Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

Rolling Stone: The Photographs Review

Rolling Stone: The Photographs
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Have seen this book before love it however the seller has yet to send it and it has been over a month. Says has had the flu but a month SERIOUSLY???? Waiting anxiously for it to get here

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A collection of photographs from Rolling Stone magazine features familiar shots of such celebs as Jagger, Nicholson, Madonna, Brando, Bowie, Mailer, Reagan, Belushi, Eastwood. Reprint.

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Rich and Poor: Photographs by Jim Goldberg Review

Rich and Poor: Photographs by Jim Goldberg
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i loved this book. i was lucky to be a student of his just when he finished grad school and the book was published. i treasured it and stupidly lent it to someone who now holds this treasure.
it's beautiful and touching and the "rich" stories are the real shockers.
even if you track this down through the library it's worth reading

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Angel Island (Images of America: California) Review

Angel Island (Images of America: California)
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This book is about Angel Island in San Francisco Bay. It is a collection of vintage photos and a rich text written by former Mayor Branwell Fanning and journalist William Wong, the native son whose ancestors had successfully passed the Angel Island Immigration Station.
The introduction gave a comprehensive historical overview from the glacier age to the recent years with eight chapters of photos supplemented by a text page orientation. Chapter 1 starts with the Early Years as a den of outlaws and a favorite arena for dueling. Of interest was a picture of Don Antonio Maria Osio who was the Mexican owner 1839-1860.
Chapter 2 focused on the Military History. It served in Civil War, Indian Wars, Spanish-American Wars, the Philippine Insurrection as well as WW I & II. Included are photos of artilleries, bunkers, tents, housing, soldiers, Italian POWs, German civilian seamen. This chapter ends with a couple pictures of USS Delta Queen, which Fanning served.
The following chapter is short with only 14 pictures in Quarantine Station. It started work in 1891 on SS China in detecting disease. Passengers mostly Chinese had to go through strip, scrub and disinfections with baggage being fumigated before heading to shelters - more demanding procedures than millennium security. Infectious diseases passengers either received quarantine medical care or deportation. The photos on p.49 showed three huge chemical steams disinfection steel tubes. A picture on p.51 showed Chinese on board US Public Health Service steamer for quarantine and another on p.52 waiting to be cleaned and disinfected.
Bill wrote Chapter 4 with 40 pages of archive photographs on the Immigration Station. The facing page 56 featured a drawing from PUCK Magazine, showing an American woman with a 5-point star on her hair and a steam engine train falling off her lap, had a pair of scissors engraved 19th Century Progress at a Chinese Mandarin pigtail in words "worn out tradition". This chapter showed the significance as the immigration processing facility for Japanese, Indians, Russians, Africans and Europeans in addition to Chinese. Between 1910 - 1940, there estimated 175,000 Chinese processed and Chinese food was served. The Chinese kitchen team helped in connecting inside with outsider for coaching paper for interrogations on "Paper Son", in response to the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act. The rare picture on p.68 showed half a banana as the crib sheet carrier. The photo p.63 was a beautifully carved poem in Chinese on barrack wall by a detainee for posterity understanding his saga. Surprisingly, there were many pictures with women and children from different continents. There were two Chinese women pictures on p.72, top one with three women and bottom fourteen with three children. It was a rare sight as incoming Chinese women were suspicious of prostitutes. The picture on p.67 revealed Chinese women living quarter: three sets of three levels bunks, each level with four beds, an occupancy of 36. The Chinese men one on p.88 showed 10 rows each with five double bunks, a total of 100. It was a sharp contrast to San Francisco City 500-footage demand on Chinatown residents. Two pictures on p.79 showed men and boys were bare chested for medical check-up. The treatable disease found on Chinese would be ground for further detention or deportation. Tye Leung on p.84 was the first Chinese woman hired in the service and she married a white immigration inspector. This interracial marriage prompted their resignation due to racial pressure. This chapter ends with National Historic Landmark designation with a picture of Park Ranger Alexander Weiss, who called attention to Chinese poems and the two Chow, Paul and Christopher among others pushed hard in preservation and designation.
Chapter 5 was short with only three pages. It was interesting that this Pacific Island provided maritime navigation signals by sight and sound in three lighthouses. The mighty bell on p.99 reminded its bygone glory.
The following was a chapter on Missile Base. Cold War once again turned it into an outpost with full military installation. The collection illustrated the sophisticated defense system against air attacks.
Chapter 7 showed the Transition with pictures of Italian POWs, empty buildings and the ghost town. The last chapter was the State Park. It was a favorable spot for holiday-makers
This book gives a comprehensive history on the different combination segments of Angel Island. It is like Ellis Island to process immigrants but lack of the compassion of the Statue of Liberty poem:
Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretch refuse of your teaming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door
This Island was the fearful guarding Angel at Golden Gate to keep immigrants, especially Chinese from entering the Gold Mountain. Surviving the lengthy and tedious quarantine, physical exam and interrogations meant a new life in the new world. Angle Island was the enforcer of 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act which politicians framed and blamed Chinese as the main source of all problems from economic, social to moral. This book, especially Chapter 4 highlights the historical importance in US immigration policy. With this unusual landmark, it helps in understanding the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act, an immigration policy based on race and addressing the impact of the 2007 Immigration Reform which sacrifices family preference in a new visa point system - education, employment and English proficiency, with a racial agenda. Even though this book does not include a reading lists about 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act, Paper Son, Chinese poem, it will be a good companion and orientation for visitors when the Island reopens in early 2008 after restoration. This book will lead readers to explore and learn more about Asian immigration in the West Coast.

