Cream Sam Summer is a novel set in the Northwest
Bronx neighborhood of Kingsbridge. The year is 1978, and I can personally
attest to the fact that it was a great place to grow up in back then—an amalgam of urban grittiness and small town charm. The book’s
narrator is a sixteen-year-old boy, which, not coincidentally, was my age in
1978. Permit me now to introduce you to a new work of fiction as well as a very real place in an intriguing snapshot in time.
For both young and old alike, there were many perks to living in
Kingsbridge in the 1970s. Everything it seemed was at our fingertips. In an
age before computers and iPhones, texts and tweets, we very literally lived
in our neighborhood. We didn’t have the option of holing ourselves up inside
with today’s advanced technological gizmos and instantaneous communication
devices. When we came home from school, we promptly went outside to play, or whatever
else we could find to do. Sometimes we settled for hanging out on our front stoops, or the grounds of our concrete backyards, and engaged in the lost art of conversation. The summers
were especially memorable—incredibly active and a lot of fun, even if they were quite often
uncomfortably hot and humid. Many families, including mine, miraculously survived without the luxury of air conditioning. We played the games that little people had
played for generations in the big city, but had this sinking feeling that we
were the last ones who would ever do so—and we were right.
In 1978, Kingsbridge’s commercial hub, W231st Street leading
down to Broadway and the elevated subway tracks of the Number 1 line—the
El—accommodated a wide variety of stores from jewelers to druggists to
shoemakers. Just about everything you needed could be found in the
neighborhood. Whether you were in the market for a deli sandwich, women’s hosiery, or tropical fish for the apartment aquarium, a local shop had what you wanted. There was even a movie
theater, bowling alley, and wintertime ice-skating rink in the area.
In those days gone by, merchants established genuine rapports with their customers and were an integral part of the neighborhood fabric. There was a
strong sense of community in the environs of Kingsbridge—an inviolable bond
that we were somehow all in it together. Despite the vast and varied personalities of the residents—good eggs and bad eggs—we shared common experiences
like exploring the sprawling Van Cortlandt Park, enjoying a slice of the appetizingly greasy Sam’s Pizza, or attending Sunday Mass at St. John’s
Church, which was uplifting to some and boring as all hell to others, particularly the younger set.
The neighborhood was remarkably accessible, too. Riders on
the Number 1 subway line, which cut a swath through the heart of Kingsbridge,
could be in mid-town Manhattan in forty-five minutes. Countless locals rode
the rails to school and to work. Others hopped on ubiquitous area buses,
which took them to wherever their hearts desired in the Bronx and parts of
Manhattan as well.
The Kingsbridge of 1978 had both character and characters—that cannot be denied. This compelling stage is where the myriad characters in Cream Sam Summer confront past ghosts and ponder their futures, too, because nothing stays the same—nothing at all. Not neighborhoods and not people.