Four new photo books,聽ranging聽in scope from the human toll of war聽to the physical impact of wind, explore the concept of vulnerability in fascinating visual ways. They look at beauty, pain, and places that need protecting. And they happen to make great gifts for anyone in your life who enjoys nice-looking things聽(which is everybody, no?).
鈥楾he Grand Canyon: Between River and Rim鈥聽by Pete McBride ($50, Rizzoli)
鈥淢ore people have stood on the Moon than have thru-hiked the canyon,鈥 McBride writes聽in his new book.聽鈥淚 wanted to take a visual inventory to see if we鈥檙e passing it forward unmarred.鈥 Next聽year is Grand Canyon National Park鈥檚 100th birthday. To celebrate that, and to document development pressure from tourism, mining, and air traffic, 国产吃瓜黑料聽contributors McBride and Kevin Fedarko hiked 750 miles through the canyon.聽They came out of it聽with an article, , a highly successful speaking tour, and an upcoming documentary with a planned release in February. It鈥檚 hard to photograph things like noise pollution聽or looming threats, so McBride focused on trying to capture stillness鈥攁nd the lack thereof. A composite photo of Helicopter Alley is juxtaposed with empty caverns. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just a hole in the ground,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he whole project is a microcosm for us as Americans and for wilderness. If you can鈥檛 save the Grand Canyon, what the hell can you save?鈥
鈥楾his is Nowhere鈥 by Jeremy Koreski聽($49, Jeremy Koreski聽Gallery)
The west coast of Canada, and specifically Tofino, the small Vancouver Island surf town where Koreski is from, is hard to reach聽and low on people. So聽yes, it鈥檚 an amazing place: wolves and bears roam the beaches, dolphins swim up the rivers, the storm swell gets huge. Koreski put together 聽of his favorite photos from the last 15 years, including聽surf shots, swooping eagles making eye contact, and dense untouched forests. It鈥檚 a tribute to the landscape he loves the most, one of the least touched coastlines in North America. 鈥淚 want to showcase my home and demonstrate the importance of preserving it for the future,鈥澛爃e says.
鈥楳颈蝉迟谤补濒鈥聽by Rachel Cobb ($50, Damiani)
鈥淭he mistral is a gremlin wreaking havoc on our lives. It is everywhere. It is nowhere to be seen,鈥 writes聽Cobb, a New York-based photographer who has spent time over the past 40 years in Provence, France, where that wind whips through the region. The mistral famously drove Van Gogh crazy, and it鈥檚 shaped both the natural and human-made landscapes鈥攈ouses in the area often don鈥檛 have windows on the windward聽northwest side. For the past 15 years, Cobb has been obsessed with trying to capture the wind and its wake in photographs. She even moved her family to southern France so she could be there any time the wind picked聽up. , which include windswept wedding ceremonies聽and scoured mountaintops, she shows how the mistral impacts聽everything from attitudes to agriculture.
鈥極f Love and War鈥 by Lynsey Addario聽($40, Penguin Press)
Addario, a photojournalist and author of the bestselling memoir ,聽has won a Pulitzer Prize for her work documenting refugees, and for the past two decades she鈥檚 been one of the only American women shooting photos in conflict zones, including Iraq and Afghanistan right after September 11. Her images capture the human side of war聽and how people live when their lives have been torn up聽or they鈥檝e been displaced.聽Her new photo retrospective,聽, is broken up thematically into sections like Life Under the Taliban聽and Women鈥檚 Issues.聽It鈥檚 unblinkingly brutal and beautifully human.