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Angel Island, in the Town of Tiburon, is a mile-square jewel set in San Francisco Bay that attracts thousands of visitors each year. Few of those who hike, bike, camp, or enjoy the spectacular vistas in this California State Park realize its diverse history. From the Spanish ships that anchored at Ayala Cove in 1775 to the 1960s cold war era missile silos, Angel Island has endured to become one of the most popular parks in the state. Although many building were demolished, there are still countless reminders of the island's multifaceted evolution, including a quarantine station, army base, and immigration station.

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Jim Goldberg, Raised by Wolves Review

Jim Goldberg, Raised by Wolves
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Goldberg documented street kids of San Francisco and Hollywood over the course of ten years. His work reflects the effort and emotion of that period. Unlike previous attempts to document homeless youth, Goldberg never sensationalized or objectified the kids he worked with. The text maintains individual voices, never judging, never interpreting, simply transmitting narratives that mainstream society would otherwise never hear. His photography radiates relationships of trust: he allows kids to illustrate their issues and amplify their voices, sharing their stories, artwork, and writings, without ever speaking for them. Such justice is rarely provided to an oppressed population. "Raised by Wolves" incites the reader's tears, anguish, and outrage - but also joy, that someone was able to successfully provide a platform for such truths to be heard. Goldberg more than did his part in attempting to educate America. The greater issue is, will we listen?

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The White Rabbit and Other Delights: East Totem West : A Hippie Company, 1967-1969 Review

The White Rabbit and Other Delights: East Totem West : A Hippie Company, 1967-1969
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I'm surprised there is no picture previews of this book, as it is really beautiful. Every page is thick, quality paper, and is in full color. I especially enjoyed the fact that I was able to see many great works of rare poster art by artists whose works are sometimes hard to locate. Some of my favorites of which are Nick Nickolds, Barbara Kahn, and Satty. A beautiful, beautiful book, that no coffee table should be without! :-)

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Julia Margaret Cameron's Women Review

Julia Margaret Cameron's Women
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Most photographs here were made in ca. 1870. Looking through the book, I imagine that at that time photography was still so new, so unprecedented, that no one yet had idea of what portrait photography was to become. An art? Or a detailed recording of what the eye perceives? In this ambiguity, Julia Margaret Cameron shows herself in this volume to be great artist, a portrait photographer second to none. In the faces of her women, I can see stories and history as recorded nowhere else.
Most notable is the series of images of Julia Jackson. (She also appears on the front and back covers.) One can see her life evolve over the time span of the photos. These images become even more interesting upon learning she was mother of Vanessa Bell and Virginia Woolf. So here at last is the real Mrs. Ramsey.

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Artificial Imagination (Special Edition): A Humorous Photostory Of A Journey Through Washington, California And Tennessee Review

Artificial Imagination (Special Edition): A Humorous Photostory Of A Journey Through Washington, California And Tennessee
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great book! love it!

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This expanded Second Edition of the book was published on May 27, 2011 and has 12 new chapters.

This humorous photo-book follows one man's journey through United States as he ventures from Silicon Valley to Seattle, San Francisco to San Diego in a quest for his dream job and his search for a place he could call home.

The book starts in 1987, at University of California campus in Davis, where it all began, where Artificial Imagination was conceived.We then fast forward by 15 years to 2002. Our main character, a Executive in the Software industry and working in Silicon Valley. Soon, he is heading to Seattle to work for Amazon.com at a lower level management position.

We read one lively story after another about the life in the Northwest and learn about his lovely wife and two daughters.

Our adventurer then heads to Nashville to work for a software company, and finally returns to California, when he gets caught in the infamous wild fires of 2007. Kudos to the author to be able to find humor in the middle of the Inferno!

