Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2008/06/18
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On Jun 17, 2008, at 2:47 PM, Lottermoser George wrote: > "I never wanted to be famous" by Steve Barbour, a self published > blurb book, arrived in my mail box many weeks ago. The day it > arrived I immediately opened it and went right to the photographs. > By page 17 my eyes were full of tears and blurring the images. I > closed the book. Not opening it again for a few days. I wanted the > right time to truly take it in. When I did I again went directly to > the photographs (not reading the Forward by Steve or the Preface by > Ted Grant). The book feels serious, with its verso pages in black, > punctuated only a with a name or two in a white san serif type face > in the upper left; and the the recto pages holding mostly full > bleed, black and white photographs of children from infants to > teens; occasionally including parents, nurses and or doctors. > > Each extremely intimate and brutally honest photograph confronts you > with a reality which usually only family and medical professionals > experience. In this way one could compare the images to those > brought back from wars and other tragedies. Steve puts you there > because he was there; one hundred percent present; next to the bed; > inches away from a very young suffering person; sometimes laughing; > sometimes sleeping; sometimes not even appearing ill. Yet, you know > they are. You can feel, hear and even smell the hospital within > these pages. You can feel the intense worry of the families; the > waiting for good news or bad; the fear and the hope. Most of all you > can feel the tenacity of these young people and the force of will to > survive. Even as I write these words my eyes begin to water again. > > Obviously Steve feels intense simpatico with these children, > families and medical staff members. He has deep access to their > world as well as broad understanding of their conditions. Many > doctors more than likely feel similarly. Few have the ability, drive > and compassion to turn those feelings into poignant, near perfect > compositions in shades of grey and then arrange them in sequence to > form a book which leaves one speechless. > > Steve asked me to comment on this book at least a dozen times. How > can one comment when one is left speechless? You have to see this > book. More than once. No words can describe its effect on your > emotions. > > I have many books by many photographers on my shelves. I have more > or less stopped buying photography books. I keep looking at them at > the bookstores and when recommended on line. And I generally decide, > "You don't need another book of beautiful photographs; rather, you > need to go out and make beautiful photographs." This book is > different because I cannot make these photographs. You cannot make > these photographs. Only Dr. Steve Barbour can make these photographs > and arrange them in this book. And that, my friends, makes this book > very rare indeed. > > Steve and I had a few email conversations before the book was > published. I felt that more verbal information about the children, > their conditions, their outcomes, etc. may give it a broader > audience appeal for publishers. I still think that may be the case. > However, "I never wanted to be famous" stands, as it is, a perfect, > lovingly created expression from the unique perspective of a very > talented documentary photographer, who also happens to be a > pediatrician specializing in infectious diseases. > > I consider it an honor to know you through this forum Steve. > > For the rest of you - if you haven't procured your copy - don't put > it off another day. This one = must have. so George, you liked it... now I'm the one left speechless, with tears. From our conversation, I knew that my book moved you , that you would find the words to say it so eloquently, so poetically, has touched me... you said things that I felt, but I could not say... I think the children in the book are touched and pleased...some who are gone are honored, the kids who are here have told me they are proud... thank you George, Steve > > > Fond regards, > George > george@imagist.com > www.imagist.com > http://www.imagist.com/blog > Picture A Week - www.imagist.com/paw_07 > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information