West Side Rag
  • TOP NEWS
  • OPEN/CLOSED
  • FOOD
  • SCHOOLS
  • OUTDOORS
  • REAL ESTATE
  • ART & CULTURE
  • POLITICS
  • COLUMNS
  • CRIME
  • HISTORY
  • ABSURDITY
  • ABOUT US
    • OUR STORY
    • CONTRIBUTORS
    • CONTACT
    • GET WSR FREE IN YOUR INBOX
    • SEND US TIPS AND IDEAS
West Side Rag
No Result
View All Result
SUPPORT THE RAG
No Result
View All Result

Favorite WSR Stories

  • They are ‘Absolutely’ Back and Some Early Customers Say the Bagels Are Still ‘10 out of 10’
  • Meet the 2nd Busiest Person on the Upper West Side: Gale Brewer’s Scheduler
  • UWS Church Raises Over $200,000 for 107th Street Fire Victims: ‘Everyone Lost Everything’
Get WSR FREE in your inbox
SUPPORT THE RAG

BOOK REVIEW: A River Runs Through This Memoir by a Former 79th Street Boat Basin Resident 

December 16, 2025 | 8:05 AM
in HISTORY, NEWS, OUTDOORS
10

By Daniel Katzive

In the cold winter of 1980, a young, pregnant Leslie Day stepped out on the icy deck of her houseboat docked in the 79th Street Boat Basin Marina and picked up her cat. While she had been living on boats in the marina for several years at that point, she still lost her footing that day and plunged into the icy water. A watchful neighbor screamed for help, and Day’s husband hauled her out of the drink, warmed her up, and phoned her obstetrician. The baby was fine and later that year joined the tight-knit community of live-aboards in the marina, where that baby grew up learning to swim in the chlorinated waters of the nearby YMCA at a young age.

The Boat Basin Marina closed in 2021 and there are not many of these former residents around the Upper West Side these days. In fact, the community of year-round residents had already shrunk considerably prior to the marina’s closure, and now these former floating Upper West Siders have largely dispersed, along with their boats, to other neighborhoods and harbors.

But you can get a glimpse of what life was like for this resilient community in “River: a Hudson Memoir,” a newly published book by Day, who lived on boats in the marina for 36 years starting in 1975. As she describes it, boat life was subject to all manner of natural forces; it was also a way of life that allowed residents to live next to the urban landscape of Manhattan while rising and going to bed each day with unobstructed river views.

“River” is partly a personal memoir and partly an anecdotal history of life in the Boat Basin, but the book also serves as a guide to the Hudson River itself. Day, who spent much of her career working as a science teacher and has previously authored New York City field guides, details the glacial origins of the estuary and provides descriptions of the various fish, birds, and marine mammals that call the river home – or visit periodically. The book also covers the history of the pollution which fouled the river and the successive efforts by activists and nonprofit organizations to clean it and bring it to (sometimes) swimmable levels of water quality.

The Hudson River has been a force in Day’s own life from her early years. She has memories of early childhood living in a rented cottage near the edge of the Palisades cliffs on an estate in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey. If you are struggling to imagine where such a house could have existed, that is because the landscape there was subsequently transformed by the building of the Palisades Parkway and the Palisades Interstate Park. No one now lives where her family once lived, and probably no one ever will.

Day moved to the Boat Basin as a young adult in 1975, answering an ad for a rental accommodation. She met her husband, another resident, while living there, and raised her son on the river, while commuting to teaching jobs on the Upper West Side and later in New Jersey. Now 80, Day lives in Riverdale with a view of the river below; she can also see the site of her childhood cottage across the way in New Jersey.

Her stories of life in the marina are organized thematically spanning her three decades of residence. Overall, one gets a sense of a tight-knit, self-reliant community who socialized actively on each other’s boats, enjoying quiet summer evenings on the river as crowds in the park thinned out, while also racing to help each other as boat horns sounded in times of emergency. And there are plenty of hair-raising tales in here: adults, children, and dogs falling in the water; sinkings and near-sinkings; docks coated in sheets of ice; hurricanes; brutal nor’easters; crushing ice flows; and at least one fire. “People in the Boat Basin were hardy,” writes Day. “You had to be.”

Decades of deferred maintenance and extreme weather finally caught up with the Boat Basin in 2021 when the Parks Department deemed the facility no longer safe enough to weather another winter. The city evicted the boats and their residents and shut it down. With collective memories of marina life slipping away into the past, Day’s book provides a valuable personal history of what is essentially another one of Manhattan’s many lost villages – what Day calls “one of the few magical villages in the world,” a description she attributes to one of her marina neighbors.

There is some hope for the future though. The city is committed to rebuilding the marina as a larger and more modern facility. The project has been moving through an arduous planning and environmental review process, but the latest word from the Parks Department’s team was that construction on the new marina could begin in late 2026 and that previous residents will be accommodated when the facility reopens several years later. The magical community Day describes seems unlikely to reemerge immediately, but of course nothing on the Upper West Side or anywhere in New York City exists frozen in time. The river, though, is eternal.

