Literature |
Short Stories |
Fiction |
Summary
Summary
"Brings to mind the books of Richard Price and the films of Martin Scorsese... I did not want this book to end." --Julie Klam, New York Times -bestselling author of Friendkeeping
It is the summer of 1972, and Katie has just turned eighteen. Katie and her town, Elephant Beach, are both on the verge: Katie of adulthood, and Elephant Beach of gentrification. But not yet: Elephant Beach is still gritty, working-class, close-knit. And Katie spends her time smoking and drinking with her friends, dreaming about a boy just back from Vietnam who's still fighting a battle Katie can't understand.
In this poignant, evocative debut collection, Judy Chicurel creates a haunting, vivid world, where conflicts between mothers and daughters, men and women, soldiers and civilians and haves and have-nots reverberate to our own time. She captures not only a time and place, but the universal experience of being poised between the past and the future. At once heartbreaking, mesmerizing, and nostalgic, Chicurel shows us that no matter how beautiful some dreams are, there comes a time when we must let them go.
Author Notes
Judy Chicurel's work has appeared in national, regional, and international publications, including The New York Times , Newsday , and Granta . Her plays have been produced and performed in Manhattan. Chicurel currently lives by the water in Brooklyn.
Reviews (3)
Kirkus Review
A vivid portrayal of the disappointed young adults in Elephant Beach, a fading East Coast seaside town, in 1972. Beware the seductive lure of sex, drugs, and rock and roll.The world-weary proprietor of a local hangout tells Katie, the 18-year-old narrator of this affecting debut short story collection, "You're different than the other kids around here. You want my advice? Get out of Dodge. Now." But in the summer after her high school graduation, there is some life lesson that Katie needs to learn from this on-the-skids town and her colorful, chain-smoking friends. Everyone around her is trying to escape the challenging circumstances that surround them in this working-class community. The women's dreams are quickly crushed in evanescent sexual affairs, which end in abandonment, arguments, abortions or just male indifference; the men they get involved with are too troubled or immature or stoned to be dependable partners. The rest of the country, roiling from the Vietnam War, seems distant, as does nearby Manhattan. Katie's friends are both contemptuous and jealous of the occasional hippie or privileged student who drifts by. Mitch, who lost a leg in Vietnam and is drinking himself to death, is the poster boy for those unable to withstand the vicissitudes of life. Katie, who comes from a more affluent family but works at an AP, is obsessed with Luke, an elusive, recently returned vet; she is also grappling with her own adoption. What makes the desperation that abounds compelling is Chicurel's perfect pitch for the characters' patter, which is blunt, cynical, often profane and sometimes laugh-out-loud funny.Will Katie get her man? Will she make a break from this hard-luck population? The author's masterful writing makes this short stay in Elephant Beach worthwhile. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
*Starred Review* It's 1972, Katie has just graduated from high school in her small New York beach town, and life stretches out before her. First, though, comes that magical summer that separates the adolescent years from adulthood. Katie spends her days working at the local grocery store and her nights partying hard with her friends, and she has her sights set on a handsome boy just back from Vietnam. Though her parents are nagging her to pursue her education and escape the rough, working-class neighborhood and its rampant drinking, drugs, and sex, Katie is happy and can't imagine leaving. Nothing remains the same, however, and with even her friends itching to get out of town, eventually Katie will have to acknowledge the pull of time. In a beautiful and honest coming-of-age story, Katie acquaints readers with the people and character of her hometown the struggles, losses, hopes, and dreams in chapters that resemble short stories, all tied neatly together by Katie's own bid for the future. The result is a stunningly evocative portrait of a down-on-its-luck town and its people, who, like Katie, are trapped between the past as they've known it and the promise of the future.--Ophoff, Cortney Copyright 2014 Booklist
Library Journal Review
The summer after her high school graduation, Katie hangs out in "The Trunk," the shabby neighborhood in her seaside town of Elephant Beach, which, in 1972, is well past its heyday as a resort spot. Katie, adopted, imagines that her birth mother was from a neighborhood like this; it's a connection to a life that could have been. Her friends are having sex, getting married, moving to New York City, dying even, while she pines for Jake, who has just returned from Vietnam, but can't figure out how to get close to him. Maybe because Katie lives in the better part of town and has caring, stable parents, she sees the Trunk's residents as romantically exotic, when many have serious drug problems or suffer from alcoholism or PTSD. Some of them are able to get out, move away; others meet their demise. In every situation, Katie is an acute observer who mourns change and feels everything deeply. There are too many colorful characters in Katie's world to get to know them more than superficially, but that is often the quality of relationships in one's youth. Verdict Narrated in the first person, this debut novel of connected short stories is similar to Dylan Landis's Rainey Royal and is recommended for those who like poignant coming-of-age stories.-Sonia Reppe, Stickney-Forest View P.L., IL (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Excerpts
Excerpts
