I came to Provincetown for the first time in the summer of 1988, during a tectonic shift.
I had left someone I secretly loved at home in Manhattan and joined my father, step-mother, and her adult children for a week in Orleans, at the crook of the elbow that is Cape Cod. Skaket Beach was a few minutes from the house that Shirley and my father had rented, and Nauset, a short distance further. Nineteen eighty-eight was the year of syringes washing up on shore, of Red Tide, and the safety of the water was questionable. So we did other things: my father and Shirley, in what is now known in my family as The Ambush, kidnapped me and Shirley’s daughter-in-law’s little sister Jean Marie and took us on a four-hour sunset whale watch when JM had other important obligations. But when a humpback rolled over onto its side a few inches from the boat and its great round eye the size of a dinner plate focused directly on me, and then the people next to me, and then the baby being held by its young father a few feet from me, the space between us closed: the whale looked at me and I looked at her, and I whispered I am so sorry, and I believe she understood.
I returned alone to Provincetown later that week in 1988, intending to walk up and down Commercial Street carrying the weight of my own secrets, and to visit Fine Arts Work Center, a block past Bradford, on Pearl Street. Don’t sit down on any toilet, my father said. Don’t kiss anyone. Don’t share a glass. Don’t eat off the same fork. Don’t fool around with anyone. My father and I had a relationship that many saw as questionable in its propriety — we talked about everything, openly — and he was a deeply kind man, but, like many people in 1988, he was fiercely, wildly afraid, and this sometimes tested his humanity, as fear often does. He didn’t know any better; I cut him that slack.
I walked up and down Commercial Street that day, past WomenCrafts at the corner of Pearl, past the bookstores and the tee-shirt shops, the stores selling cheap jewelry, the bars and the cabarets. Drag queens strolled down the center of the street, smoking cigarettes, marching along in four-inch platform sandals. Skeletal men pushed other skeletal men in wheelchairs; a sandy-haired man with a perfect mustache, a Yorkie on his lap and a blanket around his shoulders sat in front of the library and faced the sun, his eyes closed. Others, in their twenties and thirties, walked with canes or walkers or rolled in wheelchairs from one end of Commercial Street to the other — the East End with its galleries and restaurants to the West, past the wharf and The Lobster Pot and more tee shirt shops — sometimes pushed by lesbians. Don’t fucking stare, I heard one of the women say to a sunburnt tourist eating an ice cream cone, and walking ahead of me. They’re not on fucking display.
Race Point at dusk
In 1988, I was heavily embedded in New York’s food and modern dance communities; the person with whom I was living was a well-known dancer with a small company, and three out of seven nights a week found us at City Center or DTW or The Joyce or BAM, watching Pina Bausch or Karole Armitage or Trisha Brown or Bill T. Jones & Arnie Zane. In March, Zane died; one by one, every company was decimated. A hellscape of sorrow. During the day, I worked at the tiny Dean & Deluca on Prince Street; every department shrank and just two years later, thirty of the men I had worked with, all under the age of thirty-five, were gone. Thirty men. In 1992, David Robinson, a founding member of ACT UP who I had known from the modern dance community, dumped his partner Warren’s ashes on the lawn of the White House, in what came to be known as Ashes Action; by 1996, an estimated 260,000 were dead, my friends Peter Hendrickson and Tim Allen among them.
On the late afternoon in the summer of 1988 when I walked alone down Commercial Street, I was struck by the sheer magnitude of the absurdity: tourists in lobster claw hats, kids eating fudge and taffy, dykes walking with ancient young men and their dogs, Gloria Gaynor’s I Will Survive.