A Review by John Lehman,the author of Everything is changingA Review by John Lehman,the author of Everything is changing

I was half way through this book when I realized it is almost poetry in the form of prose. I am not just referring to the short paragraphs, but the imaginative leaps, stunning imagery and most importantly, words which hook us in, make us think this is our story . . . . We see them on the page but live them in the theater of our imagination.

This book reminds us that we share the mysteries of the human mind and soul, no matter what our occupation, no matter where we were born. "Why I am here may appear to be a simple question, but . . . is there a deeper purpose of being where we are?" We know that the question applies not only to the location where we spend our lives, but also to overall existence, and our place in the time continuum.

Just as the author who traveled from New Delhi to Silicon Valley felt he has traveled forty years into the future, so do I, sitting in the agricultural landscape of Wisconsin felt that I have had a glimpse into the vitality of the Hi-Tech worlds of California and Seattle.

I feel I am in the hands of a good guide. Here is what it means to do research in Computers: "Rip apart an electronic system and you see nothing moving, nothing vibrating, it's almost a make-believe world, a child's fantasy, a writer's imagination."

and what it means to yearn for acceptance:"I looked at Seattle's glistening skyline on one side and its beautiful waterfront on the other and asked it the same questions I had asked San Francisco 16 years ago: will it accept me? Or will its people treat me as someone different, not one of the? And will I accept it, call it my home? Right then, she appeared from no where, as if the city had sent her to answer my questions . . ."

I loved the section addressing Seattle's slacker sun, that comes late to work, like at 9 AM and goes back home at 4, the observation that for males, until the age eight, we want every young woman to be our mother, then for the next thirty years our friend and when we have daughters, we feel like bringing every young woman a glass of warm milk and cookies.

His first day in Nashville, the author looks out of his window and sees snow. The conclusion he draws about the snow flakes very fittingly describes his life and the message we can take with us from this hip, funny, poignant, beautiful book: "the snowflakes descend slowly, floating in the air, allowing the current to carry them with it, letting it change their paths. They have chosen not to confront their destiny, choosing instead to enjoy every second of their short lives, their journey to the ground."

Welcome home, Kalpanik!

John Lehman, author of Everything is Changing


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The Spanish Missions of San Antonio Review

The Spanish Missions of San Antonio
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This guidebook gives a great, detailed history of the missions of San Antonio as well as providing large historical photographs. The layout is excellent; however, the size of the guidebook is not practical for carrying on a tour of the missions, but does serve well as a coffee table book and as a valuable source of information.

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This is a concisely written, lavishly illustrated account of the founding, growth, decline and restoration of San Antonio's five Spanish colonial missions, a national treasure. Built by Franciscan friars and their Native American charges on the far frontier of New Spain, they stand today as the largest cluster of Spanish missions in the United States. One is preserved as the Alamo. The others form San Antonio Missions National Historical Park.

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Italians of the Bay Area: The Photographs of Gino Sbrana (CA) (Images of America) Review

Italians of the Bay Area:  The Photographs of Gino Sbrana  (CA)   (Images of America)
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This book is an amazing collection of the photography of Gino Sbrana, an Italian immigrant who lived in various locations around the Bay Area from 1894 to 1947. Until now his work has been a lost and forgotten treasure of Italian immigrant culture in the Bay Area.
The story of Gino Sbrana, which has been beautifully displayed by author Carlos Bowden, Jr., inspires us to create our own masterpieces. Sbrana's photographs are studies in how to compose a portrait using natural lighting, props, backgrounds, and outdoor locations to create an atmosphere that tells the story of the chosen subject. Sbrana demonstrates that the key element for a masterpiece is simplicity and a true affection for one's subject matter. Gino's subjects seem to glow with a divine sense of pride and accomplishment.
This book is much more than a collection of beautiful photographs--it's a book about appreciation--for Italian immigrant heritage, for the photographic vision of Gino Sbrana and for the art of storytelling.


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These images are part of the life work of Italian immigrant Gino Sbrana, who started his American life in San Francisco as a vegetable peddler. By 1911, he had launched a large photographic studio, Pisa Foto, at Columbus and Broadway in San Francisco. Later Gino founded a studio in Oakland and, in 1919, settled in San Jose. Not content to confine his artistry to the formally posed studio portrait, he traveled over the Bay Area countryside with his large wooden field camera, using soft light on the shady side of barns or under large oaks to capture his fellow countrymen. Gino posed them in the coastal mist with machetes poised to harvest cauliflower, perched atop their brand new motorcycles, assembled by trucks loaded with produce from the fields, sleeves rolled up and holding their vino.

