While she lives in Back Bay, not downtown, she often finds herself in the Ladder District, either to eat, shop, or visit a client.
The Ritz-Carlton Boston Common opened a few days before 9/11, and is starkly different from its stuffier sibling across the Boston Common. Here, it's a minimalist look. In the same complex is the upscale Sports Club/LA, where Clint Eastwood bench-pressed 250 pounds while in town to film "Mystic River." And after, you can treat yourself to a memorable meal at blu, just across the lobby.
Turn onto West Street and stop at The Brattle Book Shop. Founded in 1825, it's the country's oldest continuously operating bookstore, specializing in used, rare, and antiquarian offerings. It looks the part, with its dapple-lit interior crammed with 250,000 books, maps, and ephemera. Mantouvalos declares it "very old Boston."
If all that browsing makes you hungry, step next door into another historic building -- the West Street Grille. Built in the 1840s by Elizabeth Peabody, the first woman publisher in Boston, it became a meeting place for transcendentalists Bronson Alcott, William Ellery Channing, and Ralph Waldo Emerson. Today it's a bustling restaurant with velvet couches, exposed brick walls, and turn-of-the-century windows. "It has a very rich literary and historic component," says Mantouvalos.
On the next ladder rung, Temple Place, stop at No. 52, where all the Brahmins banked in the 19th century. Now it's home to Mantra, which Conde Nast Traveler recently named one of the best 75 restaurants in the world for its French/Indian cuisine and sleek design. Incidentally, the long marble bar is the original tellers' counter, where the Adamses and Cabots made their transactions.