An album of pity and anger which fixes the evil of war for all time. -Observer
A handsome edition of War Primer, a series of short poems illustrated and
inspired by war photographs Brecht clipped from newspapers. -David Edgar,
London Review of Books Tender, angry and incisive. -Independent A modern
equivalent of Goya. -Guardian Brecht reprinted photographs from wartime mass-
circulation magazines, replacing the captions with short poems about the
essential truth of each image. -Daily Telegraph Deserves a place of the
shelves of every public and school library. -Times Literary Supplement By
themselves the images are disturbing, often terrifying. The four lines of
poetry make them devastating. They achieve this through what was Brecht's
greatest strength as a writer: his ability to coax out the twisted, icy
rationale of a world whose overriding logic is self-justification. The bitter
chuckle brought on in the reader by these words reveals unsettling
machinations. War, capital and fascism are made mundane before that very
mundanity is turned inside out by dint of its own force. -Alexander Billet,
Red Wedge
An album of pity and anger which fixes the evil of war for all time. -Observer
A handsome edition of War Primer, a series of short poems illustrated and
inspired by war photographs Brecht clipped from newspapers. -David Edgar,
London Review of Books Tender, angry and incisive. -Independent A modern
equivalent of Goya. -Guardian Brecht reprinted photographs from wartime mass-
circulation magazines, replacing the captions with short poems about the
essential truth of each image. -Daily Telegraph Deserves a place of the
shelves of every public and school library. -Times Literary Supplement By
themselves the images are disturbing, often terrifying. The four lines of
poetry make them devastating. They achieve this through what was Brecht's
greatest strength as a writer: his ability to coax out the twisted, icy
rationale of a world whose overriding logic is self-justification. The bitter
chuckle brought on in the reader by these words reveals unsettling
machinations. War, capital and fascism are made mundane before that very
mundanity is turned inside out by dint of its own force. -Alexander Billet,
Red Wedge