Saturday, September 27, 2025

Dear Great Book Guru, What an amazing weekend here in Sea Cliff - first on Friday “Lights, Camera, Sea Cliff!”, the Sea Cliff Museum’s opening of a retrospective of films shot here in Sea Cliff from 1918 until the present! It was a gala celebration and so many of the Village came out to celebrate. Then on Saturday, the Sea Cliff Fire Department had its annual celebration/inspection of its equipment and volunteers. Many of its newest and oldest members were honored followed by a picnic at Tappen Beach. While at this event, I heard talk of a book about young men and the tragic lives they lived. Do you know about it? Lover of Sea Cliff Past and Present Dear Lover of Sea Cliff Past and Present, I too enjoyed the wonderful events of this Sea Cliff weekend and I’m guessing the book discussed was DOGS by C. Mallon. This is Mallon’s debut novel, and it is quite extraordinary. Told from the perspective of Hal, a late teen, this short book (almost a novella) takes place over one evening - an evening that will change the lives of his family, friends, and community. This book is definitely not for the squeamish. Hal and his friends live in Carbon, a small, fictional city, probably in Wyoming. The lives of the boys and a few of the girls are recounted in striking detail as we see the brutality that colors their everyday existence - most of which takes place in a shabby, malfunctioning car gotten under troubling circumstances. As the night goes on, we learn more about each of the characters. The last pages are very difficult to read but are almost poetic as lives explode in horrific detail. A disturbing book but worth the read – recommended.

Saturday, September 20, 2025

Dear Great Book Guru, I always feel September is the time of beginnings - the real New Year - certainly not January – such a middling time of year! Saying that, I am looking to start the year off with a very good book, something out of my comfort zone. Any thoughts? Starting in September Dear Starting in September, Charlotte McConaghy’s WILD DARK SHORE might be a good book to start off your year. Set slightly in the future, this novel takes place in a very special place – a tiny island off Antarctica – Shearwater. Once a hub of scientific research, it is now deserted except for the Salt family, caretakers of what remains of the island after rising sea levels have almost destroyed it. The story opens with the Salts – Dominic and his three children - finding a woman washed ashore and near death after the worst storm the island has ever experienced. The woman, Rowan, is saved by them and gradually we learn the secrets that each of the characters is hiding. The five characters look into the future and see their lives off-island, surviving but living in a world coping with horrific climate changes. We learn of Dominic’s tragic losses and his attempts to make things better for his children. And, of course, throughout we have the mystery of Rowan’s strange arrival. The five points of view shift from chapter to chapter giving us a unique perspective into their lives. This plus the description of the incredibly beautiful flora and fauna in this disappearing piece of the world make for an extraordinarily compelling read – highly recommended!
Dear Great Book Guru, Last weekend I was at the Sea Cliff Civic Association’s annual Newcomers Welcoming Party…. such fun! Lots of the guests were talking about a new book about New York City in the 1980’s. It sounded fascinating – thoughts? Newcomer to Sea Cliff Dear Newcomer to Sea Cliff, THE GODS OF NEW YORK by Jonathan Mahler is a truly compelling book. Mahler follows, over four years, a group of New Yorkers who played enormously powerful roles in New York City and the nation - many of whom are still alive and continue to hold positions of huge importance. From a local Queens politician - Donald Manes to real estate mogul Donald Trump - the book is filled with tales of these power brokers who ruled New York City. Al Sharpton, Anthony Fauci, Rudy Giuliani, Ed Koch, Mario Cuomo, Spike Lee, Linda Fairstein and David Dinkins are some of these characters who interact throughout book. This feels like a page-turner of a novel rather than a work of non-fiction. Many of the events were recorded and exploited in the tabloids of the day, and the book has that same fast-paced, feverish quality. Most of the action is focused on the AIDS epidemic, crime, and race with many of the characters playing roles in each. We revisit the shocking cases of Tawana Brawley, Yusuf Hawkins, Bernard Goetz, Howard Beach, the Preppy Murderer, and the Central Park Five and see the roles the “gods” played and the power they wielded, still reverberating forty years later - highly recommended!

Saturday, September 13, 2025

Great Book Guru #978 Dear Great Book Guru, I was at the Love Your Neighbor Long Table event and a new friend told me there is a fascinating book recently published about a famous Sea Cliff resident and written by a Sea Cliff author. Any ideas … I’d love to read it! Lover of All Things Sea Cliff Dear Lover of All Things Sea Cliff, What a beautiful past weekend we had here in Sea Cliff, but I did venture a few miles south to Cedarmere - the lovely Nassau County park that houses the home of William Cullen Bryant, 19th century poet, abolitionist, and newspaper editor - where Margaret Brucia was giving a reading of her book THE KEY TO EVERYTHING: MAY SWENSON, A WRITER’S LIFE. May Swenson lived in Sea Cliff for twenty years before her death in 1989. Brucia, a long-time Sea Cliff resident, gives us an intimate portrait of this much acclaimed poet based on her diaries and letters. While not an analysis of her poetry, this book gives us a detailed look into the forces that shaped one of the most important poets of the twentieth century. Her early childhood in Utah, as part of a strong Mormon community, and the role her parents - especially her father - played in creating her strong sensibilities is presented in exquisite detail. The bulk of the book however focuses on 1936 to 1959 - her time in New York City - during the Depression, her work with the Federal Writers’ Project, her life in Greenwich Village, and her friendship with NEW YORKER editor Harold Ross among other literary notables. Over sixty of her poems were published in the NEW YORKER, a record-breaking number. The immense number of personal anecdotes Brucia gleaned from Swenson’s diaries and letters make for a fascinating look into the life and creative process of this iconic figure. Highly recommended!