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San Carlos (CA) (Images of America) Review

San Carlos (CA) (Images of America)
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I grew up in San Carlos, CA in the late 1940s thru the mid 1950s. This book is like a ViewMaster of my personal memories. I spent many Saturday afternoons at the theater on the cover watching those (for me at the time) amazing serial Westerns. Lots of great photos and good writing. Highly recommended.

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The Photographer's Guide to Yosemite Review

The Photographer's Guide to Yosemite
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We visited Yosemite in July and took this book along. It provided tons of useful information about where and when to get great shots, and directions to each spot. It was very useful, and at the price is also a real bargain.
While there, I did a Photo Walking Tour with a pro photographer who works in Yosemite, arranged through the Ansel Adams Gallery. To my surprise, during our hike she pulled a well-worn copy of *this* book out of her backpack and cited it as a good reference for shooting photos in Yosemite -- so that would be another helpful endorsement for it.

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This comprehensive handbook is designed for all photographers , from beginners to experts.Frye's tips and directions are illustrated with full-color reproductions of his own work. An indispensable and handy resource for anyone who wants to take better pictures in Yosemite and elsewhere.

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The Streetcars of San Francisco Review

The Streetcars of San Francisco
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This was actually a very entertaining book and is filled with wonderful photographs of san Fran's beautiful streetcar fleet. I don't think people have a clue how valuable a part these historic relics played in American history in major cities all over the country. I found it very interesting that the authors explained the story of how streetcars met their end in American history. But this book does San Frans fleet justice in showing just how beautiful these streetcars are. I wish more cities would re-introduce streetcars into their transportation systems. Not only are they efficient, but they are extremely practical. I guess if you want to appreciate them, you just have to visit San Fran.

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A Photo Tour of San Francisco and Northern California Review

A Photo Tour of San Francisco and Northern California
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I bought it as a present for my friends who never visited SF. It gave them nice overview where I live.

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Harlem of the West - The San Francisco Fillmore Jazz Era Review

Harlem of the West - The San Francisco Fillmore Jazz Era
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I was getting my car worked on, and took a long stroll from Geary and Masonic all the way to Booksmith on Haight St. I stumbled on this book and was absolutely floored by the amazing photographs, the detailed interviews, and the comprehensive history of the long-lost Fillmore District in full flush. My mother worked in two of the clubs back in the 1940's: the California Theatre Club, which was run by family members, and the New Orleans Swing Room. My mother is 87 now and her eyesight is failing, so I had to read much of the book to her. She remembers all of it. People she went to high school, old friends and workmates. She saw Frank Sinatra, Duke Ellington, Earl Grant, many of the greats before they got their big breaks. My father's submarine came in from the Pacific here, and he immediately started picking out names and faces. It was like old home week for them. The well-known and unknown musicians that made the Fillmore what it was. The book covers how much of this history was literally snatched from the dumpster, so intent were the city fathers on destroying this neighborhood. I remember the Fillmore from about 1968, before the now infamous "Redevelopment" made the Fillmore look like Dresden, gutting a vibrant yet neglected multiracial community. Period photographs fill the book, and contemporary interviews with those who were there flesh out the images - it seems that no one was left out. This is one of the best books I've ever seen about San Francisco, particularly the long neglected history of African-American San Francisco and a city that is, as we speak, vanishing and being replaced with a facade of what people think San Francisco should be like.

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Fog City: Impressions of the San Francisco Bay Area in Fog Review

Fog City: Impressions of the San Francisco Bay Area in Fog
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Fans of either Rowell's gorgeous photos or the San Francisco Bay Area will welcome Galene Rowell's Fog City: a set of impressions of the San Francisco region in fog. Poetic sayings accompany beautiful full-page color photos displaying the many nuances of San Francisco weather in full glory. A gorgeous visual guide and a keeper for any with a special affection for San Francisco, Fog City is enthusiastically recommended.

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And When I Dream: Faces in San Francisco Review

And When I Dream: Faces in San Francisco
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This book is a replacement for one that was lost. I was pleased to see that it was still available.

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The Chowhound's Guide to the San Francisco Bay Area Review

The Chowhound's Guide to the San Francisco Bay Area
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Whether you are a tourist who wants to eat like the locals or a Bay Area native, this book has the most compact yet comprehensive list of ideas for delicious dining in a unique, humorous and easy-to-read format.
As a long time Bay Area resident, I found myself using it immediately

Things I love about the book
-It's lightweight, so I can carry it my purse
-There are tips about places I frequent that I didn't know about
-Great cross indexing. It's very easy to use.
-It doesn't have the same tired general knowledge tips
-Really amazing that not only is SF and immediate areas covered, but that the entire Bay Area is nicely represented.
It also captures the essence of Chowhound of having fun while finding something wonderful to eat.
I've traveled quite a bit and bought many guide books. This is one of the best and most useful books I own.

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