We’re moving to Provincetown We’re heading to Provincetown We’re going to Ptown We’re leaving for Provincetown was said by my few surviving friends, over and over. The spit of land, Mary Oliver’s blue comma on the map of the world hung like a hook into the ocean; the last stop for so many who were sick, who were treated like beasts by the medical establishment, who had been shunned by their families, abandoned in the name of religion, left to die: they came here. Most perished; a few survived. Art and music and poetry lived. The town nurse, Alice Foley, co-founded and was the first executive director of the Provincetown AIDS Support Group, now the AIDS Support Group of Cape Cod. On the late afternoon in the summer of 1988 when I walked alone down Commercial Street, I was struck by the sheer magnitude of the absurdity: tourists in lobster claw hats, kids eating fudge and taffy, dykes walking with ancient young men and their dogs, Gloria Gaynor’s I Will Survive — at first I was afraid I was petrified — blasting out of a cabaret, beauty and death and beauty and love and rage everywhere, everywhere, and if you got to Race Point even on a cloudy day you would stay for the sunset, and want to stay forever.
Into the early nineties, I began to read Provincetown: Mark Doty was published by the company I was then working for, and for whom I would go on to eventually be an executive editor. I had read his poetry for years, and then turned to Heaven’s Coast, and then, in 2008, to Dog Years, much of which takes place at 19 Pearl Street, half a block or so from Fine Arts Work Center, where I was in residency at the end of the summer of 2023, and where I have taught over the years. Before I was at Harper, I was at Little, Brown, and found a pile of dinged books to be donated; on top was a hardcover copy of Mary Oliver’s 1983 American Primitive, its spine cracked and opened to In Blackwater Woods,
To live in this world
you must be able
to do three things:
to love what is mortal;
to hold it
against your bones knowing
your own life depends on it;
and, when the time comes to let it
go,
to let it go.
Like so many people who come to the tip of Cape Cod for safety, for community, for the light, I have had very long bouts of staying away because every visit is saturated with memory and grief and beauty so breathtaking that it feels otherworldly. The Provincetown of 2025 is nothing at all like the Provincetown of 1988. There are a few people — all of us now in our fifties, sixties, and seventies — who were there, who remember what happened, what it was like, this blue comma on the map of the world. Spiritus Pizza is still there. Adam Singer, owner of Adam’s Nest, on Commercial Street, once told me that when he first opened his store in 2016, the town’s carnival theme was Back to the Eighties. Dear God, he said, no, never. Never again.
I worry that the younger people will never understand what happened to this community, will never know its history, and when I bought a new black tee shirt from Adam, emblazoned with the words Silence = Death because my old one was in tatters, a group of young men shopping, maybe eighteen or nineteen years old, didn’t know what it meant. It’s not their fault, but I want them to know.
I am in Truro this week, at Castle Hill, to teach writers how to give themselves permission to tell their stories. Now when I return to Provincetown, a queer writer, long-married, who has just hit sixty-two, I do so because of words and work, which made it all the more impossible that, after so much time, I finally saw through the grief and the ghosts to the physical beauty of the place itself, to the light. Back when I was in residency to finish Permission, I wrote for eight hours a day without looking up, moving from desk to bed to couch to teapot to desk, and what came to me was the withering realization that I had gotten the voice all wrong, and that it — even its little craft-book self — needed itself to be comprised of stories coiled around a core of permission to create, to love, to breathe. The Provincetown air and light suffuse the very idea of permission itself, which is why it has drawn so many who sought acceptance to make their art in whatever form it came, to live their lives with authenticity and pride, to die under its massive sky when the tectonic plates shifted.
Provincetown is ethereal; it is complicated, and hard to hold it, and I forever am getting turned around when I’m there. Possessed of my navigator father’s sense of direction, I never know what’s north or south, east or west. Eileen Myles said it best, writing in Agni about flying in to Provincetown: From the bowl of the sky I can never bother to try and understand land. For me it puts way too much burden on the experience to start building a map.
Provincetown cannot be mapped; the sands are always moving and shifting, the light always changing.
This post was originally published on Elissa Altman’s blog Poor Man’s Feast, the James Beard Award-winning journal about the intersection of food, spirit, and the families that drive you crazy. Read more on her Substack, or keep up with her archives here.
Images courtesy of the author; header image: Provincetown Harbor at dusk.
The post Poor Man’s Feast: A Blue Comma at the End of the World appeared first on PRINT Magazine.