Welcome to Shirley in O Magazine
April 13, 2008
Welcome to Shirley, by Kelly McMasters
9781586484866 | $26.95 hc | available April
PublicAffairs / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)
Kelly McMasters’ forthcoming memoir will be reviewed in the May issue of O, The Oprah Magazine:
A loving, affecting memoir of an American Eden turned toxic.
THE TOWN OF SHIRLEY, on the East End of Long Island, has never been chic, and certainly never part of the fevered Hamptons summer scene, but to a 4-year-old and her hard-up young parents it did seem like a kind of paradise when they moved there in 1981. In Welcome to Shirley: A Memoir from an Atomic Town (PublicAffairs), Kelly McMasters charts how she came to understand that despite all she loved about Shirley (especially the loyalty of the neighborhood and the sense of open space and security she felt growing up there), it was somewhere to be ashamed of. More urgently, she learned that-all joking about Shirley’s locals “glowing in the dark” aside-the acreage they lived on was the dumping site for three leaking nuclear reactors and countless chemical spills. Block by block, friend by friend, the number of cancer cases grows, including 16 local children diagnosed with rhabdomyosarcoma, a rare cancer that typically hits one in four million children a year. In one of the book’s most riveting moments, Randy Snell, the father of a stricken child, finds an official report that concludes that the only known cause of his daughter’s disease is “low-level radiation exposure.” McMasters tells the story of families such as the Snells and her own-her mother had benign tumors removed from her thyroid and breast-with passion and clarity. She also pulls off a small miracle in the telling, making rundown, unbeautiful Shirley a place of dignity, a place of heroic people and stubborn fighters, a place you’d be proud to call home. -ELAINA RICHARDSON
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Ken Spooner | May 22, 2008 at 8:17 pm
As someone who is a recognized historian and former resident of the Shirley area, I was truly looking forward to the arrival of this book. Ms. McMasters contacted me several years ago for both information and potential people to interview for it.
After reading it, I have to say about the only thing I can agree with is that what happened to the Shirley area is indeed a sad tale. But I am also saddened that Ms. McMasters, who is a talented writer, would use her talent to distort history to support her thesis. There are just TOO MANY factual errors and half truths here about the basic history of the town to be dismissed as just sloppy work. Because of that I can only say that her far bigger picture of the enviormental dangers both real and imaginary of having a nuclear facility looming in Shirley’s back yard is greatly diminished. If you are interested in an in depth review with many of the books errors pointed out in detail just go to The Knapps Lived Here website and look on the left side of the main page in the green area. Or if this forum allows it, here is the link : http://spoonercentral.com/2008/MyTake.html