Recommendations of Final Edition

  • Nora Louise Syran: Final Edition

    This is good copy! A super tight, never maudlin look at the last time printing "the stories that matter to someone." I appreciated Lane's touches of humor, the "journalese," the newspaper's legacy and the use of the articles they are writing in real time to tell the story of this town and how the stories we tell matter. The organized chaos at the start balances the calm resignation at the end which in turn outweighs our worry of what will happen next for them all. For us all. For our stories.

    This is good copy! A super tight, never maudlin look at the last time printing "the stories that matter to someone." I appreciated Lane's touches of humor, the "journalese," the newspaper's legacy and the use of the articles they are writing in real time to tell the story of this town and how the stories we tell matter. The organized chaos at the start balances the calm resignation at the end which in turn outweighs our worry of what will happen next for them all. For us all. For our stories.

  • Adam Richter: Final Edition

    [2026-03-03]

    I've spent 20 years working in newsrooms, and all but one of the papers I worked for has stopped printing (or gone under). "Final Edition" is a poignant but never melodramatic story of what happens when the presses stop for good. There's a loss to the community, sure. But what I love about "Final Edition" is its focus on the people who spend their lives covering the community, and the loss they experience.
    This is a brilliant play.

    [2026-03-03]

    I've spent 20 years working in newsrooms, and all but one of the papers I worked for has stopped printing (or gone under). "Final Edition" is a poignant but never melodramatic story of what happens when the presses stop for good. There's a loss to the community, sure. But what I love about "Final Edition" is its focus on the people who spend their lives covering the community, and the loss they experience.
    This is a brilliant play.

  • Kim Loe: Final Edition

    A lovely story with deeply human characters that resonates. It beautifully captures the last days of a community (the collapse of a local newspaper) with a profound sense of loss and heartbreak, and a welcome dose of comic relief.

    A lovely story with deeply human characters that resonates. It beautifully captures the last days of a community (the collapse of a local newspaper) with a profound sense of loss and heartbreak, and a welcome dose of comic relief.

  • Morey Norkin: Final Edition

    Print journalism in general is a dying breed, but the small town version is practically extinct. Corporate takeovers force a switch to digital media and a reliance on news services, meaning the bake sales, PTA meetings, and birthday parties that once found a cherished spot in family scrapbooks now come and go unnoticed. Eden Lane offers an authentic look at the workings of one such paper as the dedicated staff face their final deadline. A fitting tribute to those whose job is sharing the truth.

    Print journalism in general is a dying breed, but the small town version is practically extinct. Corporate takeovers force a switch to digital media and a reliance on news services, meaning the bake sales, PTA meetings, and birthday parties that once found a cherished spot in family scrapbooks now come and go unnoticed. Eden Lane offers an authentic look at the workings of one such paper as the dedicated staff face their final deadline. A fitting tribute to those whose job is sharing the truth.