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- Cape Cod Noir, Edited by David L. Ulin
Cape Cod Noir, Edited by David L. Ulin
Cape Cod Noir, Edited by David L. Ulin
Here, we see the inverse of the Cape Cod stereotype, with its sailboats and its presidents. Here, we see the flip side of the Kennedys, of all those preppies in docksiders eating steamers, of the whale watchers and bicycles and kites. Here, we see the Cape beneath the surface, the Cape after the summer people have gone home. It doesn't make the other Cape any less real, but it does suggest a symbiosis in which our sense of the place can't help but become more complicated, less about vacation living than something more nuanced and profound.
For me, Cape Cod is a repository of memory: forty summers in the same house will do that to you. But it is also a landscape of hidden tensions, which rise up when we least anticipate. In part, this has to do with social aspiration, which is one of the things that brought my family, like many others, to the Cape. In part, it has to do with social division, which has been a factor since at least the end of the nineteenth century, when the summer trade began. There are lines here, lines that get crossed and lines that never get crossed, the kinds of lines that form the web of noir. Call it what you want -- summer and smoke is how I think of it -- but that's the Cape Cod at the center of this book.
David L. Ulin, from the Introduction
Akashic Books, Softcover, 2011
THIS IS A BRAND NEW BOOK.