New York City, 1970s. Take a walk on the wild side.
1970s New York was a mecca for artists, writers, and musicians drawn to its vibrant energy and creative possibilities. It was also a place of grinding poverty and urban decay, where crime and violence were everyday realities and hope danced with despair.
In Street People: Invisible New York Made Visible, words and pictures intertwine to create a rare immersion into a world hiding in plain sight.
Prowl the nighttime streets with Margie — the drag queen who inspired more than fifty works by Andy Warhol — and Romeo, part-time mugger, full-time philosopher, and king of the corner of West 98th Street and Broadway. Set up shop at the crack of dawn with Morris as he assembles New York’s oldest newsstand, then spend the day with the denizens of his street corner society. Slip downtown and ride shotgun with amateur pimp and prostitute Frankie and Cookie on their first night out. Cross the bridge into Brooklyn to bear witness to Edward, the self-appointed Second Coming of Christ, here to bring down destruction on the human race.
This timeless portrayal of life on the margins is accompanied by stark black-and-white images that expose the grit and beauty of a city at its most raw and real.
Experience this classic, strikingly illustrated account of New York City’s forgotten people. Witness invisible New York made visible.
David J. Bookbinder is a life coach, writer, and photographer. He lives and works north of Boston, Massachusetts.
His award-winning Flower Mandala images were inspired by the paintings of Georgia O’Keeffe and the flower photographs of Harold Feinstein, with whom he briefly studied. David holds Masters degrees in Counseling Psychology and Creative Writing and is a regular presenter at the Creativity & Madness conference in Santa Fe, NM.
Didn't care for it. Too much information about a few (not so interesting) people and less information about a variety of the street people he ran across. Be nice if the pictures had some relation to the text and were identified. I liked the pictures, thought it would be more pictures and less text.
This was an amazing reading experience. Mr. Bookbinder makes a part of New York City's history come alive. He tells their stories with great compassion. It's a very interesting and thought provoking book.
This is a great book about a time that is really interesting to me. 70s and 80s NYC and the people who inhabited it have so many stories about such a crazy time. I highly suggest reading it if you share my interest with the city.
A photo captures a moment in time; a journalist tells a story. David Bookbinder does both. He brings to life the most eccentric and engaging characters New York has to offer, folks most might pass by without a notice or thought, but Bookbinder sees then, hears them, accepts them, and invites the reader to do the same. He writes with the power of Studs Terkel and takes pictures with the poignancy of Dorothea Lange. This is a masterpiece.