Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Insomniac City

Hayes, Bill. Insomniac City. New York: Bloomsbury, 2017. Print


First Sentences:

I moved to New York eight years ago, and felt at once at home. 
 
In the haggard buildings and bloodshot skies, in trains that never stopped running like my racing mind at night, I recognized my insomniac self. If New York were a patient, it would be diagnosed with agrypnia excita, a rare genetic condition characterized by insomnia, nervous energy constant twitching, and dream enactment -- an apt description of a city that never sleeps, a place where one comes to reinvent himself.


Description:

From these very first words, I loved Bill Hayes's Insomniac City: New York, Oliver, and Me  Who could not fall in love with such captivating language to describe a unique environment? Clearly, this book promised to be full of wry, thoughtful and unique observations, so I was all in.
 
Author Hayes moved to New York from San Francisco after the sudden death of his long-time partner, Steve. As an insomniac, Hayes began to wander his new city in the late and early morning hours, both observing and conversing with people who were similarly sleep-challenged.
In the summertime, late into the night, some leave behind their sweat-dampened sheets to read in the coolness of a park under streetlights. Not Kindles, mind you, or iPhones. But books,. Newspapers, Novels. Poetry. Completely absorbed as if in their own worlds. And indeed they are.

Hayes also brought along his camera, his "travel companion," during day and night city walks. He shot photos of people for his own private enjoyment. Unwilling to intrude on some intimate scenes, Hayes shot body parts that reflected the person's essence.

Couples captivated me -- on the Tube, on park benches, arm in arm on the street. Couples so in love you could see it in their faces....Their smiles were heartbreaking. I took pictures of their hands, laced together as if in prayer, or their feet -- the erotic dance that is a prelude to a kiss.

Hayes records these episodic meetings, observations, and photos in his diary, entries which he compiles into Insomniac City. And oh, the joy, hope, and humanity each piece presents to us lucky readers fortunate enough to share his everyday sights, elegant writing, and imagery. 

Sometimes I'd sit in the kitchen in the dark and gaze out at the Empire State and Chrysler buildings. Such a beautiful pair, so impeccably dressed, he in his boxy suits, every night a different hue, and she, an arm's length away, in her filigreed skirt the color of the moon. I regarded them as an old married couple, calmly unblinkingly keeping watch over one of their newest sons. And I returned the favor; I would be there the moment the Empire State turned off its lights for the night as if to get a little shut-eye before sunrise.

But there is yet another part of this wonderful book besides late night observations and photographs. Hayes meets Dr. Oliver Sacks, the neurologist and best-selling author. The two men connect and become romantic partners, a first for Sacks in decades. Their loving relationship is also reflected on in Hayes' diary as he records bits of their conversations, random thoughts from Sacks, and a peak at the new life they spend together.

...last night the clock chimed,..O[liver] and I counted the chimes carefully. A big smile broke out on his face. "Oh! That's very eccentric! Earlier, it did ten chimes at four o'clock, and now, seven at nine."

We laughed how this is like having an aging parent in the house, one who's a little "dotty," gets a little lost, misremembers, from time to time ... 

I could keep on giving examples of Hayes' narrations, but I have to stop and leave so many more for you to experience. Suffice to say, I fell in love with both these men, New York City, and the beauty of descriptive writing that will stay with me for a long time. Highest recommendation.

I have come to believe that kindness is repaid in unexpected ways and that if you are lonely or bone-tired or blue, you need only come down from your perch and step outside. New York -- which is to say, New Yorkers -- will take care of you.

____________________

If this book interests you, be sure to check out:

Highly unusual cases recorded and commented on by Sacks, detailing his experiences in a New York neurology clinic depict some of his patient' symptoms and treatment, including: a man with no recollection of any events in the last sixty years; a man who cannot recognize faces (including his own); an autistic, but brilliantly gifted artist; a woman who has Irish songs from her childhood constantly running through her head; and of course, the title character who grabbed his wife's head and tried to put it on his own head. Incredible, readable, and wonderfully entertaining as you try to imagine the reality of these patients.

