"Everyone has to grow up sometime and everyone has to grow up somewhere and I am delighted that I did it in the Fifties and in the Beach." Keith Black, who was born in 1947 provides a sparkling narrative about what it was like to be a child during the 50's in the Beach area of Toronto at a time when the streets teemed with children.
As we watch the children play and roam far from home, we also meet some of the residents, shop in some of the long-forgotten stores, dine in the restaurants, and remember some surprising events such as a blazing gun battle on Queen Street and the year everyone received updated appliances.
Even if you are not familiar with the neighbourhood, there is something here for you. As Keith says in the Introduction, "if you remember mello rolls and Murray Westgate, it doesn't really matter where you lived". Or Chum Charts, or The Yummy Man, or Al Boliska, or Nash Metropolitans, or cap pistols, or The Happy Gang. And the list goes on.
BOOM. A book not just for Baby Boomers, but also for their kids and grandkids as they try to understand what it was that molded this fascinating but often peculiar generation.