While checking my web stats I noticed several visitors coming by way of Stan Bantos’s blog Reciprocity Failure. Stan, who is a talented photographer and writer about photography, recently compiled a list of his “top 30 photo books.” I am honored to see that he has included my book The Lost Border as one of them.
Here’s the list from Reciprocity Failure with Stan Bantos’s comments:
1) In The American West — Richard Avedon; one of portraiture’s giants at his peak.
2) Ambiguous Ambassador- Tseng Kwong Chi; from humorous to majestic, all great photographs that happen to be self portraits.
3) Uncommon Places- Stephen Shore; the common made uncommon in color.
4) Madness- Claudio Edinger; beautiful images straight from hell.
5) Glory- Robert D’allessandro; the epitome of early seventies, wide angle, Tri-X documentary.
6) The Killing Fields; “art” by genocide…
7) The Inner City- Joseph Mills; street photography in dream time.
8) American Prospects- Joel Sternfeld; Americana redefined.
9) The Silence — Gilles Peress; genocide and poetry in Africa.
10) Farewell To Bosnia– Gilles Peress; genocide and poetry in Europe.
11) The Lost Border- Brian Rose; lyrical ghost imagery of bygone era.
12) Coney Island- Bruce Gilden; mid seventies NY at its grainy, idiosyncratic best.
13) Seydou Keita- Scalo (publ); the king of “outsider” portraiture, whether in his village in Africa or on opening night at the Gagosian in NYC on 10/23/97.
14) Cocaine True, Cocaine Blue- Eugene Richards; beauty in the depths of the human condition.
15) Inferno – James Nachtwey; high intensity, world wide drama crammed into 1 x 1 1/2.
16) Rich & Poor- Jim Goldberg; an intimate look into rich v poor. Guess who comes out looking worse…
17) Diane Arbus- Aperture (publ); the queen of portraiture.
18) William Eggleston’s Guide- The Revolutionary Handbook.
19) The Last Resort- Martin Parr; stories within stories, live and in color.
20) Troubled Land- Paul Graham; tension and forboding in the land of beauty.
21) A Green And Pleasant Land- John Davies; landscapes past, present and forever.
22) Central Park — Bruce Davidson; wonder and discovery in the manmade microcosm.
23) Sticks And Stones- Lee Friedlander: the swan song of swan songs.
24) Along the Ohio- Andrew Borowiec; middle America made familiar and magical.
25) The Black Triangle- Joseph Koudelka; a land laid waste in all its epic grandeur.
26) The Oxford Project- Peter Feldstein; the most simple of projects, the most brilliant of presentations.
27) Found in Brooklyn- Thomas Roma; neighborhood wonderland.
28) The Innocents- Taryn Simon; American tragedy as real as it gets.
29) At Dusk and By The Ground- by Boris Mihailov; two hard cover volumes of the most depressing panoramics imaginable sold in one package, haphazardly printed and toned into… true works of art.
30) The Americans — Robert Frank; The New Testament.