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The poems in Portable Planet touch on Shaffer's experiences on, around, and within the Pacific Rim, from California to Japan to Indonesia. The heart of the book is "The Western Room," a poem that presents glimpses of Okinawa by means of a tour of Shuri Castle, the newly-restored royal residence of the Ryukyu Kingdom. Portable Planet is essentially a book of poems that celebrate and examine the status of humans as "inside-outsiders," not only in other countries and cultures, but also on the planet and even within our own families.
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Eric Paul Shaffer lives in Kula, on Maui, with Veronica and Harlequin on the sunset slope of Haleakala. He is author of four books and a chapbook of poetry, two chapbooks of fiction, and non-fiction articles and reviews. His work appears in Ploughshares, North American Review, ACM, American Scholar, Threepenny Review, Rattle, Beloit Poetry Journal, Bakunin, Malahat Review, Poetry Ireland Review, and the anthology 100 Poets Against the War. Shaffer received the 2000 Potent Prose Ax Prize for Poetry, the 2002 Elliot Cades Award for Literature (presented annually to an established writer in Hawai'i), a fellowship to the Summer 2006 Fishtrap Writers Retreat and Workshop, and the 2006 Rupert Hughes Writing Award (3rd place).
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- “Portable Planet is a marvelous book. Ive been following Shaffers work for years and he is on a definitive upward spiral.”
Jim Harrison, author of
Legends of the Fall,
Dalva, The Road Home,
and The Shape of the Journey: New and Selected Poems - “Portable Planet reminds me of what poetry is about clear melody with an easy pleasing pace plain speech elegant diction pictorial makes each place . . . come alive Okinawa, Japan, Bali, delta country of California full of the largely arcane detail that makes up most of Earth life what do we write for but to say I was here at this time at this place & this is how it struck me a beautiful book ”
Albert Saijo, co-author of
Trip Trap: Haiku on the Road (with Jack Kerouac and Lew Welch) - “Eric Paul Shaffer is my favorite poet more alive than any other so-called living poet. Portable Planet is a masterpiece.”
Sara Backer, author of American Fuji - “Graced by the best from the past, the poet wanders. His poems will take you to places you need to visit.”
Steve Sanfield, author of
Wandering, A New Way, He Smiled to Himself,
and A Fall from Grace - “Eric Paul Shaffers Portable Planet demonstrates a nomads sense of place around the Pacific Rim.”
Magda Cregg, editor of Hey Lew - “Eric Paul Shaffer?'s poems carry us ever inward and out, where particular stones sprout wings, where solid ground is shaken by the nimble fingers of small gods, and the normal everyday ways of life stay blessedly themselves. These poems are portable, they?re the exact same size as the hip pocket of your mind.
John Kain, author of Cheater?s
Paradise
- Complex, paradoxical, and intriguing,
this is poetry that makes one quite happy that some writers can?t
keep their mouths shut.
Cheri Crenshaw, Fearless
Reviews
- Eric Paul Shaffer is the best poet writing
today. Portable Planet liberates American poetry from the
stuffiness of the Academy and the silliness of the Slam. Here
is a book whistling with fresh air, open vistas, and good humor.
Portable Planet should be made into our next National Park,
but hurry and get your copy, before the next administration sells
it off! If Walt Whitman had looked under his own boot soles, he
would have found Eric Paul Shaffer and Shaffer would have
been giving old Walt a hot foot. This book burns!
John P. OGrady, author of Grave
Goods: Essays of a Peculiar Nature (University of Utah Press, May 2001)
- Poet
Explores Meaning of a Portable Planet
Elisabeth Sherwin, The Davis
Enterprise
- Island
Books: Poetic words to ponder
Ann M. Sato, Honolulu
Advertiser
| | Eric Paul Shaffer is also the author of:- How I Read Gertrude Stein by Lew Welch, edited by Eric Paul Shaffer (Grey Fox, 1995)
- The Soul Unearthed: Celebrating Wildness and Personal Renewal Through Nature, edited by Cass Adams (J. P. Tarcher, 1996)
- Living at the Monastery, Working in the Kitchen (Leaping Dog Press, 2001)
- 100 Poets Against the War, edited by Todd Swift (Salt Publishing, 2003)
- You Are Here (Obscure Publications, 2004)
- Lāhaina Noon: Nā Mele O Maui: Poems (Leaping Dog Press, 2005)
- The Felony Stick: Selections from Memoirs of the Cenozoic Era (Leaping Dog Press, 2006)
- Burn & Learn: Memoirs of the Cenozoic Era: A Novel, (Leaping Dog Press, 2009)
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