From Behind the Counter: Poems From a Rural Jamaican Experience

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Life was different then – no television, no telephones, inadequate road systems, no radio. The life of rural communities revolved and evolved around the church, the school and the village shop.

By: Easton Lee

Book fusion

Description

Easton Lee was born to a Chinese father and a Jamaican mother of mixed racial heritage in the 1930s at Wait-a-bit, Trelawny, Jamaica. The family lived in several villages and towns as his parents ‘moved shop’ in search of a livelihood. 

Life was different then – no television, no telephones, inadequate road systems, no radio. The life of rural communities revolved and evolved around the church, the school and the village shop. The majority of these shops were owned and operated by Chinese families. 

Lee recalls that many evenings during his elementary schooldays were spent under the counter of his parents’ shop so he could be near to his mother as she attended to customers and helped him with homework. Customers, unaware of his presence, often discussed the village happenings and their private business in the most intimate details, giving him insight and information not otherwise available. His mother who was born at the turn of the century, fed him with stories and legends she had gleaned from her older relatives. An avid reader and a great storyteller, she often entertained her children and their friends with fascinating tales she had read or had heard in her childhood.

His attention later turned to his Chinese heritage with his father and other Chinese relatives providing the link to that source. He found to his amazement that those teachings were not all that different from those of other sources, and in some instances were identical. 

This lively interest in and knowledge of Jamaican folklore which began in his schooldays was broadened and enhanced when, in adulthood, he went to work with Jamaica Social Welfare Commission, now the Social Development Commission, in a job which took him to every corner of the country.

Additional information

Weight 1 lbs
Dimensions 8.5 × 5.5 in
ISBN

978-976-8123-879

Binding

Paperback

Page Count

216

Publication date

1998

About the Author

Easton Lee spent his professional career chiefly in the field of Communication as a radio announcer at the then Jamaica Broadcasting Commission; television announcer; director of audio-visual programming at the Jamaica Information Service; and  as a public relations consultant. His endeavours in the field of drama are also well known and are perhaps his greatest achievement as the playwright and director of several theatrical productions. Now in the Christian ministry with the Anglican Church, Revd Lee is an Associate Priest at a Church in Florida, USA where he now resides.

Owen Minott is an accomplished photographer whose work has won numerous gold medals in the annual Jamaican competition and appeared in several exhibitions. A semi-retired medical doctor and close friend of Easton Lee, he resides in Mandeville, where he continues to capture on film his very favourite subject – Jamaica and things Jamaican.

Contents

Days and Nights

My Mother is a People

My Father Inside

Church is a Place

Fun and Games

Serious Things

I saw my Land

School Days

Story Time

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