According to the
United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of , of which is land and , or 5.11%, is water. East Brookfield is bordered on the north by
North Brookfield, on the west by
Brookfield, on the south by
Sturbridge and
Charlton, and on the east by
Spencer. Most community life in East Brookfield centers around
Route 9, particularly the stretch closest to
Lake Lashaway, on the road from Spencer to North Brookfield. Within a block of this stretch are found all of the town's churches, its school and former schools, most of its retail businesses and its current and former municipal office buildings. The latter is on Depot Square, a triangular crossroads near the post office and Redmans Hall, the site of the Senior Center and some town meetings. West of the town center is the
Quaboag River plains, known locally as "the Flats". The
CSX Boston-to-
Selkirk rail line runs parallel to Main Street through this section. North of Main Street is the town's main water body,
Lake Lashaway. Southwest of the town center are the
Quaboag and
Quacumquasit Ponds (also known as North and South ponds). On Quacumquasit Pond is a YMCA residential summer camp, Camp Frank A. Day. Bordering the ponds, in the geographic center of town, is a sparsely populated marshland. South of the marshes is sparsely populated woodland, formerly a village called
Podunk—today marked only by a small cemetery along Podunk Road near the Sturbridge town line—and a hilly area called High Rocks. During his youth, the
vaudeville entertainer
George M. Cohan spent his summers with his relatives in Podunk. He loved East Brookfield, and made the term "Podunk" famous, describing it in his comedy acts. Other entertainers started mentioning Podunk, and the word entered the language, standing for any archetypal "backwater" town. ==Demographics==