

The roof! The roof! The roof is…literally on fire. If I had one wish, it would be for my four children, Belmont, Rita, Aaron, and Peggy, to jump into that same ocean, on that same beach, on New Year’s Day.Īnd no, Rita, I’m not joking.

When I walked back up onto that Coney Island beach, dripping wet and exhilarated, I could see my future. Now here’s where shit gets corny-apologies to my daughter, Rita, who of my four children, will likely find and read this first. I was a guest of a guest of a guest, as eighteen-year-olds trying to make their way in New York often are. On New Year’s Day in 1984, I jumped into the icy waters of the Atlantic with the Coney Island Polar Bear Club. When I was eighteen, I spent a year in New York City. Please be patient and try to remember that I often have-or had, rather-a plan. But I have no such qualms with a cheap notebook I bought at Rite Aid. That’s how it works, right? Well, I don’t wish to put that weight on my kids.

People make dying wishes and their loved ones carry them out. I am-or was-a culinary genius, after all. I never cooked family dinners, which is pretty damn ironic when you think about it. But looking back-hindsight is more like 40/40 when you’re about to croak-I know I only fixed minuscule problems and ignored the mammoth ones. I love that I didn’t have to say it every day for them to know it. But I’m succumbing now, in this book, because I’ve had too much bourbon. If I did succumb to those clichés and killed everyone’s vibe, I’m sorry.

Hope there were no last minute confessions or wistful wishes that I’d seen more sunrises. I hope I didn’t make a big deal out of dying. I’m obviously not there anymore to stop you. Unless something bad has happened, in which case, screw it.