So she says to me, 'Young man, you got maniacs hanging around your store,' and I tell her, 'You're right, lady, you're a hundred percent right. I got maniacs outside my store, I got them inside my store, I got maniacs on the roof,' I tell her." Desi flicked a length of ash into the ashtray we were sharing. The end of his cigar was slick with saliva. He shifted it to the side of his mouth and continued. "What am I gonna do, argue with her? Kill her? I mean, please, some of these people should maybe look in their own backyards before they come around here making comments. There's an old Italian saying, 'Don't spit up in the air, because it's liable to come back down and hit you in the face.' " "I have no idea what that means," I said. "It means what it means, man," Mitch called from the other end of the counter. "Everybody's everything. Can you dig it?" He had a six- pack of Pabst Blue Ribbon under the arm with the rainbow tattoo and was taking a Camel non-filter from a freshly opened pack he'd just purchased. He tapped his cane twice against the counter and then winked at me before hobbling out the door. Mitch lived at the opposite end of Comanche Street, in one of the rooms at The Starlight Hotel that looked out over the ocean and smelled of mildew and seaweed. This was the third six-pack of the day he'd bought at Eddy's; he had to make separate trips because he could only carry one at a time. It was close to the end of the month, when his disability check ran out, which was why he was buying six-packs instead of sitting on the corner barstool by the jukebox in the hotel lounge. Desi shook his head, mopping up a puddle of liquid on the counter. "Yeah, yeah, just ask Peg Leg Pete over there," he muttered as the door closed behind Mitch. "Don't call him that, man," I said. "I thought you liked him. I thought you were friends." I felt a vague panic that this might not be so. "Hey, hey, did I say I didn't like the guy? I love the guy," Desi said, wringing out the rag, running it under the faucet behind the counter. "But he's not the only one sacrificed for his country. A lost leg is not an excuse for a lost life. And besides, he only lost half a leg." "Desi, Jesus--" "Don't 'Jesus' me, what are we, in church? And what are you, his mother? Half a leg, no leg, whatever, he don't need you to defend him. He can take care of himself." He shook his head. "You kids, you think you know everything." "I don't think I know everything," I said wearily. Most of the time, I didn't think I knew anything. "Yeah, well, you," Desi said, moving down the counter to the cash register to ring up Mr. Meaney's Daily News. "You're different from the other kids around here. You want my advice? Get out of Dodge. Now. Pronto." My stomach winced. I was glad no one else was around to hear him; Mr. Meaney didn't count. I'd been hanging around Comanche Street for three years and there were still times when it felt like I was watching a movie starring everyone I knew in the world, except me. The feeling would come up on me even when I was surrounded by a million people: in school, on the beach, sitting at the counter in Eddy's. Desi owned Eddy's, the candy store on the corner of Comanche Street and Lighthouse Avenue in the Trunk end of Elephant Beach. The original Eddy had long since retired and moved to Florida, but Desi wouldn't change the name. "Believe me, it's not worth the trouble," he said. "Guy was here, what, twenty-five years? I pay for the sign, I change the lettering on the window, and then what? People are still gonna call it Eddy's." He was right. They did. Sometimes in February, I'd be sitting in Earth Science class or World History, and outside the windows, frozen snow would be bordering the sidewalk and the sky would be gunmetal gray and I'd start thinking about having a chocolate egg cream at Eddy's, and suddenly summer didn't feel so far away. If I thought hard enough, I could taste the edge of the chocolate syrup at the back of my throat and it would make me homesick for sitting at the counter, drinking an egg cream and smoking a cigarette underneath the creaky ceiling fan that never did much except push the stillborn air back and forth, while everyone was hanging out by the magazine racks if the cops were patrolling Comanche Street, or sitting on the garbage cans on the side of the store where, when it was hot enough, you could smell the pavement melting. Sometimes Desi's wife, Angie, would open the side door and start sweeping people away, saying, "Look at youse, loafing, what would your mother say, she saw you sitting on a trash can in the middle of the day?" And Billy Mackey or someone would say, "She'd say, 'Where do you think you are, Eddy's?'" Then everyone would laugh and Angie would chase whoever said it with the broom, sometimes down to the end of the block, right up to the edge of the ocean. Eddy's was open only in summer, from Memorial Day to Labor Day, sometimes until the end of September if the weather stayed warm. Desi and Angie and their kids, Gina and Vinny, moved down from Queens to Elephant Beach and lived in the rooms over the store, where they had a faint view of the ocean. On Sundays, when Vinny or Angie worked the counter, Desi would walk down to Comanche Street beach and put up a red, white and green umbrella ("the Italian flag") and stretch out on a lounge chair, wearing huge black sunglasses, a white cotton sun hat, polka-dot bathing trunks that looked like underwear, and white tennis shoes because once he'd cut his toe on a broken shell and needed stitches. He'd lie out on that lounge chair like a king, smoking a cigar, turning up his portable radio every time a Sinatra song came on. If any of us tried talking to him, even to say hello, he'd say, "Beat it. Today I'm incognito." "I'll tell you what the trouble is with you kids," Desi said now, walking back to where I was sitting. He took my empty glass and started mixing me another egg cream. He squirted seltzer and chocolate sauce into the glass and stirred it to a frenzy. He slid it back across the counter and I tasted it and it was perfect. "The trouble with all a youse is you don't know how to shut up. I mean, who am I, Helen Keller? I can't see or hear what goes on the other side of the counter? It's sex and drugs and rock 'n' roll all day long and mostly sex, and now it's not just the guys talking." His voice dropped a shocked octave lower. "It's the girls. The girls. 