JoanP, special thanks for the link to the song
That Old Cape Magic.
It has been done in many different versions by many artists, some only instrumentally, one by Jerry Lewis, half talking half singing, with a sixties' blonde looking on adoringly. I can't remember whether it was Sandra Dee or Stella Stevens.
I like the rendition with Keely Smith - what a lovely
timbre! She performed with Frank Sinatra, too - in perfect harmony. Aaah, those were the days when we had
MUSIC and
melodies of all sorts to hum ... some still vivid, but where to begin?
And who can forget Patti Page singing in her silky voice and beautiful diction
"If you spend an evening you'll want to stay
Watching the moonlight on Cape Co Bay,
You're sure to fall in love with Old Cape Cod"
Ginny, what you've described may very well be the
only way to read this book, where feelings, memories, the family ties that bind
and snap are the main focus.
Let's begin with the first location, Cape Cod.
It's a peninsula at the easternmost end of the landmass of Massachusetts. Its topography is rather "curious" : the land curves around, as it were, like a raised right elbow -- or the curled tail of a cat.
The body of water
within the "elbow" is
Cape Cod Bay. On the
outside of the "elbow" is the Atlantic. The beaches on the Atlantic side are favored because the water is warmer there due to the proximity of the Gulf Stream. Around Cape Cod Bay, on the other hand, the wate is several degrees cooler, which can disappoint unknowing visitors.
Cape Cod is a peninsula that functions, in effect, like a barrier island protecting the coastline against the onslaught of the Atlantic during hurricane season and particularly heavy Nor'easters in winter. In the last few years the rate of beach and harbor erosion has increased alarmingly, especially in the town of
Chatham. Retired friends of mine have moved from their home there to
Truro on the upper Cape. (Our book contains a chapter about Truro.)
I'm a great believer in maps and believe we could enjoy looking at one. With technical help I hope to get one o you in the header. In readiness now is a truly wonderful picture of the
Sagamore Bridge, the major gateway for motorists to Cape Cod, the one Griffin in our book uses.
There is something special about Cape Cod, an undefinable quality because of the dazzling light and the endless vista of the sea. It has attracted artists from a long time back. Provincetown , for example, affectionately know as P-town and located at the very tip of the Upper Cape, has become a popular summer resort and artists' colony.
More later