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a new way of looking and seeingReview Date: 2007-08-16
Honoring Memories of an Important Pioneering Photographic ArtistReview Date: 2006-03-20
Each of the 100 tritone and 5 duotone photographs in this elegant volume is accompanied by an insightful comment by the superb writer John Szarkowski who also happens to be the former director of the Department of Photography at the MOMA in New York. Rarely have photographic images been so enhanced by the written word: Szarkowski is in complete synchrony with the vision of Atget. Here are images of simple people of early 20th century Paris, images of streets, still lifes, woods, streams, rivers great and small, each captured with immediacy and yet with timelessness.
For those looking for an affordable introduction of Atget's work for the library, this is certainly the volume of choice. Highly recommended. Grady Harp, March 06
*The* Atget book to getReview Date: 2002-05-06
"Being Eugene Atget"Review Date: 2001-12-13
Atget showed us the axioms of photography and axioms cannot be explained by analysis. The test of an Atget, Bach, or Cezanne, is that it is impossible to find the source of their revelation and impossible not to find their influence in future artists.
"Good pictures are not explained by words...With exceptional good luck criticism might with words construct meanings that are different from but consonant with the meanings of pictures. Such constructs of words might possibly guide us toward the neighborhoods where pictorial meanings live.", he says in this book. (Please, if you are an art historian or critic, take this pledge!)
Thus Szarkowski tours the photographs he has selected and writes a thought or two somehow connected to each one - sometimes a revelation, often a question. Each page of writing stands alone and will engage the reader in a conversation with the author and the photographer. Many times Szarkowski puts us somewhere behind the camera a hundred years ago, or on a bridge in Paris 600 years ago. He really brings Atget to life by putting us in his time and place.
There are plenty of revealing facts stashed throughout the writing. Szarkowski talks of the influence of Atget on Weston, Walker Evans, Winogrand, and others and leaves us to recognize the Atget in Cartier-Bresson, Dorothea Lange, and ourselves. He mentions just the relevant technical and biographical details.
He shows examples of how Atget handled Time,the essence of photography. As he wrote in "Photography Until Now" about Atget, "Perhaps from the practice of looking attentively and repeatedly at the same thing from different vantage points and in different lights he came to see that ...one tree, or one reflecting pool, was never twice the same, and would therefore last as a subject as long as one's concentrated attention. With this realization he became, surely not intentionally, a modern artist."
The reflecting pools and trees are in this book along with the more familiar Parisian architecture. Different views of the same subjects are also in other books such as Berenice Abbott's "The World Of Atget". Szarkowski thus, enriches the literature on Atget, giving meaning to many of the published mindless catalogs of his photographs.
Szarkowski shows another reason Atget is a modern artist. His work is meticulously constructed in the same cultural elements as the works of his more famous contemporary French painters and sculptures. There are no accidents and no mistakes in his work. The result is a richness that reveals something new every time we look at it.
The same is true of this book by Szarkowsi. I've read it three times. It is a masterpiece, "...seductively and deceptively simple, wholly poised, reticent, dense with experience, mysterious and true." To use the words Szarkowski wrote of Atget in Looking At Photographs.
love as lightReview Date: 2001-12-31
This edition is set up by the previous 4 volume study, The Work of Atget, by Maria Morris Hambourg and John Szarkowski, Museum of Modern Art, 1985. But this new book comes from a persistent, deep seam miner, one who knows that what it is about these photographs is so fertile, they can be studied throughout one's life, and still give more.
How rich is the mind that can bring another mind to light? Would it be bearable if everything in life could be keyed into focus, for us too busy and bothered to pay attention, by a poet as revelatory as Szarkowski? When considering entree des jardins, 1921-22, he says, "except occasionally, as (for example) during revolutions, the French have managed very well to sublimate the periodic human tendency to behave violently toward one's fellow human men, and have directed these impulses toward their trees", you cannot help but love the gardener who built the gate here, the photographer for seeing it, and Szarkowski, for bringing it to our attention in this way. He tells you what is on the menu, who lived in the house, how the hotel got its name, who built it, what may have motivated them to sculpt a Dionysus over a doorway, what member of the court of Louis the XIV was cast to live where, what other photographer may have attempted to photograph the same scene, and sometimes, what led Atget there.
The book is a beautiful masterpiece, and an accomplishment worthy of a life spent looking deeply. If you love (really looking at) photographs, you should consider your shelves incomplete without it.
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Unique, to be sureReview Date: 2008-05-12
The writing is stilted at times (di Donato's attempt to make the English sound Italian), and he allows his characters to go on angst-ridden rants for far too long. But there are numerous gems in this piece. I wholeheartedly recommend it -- to Italian-Americans to learn a little more about their heritage and to all others to catch a glimpse of early Italian immigrant life in America.
VERY GOOD BOOKReview Date: 2006-09-18
One of my favorites...Review Date: 2006-06-24
PowerfulReview Date: 2006-05-14
A Classic that relates to All ImmigrantsReview Date: 2006-03-23
One note -- wait to read Fred Gardaphe's introduction until after you read the novel as he gives away a lot of the story.
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The Elusive DoorReview Date: 2007-06-06
Unique and diffrentReview Date: 2007-05-14
review of shipmentReview Date: 2006-06-30
the doormanReview Date: 2005-08-06
this is book thet i will read agan.agan, agen. Just great. Please, read this book.
fantasticReview Date: 2003-12-03