 

Thursday, March 7, 2019

Arctic Solitaire


Souders, Paul. Arctic Solitaire: A Boat, A Bay, and the Quest for the Perfect Bear. Seattle, WA: Mountaineers Books 2018. Print



First Sentences:
All the easy pictures have been taken.
But I'm here to tell you there are still some stupid and crazy ones left out there....I was heading north with at least one of them in mind; I was looking for the polar bear of my dreams...living unafraid and standing unchallenged at the very top of the food chain. 







Description:

I was freezing cold throughout this entire book. What did I expect?  Paul Souders book, Arctic Solitaire: A Boat, A Bay, and the Quest for the Perfect Bear is about sailing in a small open boat through heavy rain in the Arctic, sprinkled with climbing around on ice bergs and occasionally falling into the icy water.

In Arctic Solitairs, Souders, a seasoned wildlife photographer, details his real-life quest to capture one tryly unique picture of a polar bear. In his stunning, funny, and "chilling" account, Souders spends four summers motoring around the upper Hudson Bay seeking photogenic polar bears willing to do something interesting for a one-of-a-kind shot. And he doesn't want those starving, almost tame ones hanging around civilization scrounging for scraps like in touristy Churchill, but rather in the remote ice floes near native Inuit communities where bears roam as the largest predator on earth.
I have long dreamed of finding my own private Arctic bastion, unpeople but well-stocked with polar bears....Shouldn't it be possible to take a small boat and visit the bears during those [summer] months as the ice disappears and the bears head for short?
This means Souders must head north to the remotest parts of the vast Hudson Bay. The trip starts off as "a sort of lark" since he is not an expert in biology, animal behavior, or even boat travel. First he has to purchase transportation, settling on a 10' Zodiak ("my laughably puny boat with a too-small hand pump"), and, when that proves inadequate, acquires a 22' cabin cruiser, the "C-Sick." He then sets about to outfit it for a summer in the cold unknown, and haul it from Seattle hundreds of miles to the Hudson Bay. Of course, he takes too much stuff as well as not enough of more important items he finds out later, he tries to survive the cold, rain, waves, and drifting ice bergs daily using his wits and a load of good luck. 
I started planning with nothing more than my outdated Rand McNally road atlas. I've always found something seductive about maps. The offer all the promise of travel and adventure and discovery, yet foretell nothing of the discomfort, misery, and expense my travels always seem to entail.
Once he has motored away from civilization, he does find bears -- but they are all calmly dozing on rocks. Not much of a photo opportunity, especially when these bears catch his scent or see him approach in his tiny inflatable Zodiac. Usually they run off, but all too often they decide to explore this new, interesting smell of "sweat and dirty underwear." They are huge, especially when they charge, teeth bared, ready to jump into the water to pursue a possible meal. Several times their claws pierce his inflatable boat and Souders has to chug furiously back to his boat in a sinking Zodiac

Day after day Souders writes in his journal about his victories and defeats while searching for bears, trying to stay warm and dry, and taking photos from underwater, overhead with his drone, and with telephoto lenses from a hopefully safe distance. Of course, most of his equipment ends up dropped in the Bay, soaked, and ruined.

There is real humor throughout as Souders tries to find and photograph his giant subjects. Mostly, he is winging it to just survive the harsh weather, waves, and drifting ice. He recounts experiences with the local Inuit people living in isolated villages who suspect he works for Greenpeace and will try to stop them from their traditional lifestyle and diet of blubber that necessitates their hunting of whales. 

But he perseveres  and eventually turns this daily journal into Arctic Solitaire. His amateurish nautical (and survival) efforts written in a laughable stream-of-consciousness narration make for a pleasurable reading experience. Scattered throughout the book are his outstanding photos of the northern world of ice, water, and naturally enough, polar bears.

I'm still too cold to even think about following his path to the remote north, but Souders photos certainly opens a new world to me of beauty, animals, and life.
I had decided long ago that I could only spend the years I had with both eyes opened wide, hoping that life's majesty and drama might not pass me by. For these few fleeting moments, I had been given a chance to witness a scene of rare beauty.
____________________

If this book interests you, be sure to check out:

Mowat is dispatched to the Canadian North to document the lives of arctic wolves to prevent them from killing all the caribou as hunters claim. Unfortunately, Mowat is completely, humorously unprepared for everything he finds, from wolves who wander into his campground unafraid to their diet of field mice, and his own lack of wilderness skills. Highest recommendation (previously reviewed here)