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AMAGANSETT '84 by Shelby Raebeck

AMAGANSETT '84

by Shelby RaebeckShelby Raebeck

Pub Date: March 14th, 2023
ISBN: 9781662936821
Publisher: Gatekeeper Press

Raebeck’s coming-of-age novel follows a teenage boy through family tragedy and social conflict in 1980s Long Island.

“My mother died in May 1982, the end of my sophomore year in high school…” Ricky Hawkins tells us in the opening lines of this melancholy novel. Her death is the catalyst for the gradual dissolution of an already fragile family. Ricky’s father, Harold, moves the family back to their summer house in Amagansett, a narrow strip of land between bay and ocean on Long Island’s East End. It was their original home, where Ricky and his older sister, Lonnie, and younger sister, Tessy, were raised until his father’s job took the family up-island. Too quickly, Harold brings a new woman into the siblings’ lives. Lonnie rebels and runs off to Florida with her boyfriend, the fretful and anxious Tessy turns inward, and Ricky finds escape on the pickup basketball court behind the Amagansett grade school. This is where Ricky, who is White, becomes friends with Lance Williams, the Black star of the East Hampton high school basketball team. It is a relationship that will bring him into the middle of the tensions between the local Whites and Blacks. The narrative ambles at a gentle pace, leading to a moment of searing high drama. The author captures the particulars of time and place through evocative prose and succinct dialogue that reveals much in few words (“One of the first warm days, the sky a mild blue with huge puffs of cloud, I found Tessy leaning on one hand, pulling weeds with the other, one knee poking her white dress into a small tent”). As Ricky rides his bike from hamlet to hamlet, the author treats readers to beautifully expansive vistas that will change dramatically in the coming years (Amagansett still has its potato fields, and the large, elite chain stores have not yet invaded East Hampton’s Main Street). Through Ricky’s friendship with a group of local fishermen, the reader bears witness to the imminent demise of that industry and to the desperation and resignation among those who called the East End home.

Carefully composed, heartbreakingly poignant, and memorable.