I Never Danced with an Eggplant (on a Streetcar Before): Chronicles of Life and Adventures in New Orleans

I Never Danced with an Eggplant (on a Streetcar Before): Chronicles of Life and Adventures in New Orleans - Paperback

$25.57
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I Never Danced with an Eggplant (on a Streetcar Before): Chronicles of Life and Adventures in New Orleans

I Never Danced with an Eggplant (on a Streetcar Before): Chronicles of Life and Adventures in New Orleans - Paperback

$25.57
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by Errol Laborde (Author)

Vivid vignettes rich with the sights, sounds, and tastes of New Orleans: "A worthy contribution to the library of books celebrating life in the Big Easy." --Times-Picayune

Offering innovative insights into such New Orleans mainstays as Carnival and the Quarter, as well as food, music, sports, politics, history, and more, Errol Laborde provides a look at aspects of Crescent City living usually reserved for residents. The essays include an Orleanian ode entitled "In Praise of the Potato Poor Boy" and several explorations and explanations of Mr. Bingle, the only symbol of Christmas that is unique to New Orleans. These eighty-one vignettes originally appeared in Laborde's Streetcar column, which currently runs in New Orleans Magazine.

"Strung together like a handful of Mardi Gras beads thrown from a passing float, Laborde's tales reveal the bright and beautiful as well as the dim and gaudy sides of the city." --Southern Living

Back Jacket

Errol Laborde describes himself as a committed urban dweller whose beat to date has been his native city of New Orleans. He is the publisher and editor of Louisiana Life magazine and a columnist for City Business. His "Streetcar" column, which began running weekly in Gambit in 1982, is now found monthly in New Orleans Magazine, where he also serves as associate publisher and editor. Producer and panelist for the television program Informed Sources, Laborde has taught political science at local universities and founded several community projects, including the Tennessee Williams/New Orleans Literary Festival. He also gives talks on state and local politics, as well as on the history of Mardi Gras.

Number of Pages: 160
Dimensions: 0.37 x 8.5 x 5.5 IN
Illustrated: Yes
Publication Date: November 20, 2000

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