Arts & Entertainment

Scarsdale High Grad Publishes Debut Novel

Laura Huntt Foti's new book, "The Cusp of Everything," is set in Westchester.

alum Laura Huntt Foti recently published her debut novel.

The Cusp of Everything, set in Westhchester, is a coming-of-age tale from the viewpoint of a teenager who dreams of moving to the big city and making her own future. Foti recreates the era of the mid-1970s.

Foti grew up in Westchester County, (she now lives in Los Angeles, ) and set her story at long-gone hangouts and the occasional survivor, such as Rye and Scarsdale’s . 

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In the book, Karen Walsh’s post-high-school-graduation summer is spent working at Playland, where a summer fling diverts her attention from her parents’ divorce. When she starts college in the fall after many of her friends have headed out of town to school, it is as a lonely commuter. Her discontent and raging hormones lead her to make poor choices until a promising new relationship with the caring Mark Cassone changes her outlook, but then rocks her world.

The novel features the music of an era and life in transition. 

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“While I was writing the book, I was inspired by Keith Richards’ autobiography Life,” says Foti. “As I read it, I craved the music, and several times went to my desk to play songs that were mentioned—and even buy them when I didn’t already have them. If I’d had my Kindle Fire then, and if the music had somehow been integrated into the book, it would have been a much more satisfying experience. That’s my long-term goal with this book.”

There are references to more than 200 primarily 1970s-era songs throughout , setting tone and time frame. 

“The original concept for the book was that it would be published as an e-book through Amazon or iTunes so that you could play clips seamlessly while you were reading and buy the songs if you liked them,” she explains. “But I couldn’t figure out how to do it without completely interrupting the reading experience.”

The compromise is a playlist by chapter, which resides in multiple forms on the website cuspofeverything.com, including clips from songs to purchase on iTunes or Amazon, and full streaming music via Spotify and Playlist.com. The Amazon list also incorporates books and movies mentioned in the book.

There is a dual meaning to the book’s title.  The “cusp of everything” describes both the precipice of adulthood, when “real” life begins, and the enormous societal changes happening in the 1970s. 

“Suddenly having an abortion was legal, getting divorced was no longer a mark of failure.  Women entered the workforce in droves,” says Foti.  “I remember the day after I graduated from college my dad asked when I was getting married. My mother had gotten married the week after she graduated, and he didn’t seem to realize that wasn’t my plan–not to mention that I wasn’t even dating anybody! I already had a job and was out in the working world, but he just sort of shook his head like ‘Where did I go wrong?’  Everything had shifted.”

Foti always knew she would be a writer. 

“The first time I was published I was in high school, and I wrote a little piece for Seventeen Magazine about being one of the first girls in New York to have a paper route.  They paid me $35, which was so exciting, and then published one more piece of mine.” 

She went on to earn a BA in journalism from NYU and has pursued many areas of writing since. Following her epiphany about her unfinished novel, she joined a writing group to propel it forward toward completion.

The teal, magenta, orange and puce on Cusp’s cover evoke the era. “I wanted to mimic the colors of that shiny wallpaper that was so popular in Scarsdale in the 70s, colorful stripes, including silver or gold.  Unfortunately metallics are too difficult to print, but the color scheme is accurate!”  The cover was designed by NorthSouth Studios.

For more information visit: http://www.cuspofeverything.com/

-Contributed by Sharon Weisz.


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