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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Brian BarthPublisher: Astra Publishing House Imprint: Astra House Weight: 0.567kg ISBN: 9781662601613ISBN 10: 1662601611 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 11 November 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviews“In Front Street, Brian Barth peels back the tarps of America’s modern tent cities, immersing himself—and us—deep into the improvised lives of the unconventionally housed. Barth’s great achievement is not that he portrays society’s broken souls with empathy, though he extends uncommon grace to those typically looked on as a nuisance. It’s that he uncovers a weird sort of paradise in the chaos and discomfort of the encampments: a tolerance, a purpose, a togetherness scrubbed from so many of our tidier communities. This book will forever change your perception of the ‘homeless crisis’ and the doomed attempts to sweep it away.” —Jesse Katz, author of The Rent Collectors ""This heartfelt debut study from journalist Barth offers a window into Silicon Valley’s homeless encampments . . . [An] up-close, multifaceted representation of an unhoused community."" —Publishers Weekly ""A tough-minded, well-reported look at what would appear to be an intractable, and growing, social problem."" —Kirkus Reviews ""In Front Street, Brian Barth peels back the tarps of America’s modern tent cities, immersing himself—and us—deep into the improvised lives of the unconventionally housed. Barth’s great achievement is not that he portrays society’s broken souls with empathy, though he extends uncommon grace to those typically looked on as a nuisance. It’s that he uncovers a weird sort of paradise in the chaos and discomfort of the encampments: a tolerance, a purpose, a togetherness scrubbed from so many of our tidier communities. This book will forever change your perception of the ‘homeless crisis’ and the doomed attempts to sweep it away."" —Jesse Katz, author of The Rent Collectors ""If you want to understand what it’s like to live in poverty at the edge of great wealth, read this gentle, generous book. It will remind you of what it means to be human in an era of high technology."" —Fred Turner, author, with Mary Beth Meehan, of Seeing Silicon Valley: Life Inside a Fraying America ""This powerful and unflinchingly compassionate book challenges us to see our unhoused neighbors not as a problem to be solved, but as people to be known—wise, resilient, and deeply human."" —Kevin F. Adler, founder of Miracle Messages and author of When We Walk By: Forgotten Humanity, Broken Systems, and the Role We Can Each Play in Ending Homelessness in America ""Filled with tenderness and keen insight, Front Street shows us the resilience and movement building capacity of encampments like Wood Street, Wolfe Camp, and Crash Zone. A sweeping reckoning and indictment of the state-sanctioned violence inflicted against our unhoused community members."" —Tristia Bauman, Directing Attorney of Housing at the Law Foundation of Silicon Valley ""Brian Barth has done a tremendous service with his book, not only for those who are unhoused on the streets of America but for those of us who are housed. He has managed to capture the humanity of those who have fallen through the cracks and can no longer afford to pay for their housing. But he has also shown us housed Americans that there are amazingly compassionate communities within the shanty towns and encampments who are generously supportive of each other despite all the sufferings that come with living on the streets."" —Mike Pyatok, award-winning architect of affordable housing and author of Good Neighbors: Affordable Family Housing “In Front Street, Brian Barth peels back the tarps of America’s modern tent cities, immersing himself—and us—deep into the improvised lives of the unconventionally housed. Barth’s great achievement is not that he portrays society’s broken souls with empathy, though he extends uncommon grace to those typically looked on as a nuisance. It’s that he uncovers a weird sort of paradise in the chaos and discomfort of the encampments: a tolerance, a purpose, a togetherness scrubbed from so many of our tidier communities. This book will forever change your perception of the ‘homeless crisis’ and the doomed attempts to sweep it away.” —Jesse Katz, author of The Rent Collectors ""If you want to understand what it’s like to live in poverty at the edge of great wealth, read this gentle, generous book. It will remind you of what it means to be human in an era of high technology."" —Fred Turner, author, with Mary Beth Meehan, of Seeing Silicon Valley: Life Inside a Fraying America “This powerful and unflinchingly compassionate book challenges us to see our unhoused neighbors not as a problem to be solved, but as people to be known—wise, resilient, and deeply human.” —Kevin F. Adler, founder of Miracle Messages and author of When We Walk By: Forgotten Humanity, Broken Systems, and the Role We Can Each Play in Ending Homelessness in America ""Filled with tenderness and keen insight, Front Street shows us the resilience and movement building capacity of encampments like Wood Street, Wolfe Camp, and Crash Zone. A sweeping reckoning and indictment of the state-sanctioned violence inflicted against our unhoused community members."" —Tristia Bauman, Directing Attorney of Housing at the Law Foundation of Silicon Valley ""Brian Barth has done a tremendous service with his book, not only for those who are unhoused on the streets of America but for those of us who are housed. He has managed to capture the humanity of those who have fallen through the cracks and can no longer afford to pay for their housing. But he has also shown us housed Americans that there are amazingly compassionate communities within the shanty towns and encampments who are generously supportive of each other despite all the sufferings that come with living on the streets."" —Mike Pyatok, award-winning architect of affordable housing and author of Good Neighbors: Affordable Family Housing ""A tough-minded, well-reported look at what would appear to be an intractable, and growing, social problem."" —Kirkus Reviews ""In Front Street, Brian Barth peels back the tarps of America’s modern tent cities, immersing himself—and us—deep into the improvised lives of the unconventionally housed. Barth’s great achievement is not that he portrays society’s broken souls with empathy, though he extends uncommon grace to those typically looked on as a nuisance. It’s that he uncovers a weird sort of paradise in the chaos and discomfort of the encampments: a tolerance, a purpose, a togetherness scrubbed from so many of our tidier communities. This book will forever change your perception of the ‘homeless crisis’ and the doomed attempts to sweep it away."" —Jesse Katz, author of The Rent Collectors ""If you want to understand what it’s like to live in poverty at the edge of great wealth, read this gentle, generous book. It will remind you of what it means to be human in an era of high technology."" —Fred Turner, author, with Mary Beth Meehan, of Seeing Silicon Valley: Life Inside a Fraying America ""This powerful and unflinchingly compassionate book challenges us to see our unhoused neighbors not as a problem to be solved, but as people to be known—wise, resilient, and deeply human."" —Kevin F. Adler, founder of Miracle Messages and author of When We Walk By: Forgotten Humanity, Broken Systems, and the Role We Can Each Play in Ending Homelessness in America ""Filled with tenderness and keen insight, Front Street shows us the resilience and movement building capacity of encampments like Wood Street, Wolfe Camp, and Crash Zone. A sweeping reckoning and indictment of the state-sanctioned violence inflicted against our unhoused community members."" —Tristia Bauman, Directing Attorney of Housing at the Law Foundation of Silicon Valley ""Brian Barth has done a tremendous service with his book, not only for those who are unhoused on the streets of America but for those of us who are housed. He has managed to capture the humanity of those who have fallen through the cracks and can no longer afford to pay for their housing. But he has also shown us housed Americans that there are amazingly compassionate communities within the shanty towns and encampments who are generously supportive of each other despite all the sufferings that come with living on the streets."" —Mike Pyatok, award-winning architect of affordable housing and author of Good Neighbors: Affordable Family Housing Author InformationBrian Barth is an award-winning independent journalist with bylines in the New Yorker, National Geographic, Washington Post, The New Republic and Mother Jones, among other publications. He lives between the Bay Area and California's remote Lost Coast region, where he is developing a spiritual refuge-open to seekers, broken souls, and all of humankind-amid a foggy, fern-filled forest. Front Street is his first book. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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