U.S.1 Fiction Issue Party

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The Changing Landscape

This town has changed in subtle ways

Not to imply it’s lost its charm

Still I recall that faithful horse

Who stately walked about Stults Farm

When word escaped of a gas station

Angered diehards came opposing

And then one day I had to face

The Lapidus Deli closing

Two-seater airplanes soaring low

Dusting crops and killing pest

Endless flowing fabled fields

Long before stood Ravens Crest

Small quarters then for renting books

A room not meant for brawn but brains Though its larger digs are just as well

Since Jinny Baeckler still remains

I insist somebody out there

Plainly on this thought agrees

Don’t you miss that long-gone storefront Where one bought records, not CDs

I’d like to take you back yet further

Back to the point it all did start

But I would be of little help

You’d really have to ask Bill Hart

Forced to move out from this place

Just ask me and I’ll give you proof

For when I chose to buy a home

The prices soared straight through the roof

— Barry Grossman ##M:[more]##

Barry Grossman lived in a studio apartment in Plainsboro’s Quail Ridge when he was single back in the mid-1980s. After marrying his wife, Iris, they lived in Plainsboro’s Princeton Crossing, Ashford, and Ravens Crest until his family relocated to Monroe Township two years ago. He has seen the landscape change dramatically and recently wrote a poem on the subject (at left.) Copies of the poem are hanging in Stults Farm and Plainsboro Public Library.

The family’s Plainsboro roots continue with their son Jeremy, 13, celebrating his Bar Mitzvah this week with ceremonies at Congregation Beth Chaim in West Windsor, followed by a reception at Doral Forrestal in Plainsboro.

His fiction piece, “Limitless Undying Love,” was published in the U.S.1 Summer Fiction Issue on July 27. Grossman and his wife, Iris, attended the writer’s reception at Tre Piani on August 11.

Other published authors in the U.S. 1 Fiction issue included W. Eugene Claburn of West Windsor for his poem “Our Woods”; E.E. Whiting of Plainsboro for her poem “Commuters’ Garden”; Mary Mallery of West Windsor for her story “Pirate School”; and Corey Langer of West Windsor for his poem “Vegan Cannibal(ist)”.

Copies of the fiction issue are available at the U.S. 1 offices at 12 Roszel Road, Suite C-205.

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