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A Book So Nice They Named It TwiceReview Date: 2004-10-08
This is a terrific book for anyone who wants to learn how great projects are visualized, actualized, and pressed through extremely challenging environmental circumstances. It's a source of inspiration for the dreamers and the practical alike.
If you want to read about architecture and engineering, you get only a small dose here. It's more about the capitalization, visioning and building. But that story is magnetic and wonderful.
Only thing they left out: that it was to this (then half-empty) building that Annhaeuser-Busch delivered the "first" case of legal beer to Al Smith at the end of Prohibition. Smith, the "wet" and the eternal optimist, exemplifies what this building was conceived to be: a vibrant and living testimony to the human spirit.
So, it stands to reason that it survives now as New York's essential symbol.
American emblemReview Date: 2004-07-02
John Tauranac describes all this and more in his exhaustive book, THE EMPIRE STATE BUILDING: THE MAKING OF A LANDMARK. Written in an engaging style, Tauranac's book is as elegant and interesting as the subject itself, while his wit is as colorful as the characters surrounding the Empire State Building's creation. The book covers the idea for the building, Raskob's and Smith's supervision, the monumental task of the construction workers, and, most importantly, the survival of the building to become THE emblem of America's cultural and economic reach while become THE identifying symbol of New York City. The generous amount of photographs add to the understanding and enjoyment of the book. Highly recommended.
Great Building, Great StoryReview Date: 2001-09-25
The History of the ESBReview Date: 2004-08-11
Wonderful! Fun To Read! Educational!Review Date: 2001-07-08

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Superb monographReview Date: 2008-05-04
There is art, street imagery, nostaglia, a gusher of photos of sheer beauty from a glance that Friedlanders eye is drawn to.
Beginners, collectors or professionals will find this tomb a timeless collection that cannot be ignored.
Look into photographers William Eggleston, Helen Levitt, Saul Leiter, Robert Adams and Garry Winogrand just to mention a few for more visual classics.
Saul Leiter's new book is quite unique relative to style, really a beauty.
THIS IS A STUNNING BOOKReview Date: 2007-07-01
top printing, comprehensive big bad boyReview Date: 2006-04-25
a major figureReview Date: 2006-07-20
Framing the world through the viewfinderReview Date: 2006-04-20

Nice BookReview Date: 2008-05-15
Incredible artworkReview Date: 2008-01-27
Long Wait for an Excellent BookReview Date: 2007-05-12
A beautiful exhibitionReview Date: 2007-04-08
Glitter and DoomReview Date: 2007-03-22
Highlight: Otto Dix is a wild artist, forever a favorite now. Also a DaDa artist.
I am a frequent art museum visitor. Therefore, in my opinion, this catalogue did the show great justice which is not aways the case.

Go in and out the windowReview Date: 2005-09-19
Good selection, unusual illustrationsReview Date: 2002-07-10
Each song has a brief introduction describing its origins or other important facts, and each image also has a description, often including historical tidbits.
The bountiful images (at least one per page, often more) make it a good book for young children to look at while singing or playing at the piano.
Go in and Out the WindowReview Date: 2002-07-03
Every night we take that book to bed and we sing and sing until we fall asleep. This is of course after reading several other board books first. I reccommend this book as a keepsake for life!
Go In And Out The Window is a breeze!Review Date: 2000-05-22
A real classic.Review Date: 1999-08-01

