn’t guarantee a refund if you cancel simply because you no longer want to go. However, if you do want that flexibility, there is an option for that, aptly named the “cancel for any reason” add-on. You can cancel your trip for any reason as close as two days before your departure and still get reimbursed 50% or 75% of your nonrefundable costs.  Do I need travel insurance if I have a pre-existing medical condition? If you have a medical condition that existed before your trip, such as asthma or even pregnancy, there are a few steps you need to take – and you’ll want to act quickly, according to Beth Godlin, president of Aon Affinity Travel Practice.  “What’s most important, number one, is that you check the definition of pre-existing conditions,” she said. Then you’ll know how long you’ll have to fill out the pre-existing waiver, any requirements for purchasing to get the most coverage and what the lookback period is, or the timeframe that the insurance company will consider a condition stable.  When it doubt, give them a call. “If you’re still confused, call the company and say this is what I’m worried about,” Godlin said. Do I need travel insurance for Japan? Do I need travel insurance for Europe? Those traveling internationally will especially find travel insurance useful if something were to happen, from as small as a visit to a doctor to as major as a medical evacuation. “Even with the best health insurance plans in the U.S., you may not have coverage when you travel overseas or outside your home medical territory or maybe just very limited,” Sandberg said.  Do I need travel insurance for a cruise? If you’re taking a cruise, travel insurance can definitely come in handy, so shop around and see what type of coverage is offered. Cruise lines typically offer their own insurance, but they’ll often have quite a bit of restrictions, so make sure to read the fine print.  “When it comes to cruises, some benefits are more important than others,” Tunnah said. “As you aren’t flying between many locations, baggage delay may not matter as much. However, what if you have to skip a planned port of call due to weather? Some plans may cover this inconvenience.”  It’s also very likely that your usual health insurance won’t cover visits to the cruise infirmary or clinic at a port, and you’ll end up having to pay out-of-pocket.  

‘Serious travel warning’ for anyone visiting Spanish holiday hotspot over Christmas

A travel expert has issued a “serious” warning to anyone planning on visiting one of Spain’s most popular holiday hotspots this Christmas. Although you can still expect plenty of sun, Mallorca transforms during the festive season as Christmas lights go up and crowds gather for festive events in the city of Palma Nova. It’s the perfect place to escape to if the dreary British weather is killing your Christmas buzz. But Alex from the Mallorca Under The Sun channel on YouTube says there’s something you need to be aware of if you’re planning on doing just that – pickpockets. “Now you may well be forgiven for, just looking at Palma Nova this morning, that the island is completely dead,” she said in a recent video. “I’m afraid that is not the case.”She explained how pickpockets have “not gone away” and will be “operating throughout the winter months, particularly throughout the Christmas season over in Palma”. She went on: “As amazing as Palma is over the festive season, there is a darker side operating and this is going to be these street thieves, the pickpocketers, the handbag dippers that are going to be out and about.”I very much doubt they’re going to be on the next flight to the Canary Islands and operating over there. They’ve got plenty of targets over here in the form of Christmas shoppers and those enjoying the festive season over here in Mallorca.”Alex also warned that Palma “is going to be extremely busy” in the run up to Christmas, right up until the Three Kings’ Night on January 5. She recommends that anyone travelling to Palma from elsewhere on the island uses public transport during this period, as parking spaces will be hard to come by.However, she continued: “At the same time, if you are getting on public transport into the centre of Palma, just be aware that is also going to be extremely busy. Which means that you need to pay special attention to the location of your belongings. Watch out for people pickpocketing on public transport, particularly on Saturday night when it’s likely to be very busy.”Alex said another day to be aware of is November 23, when Palma’s “big Christmas light switch-on will take place”. Again, there will be big crowds and potential pickpockets.She cautioned: “Do not carry your backpack across two shoulders, make sure it’s tucked under your arm or wear it across your front. Make sure you know where your wallet and your phone are at all times.”Avoid bringing your passport or any important documents with you into Palma, try to leave them at a hotel. If not, just make sure you really do have tight hold of them.”However, Alex did not want to put anyone off visiting. She insisted visiting Palma at this time of year really is a “magical experience”, with the “perfect combination of sunshine with the festiveness of the Christmas lights too”.

‘Serious travel warning’ for anyone visiting Spanish holiday hotspot over Christmas

A travel expert has issued a “serious” warning to anyone planning on visiting one of Spain’s most popular holiday hotspots this Christmas. Although you can still expect plenty of sun, Mallorca transforms during the festive season as Christmas lights go up and crowds gather for festive events in the city of Palma Nova. It’s the perfect place to escape to if the dreary British weather is killing your Christmas buzz. But Alex from the Mallorca Under The Sun channel on YouTube says there’s something you need to be aware of if you’re planning on doing just that – pickpockets. “Now you may well be forgiven for, just looking at Palma Nova this morning, that the island is completely dead,” she said in a recent video. “I’m afraid that is not the case.”She explained how pickpockets have “not gone away” and will be “operating throughout the winter months, particularly throughout the Christmas season over in Palma”. She went on: “As amazing as Palma is over the festive season, there is a darker side operating and this is going to be these street thieves, the pickpocketers, the handbag dippers that are going to be out and about.”I very much doubt they’re going to be on the next flight to the Canary Islands and operating over there. They’ve got plenty of targets over here in the form of Christmas shoppers and those enjoying the festive season over here in Mallorca.”Alex also warned that Palma “is going to be extremely busy” in the run up to Christmas, right up until the Three Kings’ Night on January 5. She recommends that anyone travelling to Palma from elsewhere on the island uses public transport during this period, as parking spaces will be hard to come by.However, she continued: “At the same time, if you are getting on public transport into the centre of Palma, just be aware that is also going to be extremely busy. Which means that you need to pay special attention to the location of your belongings. Watch out for people pickpocketing on public transport, particularly on Saturday night when it’s likely to be very busy.”Alex said another day to be aware of is November 23, when Palma’s “big Christmas light switch-on will take place”. Again, there will be big crowds and potential pickpockets.She cautioned: “Do not carry your backpack across two shoulders, make sure it’s tucked under your arm or wear it across your front. Make sure you know where your wallet and your phone are at all times.”Avoid bringing your passport or any important documents with you into Palma, try to leave them at a hotel. If not, just make sure you really do have tight hold of them.”However, Alex did not want to put anyone off visiting. She insisted visiting Palma at this time of year really is a “magical experience”, with the “perfect combination of sunshine with the festiveness of the Christmas lights too”.