“We Have to Write a Story about This.”

Elaine Kiesling Whitehouse knows a good story when she sees it, and those stories often come from history. Writing from an early age, she was intrigued by the signs of the past all around her. There was a WWI era German radio transmitting station across the street and the decaying windmill of a former Gilded Age estate down the block.

Elaine Kiesling Whitehouse.

On today’s episode, we discuss Elaine’s writing history and how she has drawn on Long Island’s past for inspiration. Her novel Hart’s Tavern, set in Revolutionary War-era Patchogue, sprang from a roadside marker commemorating George Washington’s trip through the area in 1790. She also relates the valuable lessons she learned as the editor of the Fire Island Tide as well as the writing career of her husband, Jack Whitehouse.

Ornaments from the Bourne Windmill. Photo courtesy of Elaine Kiesling Whitehouse.
“Old ’88” being demolished in the late 1960s. Photo by Albert Popely.
In front of the Kiesling home in West Sayville. Photo courtesy of Elaine Kiesling Whitehouse.

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