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Why Bash Walter O'Malley?Review Date: 2007-08-07
But by 1957, Ebbets Field was no longer a suitable ballpark for a major league team. The park and its neighborhood were deteriorating, there was no public transportation, and attendance had been steadily falling even in their pennant-winning years (the previous review notes that the powerhouse Dodgers were drawing around 10,000 fans per home game). Renovation was not an option because there would be insufficient additional revenue projected to cover the cost. The Dodgers simply could not stay there. But Walter O'Malley did not want to leave Brooklyn.
In reality, he wanted to stay in Brooklyn and build a brand new ballpark at the corner of Atlantic and Flatbush, near public transportation. Walter O'Malley was not the villain of the piece; rather, it was Robert Moses, then the most powerful man in New York City, who refused to let him do so, insisting that he build instead in Flushing Meadows (where Shea Stadium stands today). They would no longer have been in Brooklyn, and O'Malley naturally refused. He left reluctantly, narrowly choosing Los Angeles over Minneapolis. In doing so, he brough Major League Baseball west of the Mississippi, and forever changed the game. He deserves to be in the Hall of Fame (plenty of even tougher businessmen are), but East Coast writers like Roger Kahn and misinformed fans like the one who posted that he "hates O'Malley" to this day have blocked his entry. Shame on them.
Good book on a far-overdone subjectReview Date: 2007-11-23
Few, if any, owners in the major leagues then or now would have remained in a rotting ballpark with no parking in one of the worst neighborhoods in a dying borough. The Dodgers' attendance in 1955, their World Series title year, was just over 1 million, almost a 50 percent drop in only eight years, and if any other franchise had suffered a similar attendance drop, it would have taken wing also. The Dodgers also had to deal with the Milwaukee Braves phenomenon, which is mentioned hardly at all as a factor in the Dodgers' departure, even though it played a very important role.
McGee, and other self-styled Brooklyn historians, also glosses over the fact that Ebbets Field was a very dangerous place in its final years, with many beatings, assaults and robberies - many of them racially motivated, the Jackie Robinson experience notwithstanding - inside and near the ballpark.
Brooklynites of that era claim that the Dodgers leaving killed Brooklyn ... it's my belief that Brooklyn would have killed the Dodgers if they'd stayed at Ebbets Field much longer.
At any rate, this is a well-written book, but I'd like to see someone write a Brooklyn Dodgers/Ebbets Field book that isn't an exercise in Pollyannish literature. If you're sick of hearing about Brooklyn as the fulcrum of society as we know it, don't bother with this book.
Bring back the Dodgers to Ebbets FieldReview Date: 2006-10-22
"There was a ballpark . . ."---Frank SinatraReview Date: 2008-05-12
Of particular joy is the fact that McGee refuses to fall for the revisionist dreck presently being touted by the O'Malleys and their supporters, that "The Big Oom" had no choice but to hijack the Dodgers from Brooklyn in 1958. He relegates their arguments quite properly to the floor of the horse stall where they (and Walter) belong.
If McGee's symbologizing of Ebbets Field sounds awfully highfalutin', it isn't. McGee loves the IDEA of Ebbets Field, and in communicating that love, recreates the ballpark in words, an almost impossible task, considering that, like much of his reading audience, he never experienced the reality. That he could succeed at all is a measure of how fine this book is. THE GREATEST BALLPARK EVER comes VERY HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.
---Order me dogs and beer. Here comes the Duke of Flatbush to the plate---
Brooklyn As It Once Was-The Greatest Place to Grow UpReview Date: 2006-12-03

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a delightful book of history and lore of New York areaReview Date: 2004-07-26
She has an easy writing style and does a good job of portraying events, researching this history and the lore of places believed to be haunted. Every time I pass some structure I always wanted to know what happened there. If someone says a place is haunted, it drives me to want the facts behind the tales. Revai does this. She gives you the roots of the tale, but then very thoroughly checks with the various owners to see the experiences - or not - of the different owners. She also tells
you when a site is "by invitation only" so you know beforehand if you can actually visit the place.
The book is a fascinating, spine-tingling collection of about 30 tales covering northern New York - Jefferson County, St. Lawrence County, Franklin County and Clinton County. So those of you planning a leisurely tour of the area to see the fall colors might wish to have this little guide to give your trip even more excitement. For writers, there is a wealth of tales to spur your imagination, so I highly recommend this wonderful book.
P.S. It might interest you to know Cheri Revai is the sister of bestselling Sci-Fi Romance writer C. J. Barry!
Haunted Northern New York: True, Chilling Tales of Ghosts inReview Date: 2004-05-28
Some Scary Stuff!Review Date: 2003-08-29
A Must HaveReview Date: 2002-10-24
Haunted Northern New YorkReview Date: 2003-02-06

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DarlingReview Date: 2008-03-26
A delightful bookReview Date: 2007-01-18
I fell in love with Henley!!Review Date: 2006-09-19
Great art workReview Date: 2006-03-16
Amazing book for children of all agesReview Date: 2005-11-01
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