Susie Davidson, (and her partner Frankie) a reporter for the Jewish Daily Forward, an Ibbetson author, as well as the editor of the critically acclaimed Holocaust anthology "I Refused to Die..." ( Ibbetson Street Press) poses below with small press legend poet Ed Galing. Galing is 94 and just released his new poetry book "Pushcarts and Peddlars" (Poetica Publishing). Davidson recently interviewed Galing for an article in the Forward and visited at his home in Hatboro, PA. in April 2011. 

Showing posts with label Ed Galing Buying A Suit on Essex StreeT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ed Galing Buying A Suit on Essex StreeT. Show all posts
Monday, May 2, 2011
Ed Galing and Susie Davidson
Posted by
Doug Holder
at
7:26 AM
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Labels: Ed Galing Buying A Suit on Essex StreeT, Susie Davidson
Tuesday, January 9, 2007
Small Press Review: Buying A Suit On Essex Street
Review of Ed Galing's " Buying A Suit on Essex Steet" in The Small Press Review Nov-Dec. 2006
Ed Galing, 88 is a historian of New York's Lower East Side in the days of pushcarts and of tenements packed with poor Jews and other immigrants-- Emma Lazarus: " tired and poor...wretched refuse" and Mike Gold's "Jews without money." According to Galing, his family, fit those categories, living on welfare and stifled in a "small iron cage" of an apartment.
Galing writes about his poverty-thwarted childhood in a clear style, short lines, and brief stanzas, aptly set in Arial bold by Dave Roskos, the proprietor of Inquity Press. The cover bears a photo of Galing in fedora and black-double-breasted overcoat about 50 years ago, and the back cover shows old Ed in an open sports shirt. In both photos he is smiling, broadly on the front cover, world-wisely on the back. He's a survivor: at his most bitter he writes: "fuck humanity," at his most hopeful, he says: "god bless."
Today his Essex Street Neighborhood is being gentrified, with large apartment towers rising amid the dwindling number of tenements. The clothier where he bought the suit of the title is long gone, like most of the other small buisnesses that served his family and later drew bargain hunters to the Lower East Side. All that remains are the memories and words of Ed Galing in the many small press venues that have published him.
George Held.
Ed Galing, 88 is a historian of New York's Lower East Side in the days of pushcarts and of tenements packed with poor Jews and other immigrants-- Emma Lazarus: " tired and poor...wretched refuse" and Mike Gold's "Jews without money." According to Galing, his family, fit those categories, living on welfare and stifled in a "small iron cage" of an apartment.
Galing writes about his poverty-thwarted childhood in a clear style, short lines, and brief stanzas, aptly set in Arial bold by Dave Roskos, the proprietor of Inquity Press. The cover bears a photo of Galing in fedora and black-double-breasted overcoat about 50 years ago, and the back cover shows old Ed in an open sports shirt. In both photos he is smiling, broadly on the front cover, world-wisely on the back. He's a survivor: at his most bitter he writes: "fuck humanity," at his most hopeful, he says: "god bless."
Today his Essex Street Neighborhood is being gentrified, with large apartment towers rising amid the dwindling number of tenements. The clothier where he bought the suit of the title is long gone, like most of the other small buisnesses that served his family and later drew bargain hunters to the Lower East Side. All that remains are the memories and words of Ed Galing in the many small press venues that have published him.
George Held.
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Doug Holder
at
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