“‘One must awaken the stories that sleep in the streets,’ wrote the philosopher of everyday life Michel de Certeau. David Lazar has assembled an anthology of them, found underfoot and awakened with deft artistry and genuine wonder. Balanced between prose poetry and flash fiction, these pieces, with their instigating photographs, reveal that stories waiting to be told may be found wherever you look.”—D. J. Waldie, author of Holy Land: A Suburban Memoir and Becoming Los Angeles: Myth, Memory, and a Sense of Place
“David Lazar’s enchanting Stories of the Street opens on a mysterious world where scraps of notes, torn lists, and the odd name and number on a flyaway slip of paper morph into reverie. Lazar’s prose reflections, each paired with a photograph, are beautifully unpredictable and witty. About a postcard written fifty years ago in Greek, posted from Amsterdam, discovered a decade ago in Athens, Lazar writes in Chicago, ‘Being lost doesn’t mean you don’t get around.’ A slip of paper from an old Chicago hotel for lost souls becomes a scene in the life of a private eye, who quips, ‘Some memories need a decent burial.’ Stories of the Street sparkles with brilliance, wise in the world’s way. Things can be rescued, but as Lazar muses, ‘what is saved is never saved forever.’”—Cynthia Hogue, author of instead, it is dark
“David Lazar finds poems everywhere! A flaneur with his gaze toward the ground and his poetics soaring skyward, he’s collected Lotto receipts, a tarot card, a torn movie review, a crumpled page from a screenplay-in-progress, geometry homework, children’s drawings, a rosary, shoes separated from their wearers, grocery lists, postcards from Croatia and Amsterdam, an advertisement for psychic readings, photographs, and so much more. These serve as the basis for his splendid deep image prose poems in Stories from the Street. His whimsical musings about our ‘emotional’ trash, our hopes and despair, our living inside-out, and his exquisite observations about our contemporary day-to-day elevate this ephemera to art.”—Denise Duhamel, author of The Unrhymables
“Stories of the Street is a hidden city of distributed psyches unveiling prose traces in reply to images’ trace. Responding to gutter-found items—lists, abandoned photos, stationery squibs—the story segments feel lifted out of longer stories, a lift that proves the rule of this collection: what’s missing is where the meanings are. Midway, abandoned shoe photos embody their absent walkers and the prose intermits—and then returns to enamoring its character ghosts, because ‘anything that isn’t me is such a relief.’ Squint at arcades made of paper; hitch your luck-star to a Fireball; read this book for its rueful, tender, crazed devotion to our human scaffolding in ‘the lexicon of air.’”—Lisa Samuels, author of The Long White Cloud of Unknowing
“Literally taken from scraps found tossed to the ground, David Lazar’s Stories of the Street magics this ephemera into ‘some sense of leaked soul.’ Each discarded or lost image . . . tantalizes with mystery. To Lazar the flaneur, each fluttering, crushed, or soiled piece of paper becomes ‘a memory sandwich and a chocolate milkshake’—in short, quite a treat. You’ll want seconds.”—Terese Svoboda, author of Dog on Fire
“Stories of the Street is a wonderfully witty collection of words and pictures. It juxtaposes photographs Lazar made of lost pieces of paper and abandoned things, encountered on his walks, with the thoughts and feelings they provoked in him. Sometimes Lazar’s thoughts rush along like riffs from a scat song; sometimes they patter like monologues spoken by a motor-mouthed hipster; and sometimes they settle to earth like the most sober-minded meditations of love and loss.”—Michael Lesy, author of Snapshots 1971–77
“The formally capacious, frequently hilarious poems in Stories of the Street were written as responses to the author’s photographs of ‘found texts’. . . . The lives of his responses, like the photographs, exist beyond the author’s eye/I. Lazar’s reverence for his subjects manifests as a civilized kaleidoscopic whirl of form and tone. ‘Some might call these responses hybrids . . . I’d probably prefer circus acts.’ In an age of one-track tweets and vids, it’s a pleasure to wade into this worldly current.”—Jennifer L. Knox, author of Crushing It