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The Brooklyn Paper

Growing up in Coney Island, Arlene Gottfried, was witness to plenty of odd scenes. It’s no surprise, then, that her new book of gritty, black and white photographs, “Sometimes Overwhelming” ($45, powerHouse Books), charts a path through the wacky, wild and just plain weird characters that New York City attracts.

“I started taking pictures when my parents wanted me to go to college, and I didn’t really want to go,” Gottfried said. “I went and signed up for photography — I chose that class, because no matter what it was, I would be doing something rather than sitting and listening, which I had already had my fill of at Erasmus Hall.”

“I started taking photographs of people I knew and people I saw on the street, and I still work the same way,” said Gottfried, who has worked as a photographer for the New York Times Magazine, Fortune and Life. “I always loved [taking pictures in] Brooklyn because of the neighborhoods, the diversity and the architecture. I like the realness to it.”

Here, Gottfried dishes on the story behind five of the book’s most arresting photographs.

All photos: Arlene Gottfried

Angel & Woman on Brighton Beach
“Angel was a friend who lived on my block, and we often went to the beach together. One thing led to another, and I wound up taking a picture of him on the boardwalk [in Brighton Beach].”

Street Photographer Brooklyn
“This was in Borough Park. I was walking with my grandmother and I stopped to take that street photographer’s picture. I can’t believe I never had my picture taken by him, that’s what I always think when I see that photograph.”

Baby in Car on Coney
“I was doing a lot of photographs in Coney Island, and I remember walking along the boardwalk and looking over and seeing that, so I took a picture. That’s usually how it went — I saw something, took one image and kept going.”

Isabel Croft Jumps Rope
“I was still in school and was in a work-study program — I’m still friends with the guy who ran it — and they were making some sort of student film. I was hired to do still photographs. Isabel [Croft] was there, she was a photographer, too, and she just started jumping rope.”

“Sometimes Overwhelming” is available the powerHouse Arena (37 Main St. at Water Street in DUMBO). For information, call (866) 99-ARENA or visit www.powerhousebooks.com.

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