sojournerphoto
Veteran
Gathering - Kate Bellis and Sally Matthews, a 15 month project on hill farming in Northumberland- I like it very much as it reminds me of my early years. See http://www.katebellis.com/
On Reading - Andre Kertescz - outstanding new Norton verion that i would recommend to anyone.
Henri Cartier-Bresson - Thames and Hudson - a biography with pictures. A nice short biography, but they could have avoided putting some images across the centre of the book.
Mike
On Reading - Andre Kertescz - outstanding new Norton verion that i would recommend to anyone.
Henri Cartier-Bresson - Thames and Hudson - a biography with pictures. A nice short biography, but they could have avoided putting some images across the centre of the book.
Mike
Florian1234
it's just hide and seek
Today a friend gave me Beaumont Newhall's History of Photography as a gift, because I took the "official" photos at his wedding. 
gns
Well-known
I've picked up some pretty good books so far this year, but my current favorite is, "Waiting, Sitting, Fishing and Some Automobiles" by Anthony Hernandez. This book came out a couple of years ago, but the pictures are not recent. They are all from around 1980, shot in the streets and other public places of Los Angeles with a 5x7 camera. One thing these pictures will do, is remind you what bunk it is, categorizing photographs into different "Genres" like street, landscape or portraiture.
Cheers,
Gary
Cheers,
Gary
Chuck Albertson
Well-known
Costa is alive and well - and living in Florida - at least during the winter.
The only "Bostonians" that I have seen is the one he did many decades ago - I think it wa done more or less in conjunction with the US Bicentennial in 1976.
The Magnum store is selling signed copies. I remembered the project from when Modern Photo ran several of the photos in the 1970's, so I bought one.
PMCC
Late adopter.
"The Destruction of Lower Manhattan" by Danny Lyon, documenting the site clearance in order to build the World Trade Center in the late 60s. In retrospect, one can't help but think of 9/11: both are lost worlds. Remarkable photos and text -- Lyon is one of our best. (And truly stunning tritones by the great Robert Hennessey.)
Haigh
Gary Haigh
Nami by Syoin Kajii.
RayPA
Ignore It (It'll go away)
Invasion 68 by Koudelka
nksyoon
Well-known
Papercut
Well-known
Eggleston: William Eggleston Guide
not bountiful in terms of number of images, but boy are the reproductions gorgeous!
Seamus Murphy: Afghanistan: A Darkness Visible
excellent war reportage in the classic / traditional photojournalism style
not bountiful in terms of number of images, but boy are the reproductions gorgeous!
Seamus Murphy: Afghanistan: A Darkness Visible
excellent war reportage in the classic / traditional photojournalism style
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martin s
Well-known
Now for something different, maybe I'll buy the recent World Press Photo Award book.
I bought it some time ago, it's just _great. It really illustrates what documentary photography is all about (at least for me). And not just the Suau images, there's a lot more in there.
At a friends place I looked trough Paul Grahams "Shimmer of Possibility", overall I didn't like it. The ones I saw at his exhibition (c/o) were good though, they're in the book as well - but imo a lot better than the rest of his work.
"Magnum Magnum" is on sale btw in most book stores (in Germany) I've seen it in.
martin
Florian1234
it's just hide and seek
I bought it some time ago, it's just _great. It really illustrates what documentary photography is all about (at least for me). And not just the Suau images, there's a lot more in there.
I did not buy it yet. But another one on my list is the current book by reporter ohne grenzen. I guess I'll order both with Rober Frank Looking in expanded in the coming weeks.
The initial next money is put into my M4 camera with the shutter fault tomorrow...:bang:
martin s
Well-known
I did not buy it yet. But another one on my list is the current book by reporter ohne grenzen. I guess I'll order both with Rober Frank Looking in expanded in the coming weeks.
The initial next money is put into my M4 camera with the shutter fault tomorrow...:bang:
Hey where do you get the latest Reporter ohne Grenzen issue? I have a few past issues (Reza, ... ) and I wanted to get the one with Nachtweys Portfolio, that's the latest, right?
martin
Florian1234
it's just hide and seek
Martin, the latest reporter issue is about "Tatorte" and has stuff by Paolo Pellegrin inside. No clue about Nachtwey. They had some copies of it in the large Thalia bookshop here in Bremen. (http://www.amazon.de/Tatorte-Rolf-N...=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1245009064&sr=8-1)
palec
Well-known
Jeff Mermelstein - SideWalk and No Title Here
I love his sense of visual humour
I love his sense of visual humour
martin s
Well-known
Ah so "Reporters sans Frontières" isn't the same as the German version, still, I missed the Nachtwey issue - it's Don McCullin this quarter (?).
There are two more books I want to recommend, first "How you look at it" - a book with various photographers and artists, it's images which were exhibited in Hanover in 2000 (Expo). It's not amazing and most of us probably know most photographs in there, still, pretty entertaining if you can't find anything else.
Also, and that's probably my favorite photography book so far, "Einmal" by Wim Wenders. Just beautiful.
It's stories with (small) photographs, he's such an amazing photographer I would have never thought. I figured the Leica commercial was, well.. a commercial, but wow! The one book I would recommend, would I have to pick one. If you can get it, get it. I'll even translate the German for you, if necessary
.
martin
//EDIT: It's "How you look at it", not "we". Now I can find the Amazon link, too. I wouldn't spend more than 30 Euros on it, those prices are crazy. It's 20 Euros in Germany, new.
There are two more books I want to recommend, first "How you look at it" - a book with various photographers and artists, it's images which were exhibited in Hanover in 2000 (Expo). It's not amazing and most of us probably know most photographs in there, still, pretty entertaining if you can't find anything else.
Also, and that's probably my favorite photography book so far, "Einmal" by Wim Wenders. Just beautiful.

It's stories with (small) photographs, he's such an amazing photographer I would have never thought. I figured the Leica commercial was, well.. a commercial, but wow! The one book I would recommend, would I have to pick one. If you can get it, get it. I'll even translate the German for you, if necessary
martin
//EDIT: It's "How you look at it", not "we". Now I can find the Amazon link, too. I wouldn't spend more than 30 Euros on it, those prices are crazy. It's 20 Euros in Germany, new.
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Florian1234
it's just hide and seek
Ah, Martin, this was unknown to me. Thanks for the hint to the international "version". 
nksyoon
Well-known
Ah so "Reporters sans Frontières" isn't the same as the German version, still, I missed the Nachtwey issue - it's Don McCullin this quarter (?).
There are different country chapters of the same international organization and some countries publish their own albums.
http://www.rsf.org/Albums,33282.html
http://www.reporter-ohne-grenzen.de/publikationen/fotobaende.html
RSF Switzerland has an album by Swiss-Afghan photographer Zalmai:
http://www.rsf-ch.ch/node/764
Florian1234
it's just hide and seek
Today's arrival: That "world press photo award" book of this year. Very good format and clean production!
Tom A
RFF Sponsor
Came back from Europe on Wednesday. Behaved well and only bought one book. Robert Frank's "Paris" - a 2008 Steidl production. Early shots of Paris (1949-50). Smallish but well printed. Modern print technology is amazing - but digital press tends to create a bit "digital" looking images with "pixel glare" on the edges. I long for some good rotogravure printing sometimes.
Andrew Sowerby
Well-known
Chris Killip's Here Comes Everybody arrived the other day. I like it. Very narrative.
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