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"In the first, of a three-book anthology, Earl LeClaire relates
events of an early childhood which eventually leads to leaving home
at fifteen on a motorcycle and just enough cash to see him through.
What he lacked in guidance from parents, and growing up in an
Italian culture, was made up for by devoted friends, teachers, and
the books he read that told of a world beyond lobstering off the
coast of Rhode Island. On My Own will serve as an inspiration to
teenagers who feel they face insurmountable barriers." ~ruth weiss,
"Last Train Out", "Desert Journal", "Can't Stop the Beat".
Earl LeClaire's poems are written in everyday language. It is as if
while reading them he is sitting in the room talking to you.
However, that said, his poems are also, structured. Christmas
Story, for example, is a "prose poem" but put down in a
well-arranged form. For me, as a visual artist and musician,
LeClaire's poetry is "word music" and as Plutarch said "...poetry
is painting that speaks." ~Harrah, artist and musician. In this
collection of poems, Earl LeClaire lays his hand on the heart of
the reader; cheering, consoling, challenging and delighting.
LeClaire's poetic inspection of life experiences has resulted in an
exceptional compendium of poetry, with each poem reflecting
elements of a life well spent. His final admonition to his reader
is that love is, indeed, the only resolve. ~Douglas Roberts, author
of Soul Witness.
Best known for his performance poetry, Earl LeClaire's observations
on the human condition take many forms. In Night Taxi he absorbs us
with glimpses into the lives of his passengers. The work is by
turns, extremely funny, and very troubling as he celebrates the
quirky, and the genuine in people, while describing the destructive
effects of those who use addiction, whether to money, power, sex,
or drugs, to get them through. In very sharp language that has a
vibrant urgency, LeClaire takes us on a high-spirited ride that
shows us the view out the driver's window rather than from the back
seat. Steve Kowitt, Gorilla Press
All the restaurant experience, the job skills, people savvy,
self-confidence, work-ethic, physical stamina and blind faith in
the world could not have prepared me for that first year as CAMP
COOK . . . One hundred to three hundred people per meal, three
meals a day, seven days a week, mid-morning snacks, afternoon
snacks, Smores at the campfires, special events, hors d oeuvres for
administrative get-togethers, birthdays, and parent-visitor day
youth camp sessions, family sessions, adult sessions and special
camps . . . with a kitchen staff of three . . . and . . . a crew of
inexperienced kids . . . all of us limping along . . . in an
antiquated kitchen trying to get by with crossed fingers, a lot of
luck and the worn-thin, seat of our pants . . . This book is
designed to provide camp cooks and volume cooks with sample menus,
ideas, management techniques, and recipes to serve 50 to 100
portions, shortcuts, tricks of the trade, and as a primer for
personal survival.
The poems in Holy Shit!!! never fib, instead they sway with
imagination. when i was young i could take a heart and fold it in
the crease of a smile. (off the isle of shoals) Their truth is
sliced with a cherished Japanese Samurai sword from a life
resonating, bursting with life. Earl LeClaire talks with flowers,
loves his family and blesses us with his imagery and wisdom. Now,
in his later years the boundaries of his life circle back to often
focus on empirical wisdom: For, in the end, it comes down to this:
The past and the future exist Only in the joy of the present.
(Shag-bark) If Earl LeClaire poems are on the menu, I'm pulling my
seat up to the table!!! Maryrose Carroll, author of -Beats Me:
Love, Poetry, Censorship, from Chicago to Appalachia,
-Conversations with a With a Dead Lover, -Tales from the Beaver
Dams; editor of -God & Other Poems: Final Poems by Paul
Carroll.
Shellfish Lovers Rejoice! It is here! Finally! A cookbook devoted
exclusively to shellfish, with 88 outstanding recipes and a bevy of
variations, anecdotes, information about the purchasing, storage
and preparation of mollusks. Included are succulent recipes and
easy to follow instructions for an Old Fashioned, New England
Clambake. Rhode Island and Providence Plantations was referred to,
by Colonial "Massachusetts People" as Rogue's Island as it is where
all dissidents fled to for sanctuary. From this "rogue's heritage"
came a stalwart personality and a superb regional cuisine. "If you
love shellfish, you will find this book an indispensable addition
to your cookbook collection." ~Lorenzo Del Falco "Quahogger and
shellfish fisherman." Timothy Gilchrist is the creator of The
Gilchrist Shellfish Griller. Earl LeClaire is a food writer and
professional chef.
Earl LeClaire is a leviathan; his path has taken him to depths most
of us cannot fathom. His work is direct, blunt, angry, tender, and
unstintingly honest. These observant poems shout from the page.
Tales of injustice and adventure, full of humorous irony, alternate
with gentle love poems so exquisitely felt that they break your
heart. Earl walks through life wide awake, and we are lucky to be
led through his world, feeling the heartbeat of a writer in love
with words. ~Cathy Larson Sky, musician/poet, author of "Blue egg,
my heart" (Finishing Line Press, 2014)
In "Below The Mayonnaise Factory", Earl LeClaire's poetry takes on
many shapes and colors. His frank observations on the human
condition are absorbing. You walk away from them only to have them
keep coming back. The work is, by turns, extremely funny and very
troubling as he celebrates life: his, ours, and theirs. "Very
sharp...wonderful energy...talented and original and crisper than
the sort of thing one sees getting published left and right. Just
fine work!...a shock and a pleasure to read." -Steve Kowit, Gorilla
Press. "Earl's poetry is a sledgehammer." -ruth weiss, the "Beat
Generation Goddess".
"We were quite a crew. I thought I was tough and getting tougher
all the time but the guys I hung around with, Bad Bob Royster,
Pike, Hank-The-Man, Manny and Bundog made me look like an altar
boy. Prohibition is still in effect as I'm telling you this story
and everyone with a boat is still making money and being shot at.
We had our day. And we paid dearly for it. We were just trying to
muscle in on some of the action. I guess 'muscle in' isn't the
right terminology. We were more like jackals trying to get our
share after the lions brought down the prey."
Earl LeClaire does not write poetry. Earl LeClaire writes life. He
takes very high resolution pictures of the world with his mind's
camera and then, with the precision of a sci-fi computer somewhere
between Clarke's HAL and Asimov's UNIVAC, he translates each pixel
into such precise words, lines and stanzas, that one forgets where
the color ends and the poetry starts and where did that thief
called time disappear.
Cree is the most widespread native language in Canada. The Alberta
Elders' Cree Dictionary is a highly usable and effective dictionary
that serves students, business, governments, and media. Designed
for speakers, students, and teachers of Cree; includes Cree-English
and English-Cree sections. [See online dictionary at
http://www.creedictionary.com or download the app from iTunes.]
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