'So-and-so got so-and-so pregnant,' 'So-and-so had an abortion,' I mean, please, what do I need to hear this for? Look at that little girl, what's her name, the one got knocked up didn't even finish high school, waddling in here like a pregnant duck. Nothing's sacred, nothing. And then you wonder why." Desi shook his head. "Believe me, there was just as much sex around when your mother and I were young. Thing is, we weren't talking about it. We were doing it." We both looked up as the door banged open and then just as quickly banged shut. Desi shrugged. "False alarm," he said. He opened the ice-cream freezer and the cold heat from the freezer melted into the air. He began scooping ice cream into a glass sundae dish, vanilla, coffee, mint chocolate chip, and then covered the ice cream with a layer of chocolate sauce, then a layer of marshmallow topping, and finally a few healthy squirts of Reddi-wip. He picked up a spoon and casually began digging in. Angie hated that Desi could eat like that and never gain an ounce. She said that all she had to do was look at food and she gained ten pounds. Desi said she did a lot more than look, but only when Angie wasn't around. I glanced up at the Coca-Cola clock behind the counter, wondering where everyone was. I'd left the A&P, where I worked, at three o'clock and figured I'd hang out at Comanche Street until it was time to go home for dinner. It was one of those dirty, overcast days in early summer and no one was at any of the usual places. They were probably at somebody's house, in Billy's basement, or maybe at Nanny's. I thought about calling but the taste of the egg cream, the whoosh of the overhead fan, Desi's familiar gluttony were all reassuring. Part of me was afraid I might be missing something, but I was always afraid of missing something. We all were. That's why we raced through family dinners, snuck out of bedroom windows, took dogs out for walks that lasted three hours, said we had school projects and had to hang out at the library until it closed at nine o'clock at night. The way I felt now, though, unless Luke was involved, there wasn't that much for me to miss. Part of me was hoping he'd come into Eddy's to buy cigarettes or the latest surfing magazine. Something. I'd only seen him once since he got back from Vietnam last Sunday, right here in Eddy's. I hadn't been prepared, though; I hadn't washed my hair or gotten my tan yet, and I hid in one of the phone booths in back until he left. Since the summer before tenth grade, I'd been watching Luke McCallister, from street corners, car windows, in movie theaters, where some girl would have her arm draped around his back and I'd watch that arm instead of the movie, wanting to cut it off. I'd comfort myself that she was hanging all over him, that if he'd really been into her, it would have been the other way around. Luke was three years older, his world wider than Comanche Street and the lounge at The Starlight Hotel, all the places we hung out. But I was eighteen now, almost finished with school and ready for real life. It was summer, and anything was possible. "Mystery," Desi said, and I jumped a little, thinking he could read my mind. That's exactly what I was thinking about Luke, that he was more of a mystery now than before he'd left for the jungle two years ago. I looked at Desi, who was scraping the last little bits of marshmallow sauce from the sundae dish. He pointed the stem of his spoon toward me. "You gotta have mystery, otherwise you got nothing." I slurped the remains of my egg cream through the straw, making it last. Then I lit a cigarette. "I still have no idea what you're talking about," I said. "Speaking of mysteries." Desi sighed. He carried the sundae dish over to the sink and rinsed it, then set it in the drain on the side. He came over to where I was sitting and put his palms flat down on the counter and stared at me, hard. "Here's what I'm talking about," he said. "A girl comes in here, she's got on a nice blouse, maybe see-through, maybe she's not wearing a bra, I don't know. I look, I'm excited, I start imagining possibilities. But a girl comes in here topless, her jugs bouncing all over the counter? That's it for me. I'm immediately turned off. Why? Because now I got nothing. There's nothing left to my imagination. There's no mystery, you see what I'm saying here?" I rolled my eyes. "Yeah, right. Like some girl would come in here topless and sit down at the counter and you'd have no interest." But I could see that Desi wasn't listening. He was just standing there, leaning against the counter with this dreamy little smile on his face. "What?" I asked finally. "Nothing," he said after a moment. "I was just--" He picked up his cigar from the ashtray and relit the stub. "There was this girl, see. Back in Howard Beach. Before I started going with Angie. She used to wear this sky-blue sweater when she came around the corner." He took a long pull from the cigar. "Little teeny-tiny pearl buttons, all the way up to her neck." Embers spilled from the cigar stub and showered the counter. "All those buttons," Desi said, gazing through the smoke, as if he was watching someone walking toward him. He put the cigar back in the ashtray and sighed again. He picked up the rag and began wiping the dead embers off the counter. "Ah, you kids," he said. "You think you invented it. All of it! Everything. You think you invented life." Excerpted from If I Knew You Were Going to Be This Beautiful, I Never Would Have Let You Go by Judy Chicurel All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.