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6 result(s) for "Prisoners Drug use Fiction."
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Concrete Carnival
Darcleight narrates his oddities in life as a prisoner. He relates his imprisonment as a carnival of the bizarre in a fairground of bars and steel, bricks and concrete. Darcleight tells that drugs are so popular in prison, for drugs are ultimately about escaping ones life, and no one wants to escape their life more than one doing time. He states that prison is a shitty, diet-cola version of the world, so they are the carnies to the world's clowns--a misfit toys, wayward boys, sad jesters, maniacally-homicidal clowns. Due to his depression, he reveals his darker moments that he's dreaming of donning his clown outfit, painting tears on his face, and taking a rusty razor to his throat.
FROM CLEVELAND TO NEW ORLEANS
Jon Edgar Webb was born on February 1, 1905, in Cleveland, Ohio, the first child of carpenter and building contractor T. W. Louis Webb and the former Ella Neely. Louis was born in Canada in 1878, the son of English emigrants. Ella was a year younger than her husband and, like her father, hailed from Philadelphia. Her mother was born in Ireland. The Webbs eventually had five children, with the addition of sons Harry, Thomas Louis, and William, and a daughter, Mary. Though blue collar, the Webbs were reasonably well-off. They were land owners, possessing a number of houses and