Category: Reviews
On the Clarity of Night – Review of “Hà Nội” by Wouter Vanhees
Sometimes a simple idea is the best idea. Sometimes, in fact, a simple idea can be genius. Every Wednesday night, at
The Perfect Tabletop Hike – Review of “The Nature of Yosemite: A Visual Journey” by Robb Hirsch
Here is a confession. Every now and then, for whatever reason, I find myself holding an Audubon or Peterson field guide
Too Much, Too Little – Review of “Women Street Photographers”, edited by Gulnara Samoilova
Everything about this book seems like a good idea. Street Photography is hot right now. The founding superstars are all men –
A Braided Healing – Review of “He Threw the Last Punch Too Hard” by Hannah Kozak
“One of the hardest, yet most therapeutic journeys a photographer can take is to turn the lens around on themselves,
Mind Time – Review of “Escape” by Olga Karlovac
There are a thousand ways to judge a photobook: technical sophistication, artistic accomplishment, social relevance, and so on. Those are all
Beauty and Despair – Review of “In Guns We Trust” by Jean-Francois Bouchard
There is a quote in Tim O’Brien’s book The Things They Carried I find myself remembering often. He writes: “The truths
The Deep Fleeting Moment – Review of “Fill the Frame”, a film by Tim Huynh
Here is a question: How do you explain the ineffable? How do you explain what is present – oftentimes right
The Persistence of Whispers – Review of “The Locusts” by Jesse Lenz
When we tell the stories of our lives, to others or to ourselves, we tend to land on events. Here
A Necessary Book – Review of “Pictures on the Radio” by David P. Gilkey
I love radio. Perhaps because radio seems to come from nowhere, or everywhere, the act of listening, for me at
A Sensual Response – Review of “Look Up To The Moon” by John Cohen
I would be surprised if every photographer did not share one common dream – to go someplace, someplace unfamiliar, perhaps
Spectacle and Distance – Review of “In the Limelight: The Visual Ecstasy of NYC Nightlife in the 90s”
It seemed good at the time. In the 1990s, New York City nightclubs defined energy, culture remade by boundary-exploding innovation.
Yes – Review of “Henri Cartier-Bresson: Photographer”
I know what’s going to happen. This book is going to sit on your coffee table. There will be a moment
The Moment Before Everything – Review of “In Search of Elsewhere” by Steve McCurry
There is a moment I love. Imagine a dance teacher counting five, six, seven, eight. Just before the next one, the
On Nostalgia, Happiness and Tears – Review of “The Boys” by Rick Schatzberg
Here is a proposition: Memory demands the present. At one level this is obvious. Memory, by definition, resides in the previous,
Those Wonderful Small Corners – Review of “Do Not Disturb My Waking Dream” by John Cohen
There should be a word somewhere between evocative and provocative. To evoke is to cause memory. To provoke is to cause