The woods at Ke'was End |
Once odorous fish-processing plants dotted the New York shorelines; however, by 1900 they have been replaced with grandly gracious homes; breezy, yacht clubs; and palatial, resort hotels.
The indigenous community of Corycian Island watches as a new culture disembarks from the Westside Ferry. Lovelorn secretaries, sharp-eyed spiritualists, breathless bachelors, wealth-seeking developers, idiot klan members, disgraced priests, naive nuns, and muscular Christians arrive. They are shoreless refugees seeking a connection to the ether sifting through the universe.
It is said such a vortex exists on the east point of the Island at Ke'was End, where the Runapewak, the tru-people, are stewards
of the land, protecting it for Mother Earth and Father Sky.
Runapewak. The Tru-people. All-a-wanna. |
Large docks extend from Corycian's Strand Hotel |
Great American Planes stand tall on Ke'Was End |
The Corycian Island Reader, a weekly broadsheet tells the Island's story |
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