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8th Avenue Poems by Stefan Brecht
ISBN 1-933132-23-X   $13.00 US   |   $16.95 CAN   




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Brecht brings decades of cultural observation to NYC’s streets, missing neither
harshness nor beauty, in a language bursting with the specific, punctuated by the
lyric—a night city of desolation and courage he clearly loves, fetid and sublime.   

Kenneth Bernard, author of The Man in the Stretcher

Stefan Brecht’s poems have the unforced urbanity of high art.  A flaneur of subtle
penetrating insight, he remains ever open to the miraculous. His city—New York
City
—his “poet’s estate,” is bathed in “the morning star's ambiguous light,” in which
every mote scintillates, throwing off shards of sadness, beauty and hope. 
Michael Heller, author of Uncertain Poetries

In Stefan Brecht’s ambitious epic poem, 8th Avenue, a sentient and transient city
is discovered anew. Brecht, the adept explorer, documents days and nights from
sunrise to dark, from summer to winter, from light to shadow; his 8th Avenue is the
vortex of streaming lives on meandering streets.  Interior and skeletal moments are
sometimes stilled, sometimes speeding across short and long lines of rigorous,
incisive poetry. 8th Avenue offers a bird’s-eye and microscopic view of New York
City
that shouldn't be missed.    Martine Bellen

Stefan Brecht echoes city strife with wit and anguish.  Lawrence Ferlinghetti

Stefan Brecht’s 8th Avenue is a remarkable set of poems. Its spare style, determined
by the moving eye in the urban streetscape and informed by a wry wit and bittersweet
attachment to the common life and people of
Manhattan, brings to mind the Objectivist
vision of Charles Reznikoff. And like Reznikoff, Brecht gives us moments of wisdom, dark
and unadorned, in an offhand, casual fashion.  But this is also poetry that will suddenly
veer into the abstractly philosophical and the socially analytic without missing a beat or
losing the melody. Above all, it is uncompromising in its insistence that art face up to
the way life is lived, along a pulsing artery of the greatest city in the world.    Norman Finkelstein