SEA
By Ian Daly • Photography by Jared Leeds
IN THE VARIEGATED MOSAIC OF THE
American landscape, some of the tiles, like the former
Republic of Texas, are vast. Others, like the Florida Keys,
are mere specks—dangling lazily into a turquoise realm
that feels about as detached from the rest of the country
as a person can get. These specks are special places—
their status as outer fringes a matter of civic pride for
those who live there, and a strangely magnetic force for
those who don’t.
Cape Cod is one of those places.
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