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tough guy poetry and manly stories of loneliness
all contents copyright Jon Rolston 2004, 2005, 2006

October 16, 2007

Live from Lewisburg Prison

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My old high school chum Sean Ahern is serving some time in Pennsylvania and I hired him to write a review of the prison food. The letter arrived yesterday, so with no further ado, take it away Sean:

“One would expect a dull, oleaginous sheen coating the inner workings of the seventy-five year old colossus of confinement that is United States Penitentiary, Lewisburg. A slow walk through the crestfallen bachelor pad of serial killer “Buffalo Bill” in “Silence of the Lambs.” A greasy stroll to the putrescent cavity in the center. The dining hall. Despite the cold harsh semi-realities mirrored in the songs of David Allen Coe, I’m here to tell ya – it’s not all that bad.

Three hots and a cot are not nearly as good as some things that rhyme, but I assure you, you’d be hard pressed to find better biscuits and gravy this side of Cuzzin’ Richies*, my friend.

They say breakfast is the most important part of the day and the day starts at 6:30 am with a variety of cold cereals, pastry and fresh fruit.

But let’s do lunch. Vegetable soup compliments a hot turkey sandwich, sides of mashed or boiled potatoes, green beans, turkey gravy and and apple sauce accompany in mouth watering delight.

Care to kick it up a notch? Bam! Try the soup du jour, pasta rotini with meat sauce, mixed vegetables and garlic bread. Perhaps a tossed salad* is something you take pleasure in. (syrup and jelly are available for you deviants.) Those eating something other than ass, this culinary delight boasts a healthy mix of lettuce, cabbage and carrots. Low calorie dressing is always an option. (for the salad)

For the hypertensive convict “heart healthy” alternatives are offered as well as no pork for Muslim fundamentalist radical jihadi terror suspects.

Did I mention the beverage bar? Take your pick from these palate pleasing options to quench your thirst – coffee, milk, cola, diet cola, root beer, lemon-lime, lemonade and fruit punch. Go ahead and drink your fill. It’s free! Sort of.

What’s not easily washed down with the many fine selections from the beverage bar is the high price of this all inclusive resort. what you won’t be getting is the fuck out here any time soon. The federal system offers no parole, chances of early release are as hollow as the center of a bagel – your choice of margarine pats or grape jelly.

The food truly isn’t bad, but then again Olive Garden has the never ending pasta bowl with free salad and bread sticks. How would you like to live there though? Put a bunk bed in the bathroom, lock the door at 10 pm…

Pasta becomes insignificant after a while and even the most comfortable of comfort foods can’t ease the pain.

The chow hall isn’t just food. Let’s talk about ambiance. The quaint personal touch of racially divided Formica topped tables supply the background for a cultural stew, while the sectioned brown plastic trays and yellow plastic utensils wrapped in napkins add a festive burst of color, appropriate for all occasions.

A cheerful beeping of scanned prison identification cards chirps as each meal is served and a jovial corrections officer announcing the block rotation over the public address system can be heard over the many conversating patrons.

The lines are long and the service is less than perfect. It’s rare to find a server without at a sourpuss as he is forced to work under the watchful eye of The Man. I’ve only experienced worse service once, when I was accosted by a post-op transsexual at an eatery called “the Friendly Toast” in Portsmouth New Hampshire. It was over a harmless sausage joke and I’d rather not talk about it – Bon Appetit!”


*The truck stop in Greenland NH

*tossed salad is prison slang for analingous

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13 Comments

  1. Hey, that’s some real stuff there, a nice read. Good to see Sean’s doing a little more than “building a physique desired by many”.

    Comment by Lyle_s — October 16, 2007 @ 4:56 pm

  2. This was great! More tales, please.

    Comment by CooCooCaChoo — October 16, 2007 @ 6:37 pm

  3. i think i’d rather starve

    Comment by almostboogienegress — October 16, 2007 @ 9:51 pm

  4. And he can write too. Nice work, maybe you should have a regular section from Sean.

    Comment by al — October 17, 2007 @ 9:42 am

  5. Not a bad idea. I don’t want any reviews of the shower stalls, though.

    Comment by Lyle_s — October 17, 2007 @ 1:04 pm

  6. i like “patrons”. that’s being sunny, sean. a nice hot cup of coffee sounds like a pleasure. although not across the face.

    Comment by sean — October 19, 2007 @ 10:51 am

  7. it is well written. i’d like to hear about the library and if there is a Arts in the Prisons program there and if so what play are they doing.

    Comment by don't i know it — October 21, 2007 @ 12:56 am

  8. I heard that interview on NPR too. I don’t think Sean would be involved with that, but I”ll ask him if he ever turned out any of the actors.

    I met him when he was washing dishes with me at the other restaurant in Greenland NH, The Country View. It was breakfast and lunch and instead of splitting the tip-out from the waitresses for bussing, he kept the money. I asked him where my cut was and he said he wasn’t gonna pay me. I was 13, he was probably 14.
    I was so naive I didn’t realize I was being stuck up so I just laughed and then he paid me.
    I can’t remember if it was him or Ken Hawkins who taught me to throw out the dishes if you were in a rush and just wanted to go home.

    Comment by Rolston — October 21, 2007 @ 9:12 pm

  9. why where you working at the age of 13? you should have been out playing football or chess or burning ants with a magnifying glass or tossing dirt in girls’ hair or …

    Comment by man of means by no means — October 23, 2007 @ 10:11 pm

  10. Dear King of the Road,

    I was working at 13 because I was trying to get out of Greenland New Hampshire.

    Comment by Rolston — October 23, 2007 @ 10:49 pm

  11. “I did throw out dishes at the Country View and other fine establishments. I’m sure Ken “the indestructible man” Hawkins did too. The reason I split the dough with Rolston was that my mom was a waitress there so I’d just steal money from her when I got home. I think I was 14 at the time. Anyways, was our high school gym teacher Tom Daubney fucking young (high school) girls or what? Just wondering, I saw him at the Country View once with a girl I went to school with. He slipped some jelly packets in his pocket and gave her a sly grin before they left. It took me years to make the connection. He could shoot baskets from half court and bang em’ no-net every time, also the hair on his forearms was thicker than Tom Sellecks mustache. Chicks dig that. I really shouldn’t be commenting on things that I write and others comment on, but I’m not supposed to throw dishes away either. Take that society!”

    Comment by Sean Ahern — October 29, 2007 @ 10:39 am

  12. The gym teacher to wonder about was the girl’s teacher…a true lesbian. Would they put a straight man in that locker room? So why was she there?

    and don’t worry about commenting on your own work Sean, it’s like a big hippy free for all here.

    Comment by Rolston — October 30, 2007 @ 10:35 pm

  13. [...] Sean Ahern sent me a letter that explains life in the prison yard. He sent us the story about the prison cafeteria earlier. Read and learn some more [...]

    Pingback by My Robot Is Pregnant » the lewsiburg prison playground — December 6, 2007 @ 6:48 pm

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