“River: a Hudson Memoir” is published by Three Hills and is available at Book Culture on the Upper West Side.

Subscribe to West Side Rag’s FREE email newsletter here. And you can Support the Rag here.

Share this article:
SUPPORT THE RAG
Leave a comment

Please limit comments to 150 words and keep them civil and relevant to the article at hand. Comments are closed after six days. Our primary goal is to create a safe and respectful space where a broad spectrum of voices can be heard. We welcome diverse viewpoints and encourage readers to engage critically with one another’s ideas, but never at the expense of civility. Disagreement is expected—even encouraged—but it must be expressed with care and consideration. Comments that take cheap shots, escalate conflict, or veer into ideological warfare detract from the constructive spirit we aim to cultivate. A detailed statement on comments and WSR policy can be read here.

guest

guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

10 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Meg P
Meg P
21 days ago

Sounds so interesting. Thanks for letting us know about this book. Wonder if Book Culture would host a book signing with Leslie Day.

3
Reply
Leslie Day
Leslie Day
21 days ago
Reply to  Meg P

Hi Meg – I would love to do that.

2
Reply
Jeremy
Jeremy
21 days ago

I was a friend of Leslie’s wonderful son as a kid, and loved going to the Boat Basin to visit him. What a unique, amazing NYC life they had, that I was fortunate to have been given a tiny taste of. It’s disappointing, but not surprising, that this special community was lost due in large part to neglect by the city. Homes will be replaced by transient yacht parking, with perhaps a kayak launch thrown in for us plebes. Anyhow, I just bought the ebook and am looking forward to giving it a read.

7
Reply
Leslie Day
Leslie Day
21 days ago
Reply to  Jeremy

Jeremy!!! Just read your comment to Jonah – we are so happy to see this!

2
Reply
Lily Goldstein
Lily Goldstein
21 days ago

I walked my dogs by the boat basin for years and got to meet a number of residents including one who had 2 dogs on her boat. It was a great community. I miss it.

4
Reply
Leslie Day
Leslie Day
21 days ago
Reply to  Lily Goldstein

Hi Lily – that might have been me. I had two dogs – Spot and Maya. Their photos are in the book.

3
Reply
Anna
Anna
21 days ago

I’m looking forward to this. One of my HS classmates lived there with his father and it always seemed like such an interesting place to grow up.
Thanks for the info, WSR.

1
Reply
Shari
Shari
21 days ago

Loved walking the pier and talking to people who lived on the boats-such an interesting life style. Enjoyed O’Neils outdoor restaurant, for years going there to eat and watching sunsets and boats on the Hudson. It felt like a great community. Now, it’s just desolate. All gone. Even the ducks.

3
Reply
Erica Gruen
Erica Gruen
21 days ago

As they do in Japan, Leslie Day should be designated a Living Treasure of New York City. Having known her for over 20 years, I can attest to her brilliant, keen insights into the natural world, especially of our beloved city, and her extraordinary ability to fire curiosity in everyone around her. She is also an artist and naturalist of the highest caliber. So very delighted to see her new book in print and can’t wait to read it!

3
Reply
Jen
Jen
20 days ago

What a beautiful title. Where do people in NYC live on the water now?

0
Reply

YOU MIGHT LIKE...

Where to Responsibly Dispose of Your Christmas Tree on the Upper West Side
NEWS

Where to Responsibly Dispose of Your Christmas Tree on the Upper West Side

January 6, 2026 | 12:54 PM
Ruthless Advice for Upper West Siders: All of the Answers With None of the Expertise
ABSURDITY

Ruthless Advice for Upper West Siders: All of the Answers With None of the Expertise

January 6, 2026 | 8:30 AM
Previous Post

Manhattan Market Report: ‘The Tie Goes to The Runner’

Next Post

Upper West Side Historical Photo Challenge No. 16

this week's events image
Next Post

Upper West Side Historical Photo Challenge No. 16

A New York Police Department vehicle.

No Arrest After Man Attacked Outside of UWS Beacon Theater: 'Traumatic Brain Injury'

The New York Historical’s $175 Million Tang Wing on the UWS Takes Shape: A First Look

The New York Historical’s $175 Million Tang Wing on the UWS Takes Shape: A First Look

  • ABOUT US
  • CONTACT US
  • NEWSLETTER
  • WSR MERCH!
  • ADVERTISE
  • EVENTS
  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • TERMS OF USE
  • SITE MAP
Site design by RLDGROUP

© 2026 West Side Rag | All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • TOP NEWS
  • THIS WEEK’S EVENTS
  • OPEN/CLOSED
  • FOOD
  • SCHOOLS
  • OUTDOORS
  • REAL ESTATE
  • ART & CULTURE
  • POLITICS
  • COLUMNS
  • CRIME
  • HISTORY
  • ABSURDITY
  • ABOUT
    • OUR STORY
    • CONTRIBUTORS
    • CONTACT US
    • GET WSR FREE IN YOUR INBOX
    • SEND US TIPS AND IDEAS
  • WSR SHOP

© 2026 West Side Rag | All rights reserved.