Recent Terrains: Terraforming the American West (Creating the North American Landscape)

In this book of sixty black-and-white panoramas, photographer Laurie Brown documents the changing landscape along the western edge of Southern California. These stark, compelling images reveal a world scraped and reshaped by construction equipment—boulders pushed aside, stretches of earth flattened and then measured with surveyor sticks. High-tech housing developments rise in these places, lines of identical homes that simultaneously offer a pleasing vision of order and a numbing prospect of sterile conformity. Recent Terrains: Terraforming the American West is a thoughtful sequence of photographs that consider how the planet’s surface has been transformed to meet the needs of our consumer society.

The term terraforming originated in Kim Stanley Robinson’s science fiction trilogy about the colonization of Mars, in which that planet is reshaped for human settlers. The panoramic format of Brown’s photographs is partly inspired by space photography—with their long and low perspectives of the horizon, these photos give us views of our own planet as it might be seen by the Mars explorer. But if many of the images look like alien landscapes, they reveal a familiar shift in American geography: the wild, agricultural terrain of our early frontier gives way to densely built suburban communities.

Brown’s photographs are neutral about what they record, dramatizing some of the tensions and dualities that comprise our society’s complex relationship to nature. She shows the invasion of unspoiled territory by the high-tech developments we so often label with the pejorative term suburban sprawl. At the same time, however, she uncovers surreal stillness and beauty in the built environment, searching for a postindustrial idea of the sublime.

Taken during the last decade of the twentieth century, these photographs serve as an archive of change at a specific place on the coastal edge of California at the turn of the millennium. But these images have larger relevance for all of us, exploring our ideas about what constitutes a home and what defines our sense of community.

The book is divided into three sections, each prefaced by a poem by Los Angeles poet Martha Ronk; it concludes with an essay by renowned writer and conservationist Charles E. Little. Recent Terrains is a major photographic work—a thoughtful, serious book of time and place.


Recent Terrains: Terraforming the American West (Creating the North American Landscape)

Essential Skills for Nature Photography

Covering the fundamentals of nature photography for beginners and offering additional detail for those with 35mm SLRs who want to improve their technique, this book provides specific tips for photographing wildlife, landscapes, and close-ups, in addition to information on using filters, natural and artificial light, lens choices, and location options. A full glossary of definitions and appendixes covering 10 quick nature photography tips, troubleshooting, and frequently asked questions is also included.


Essential Skills for Nature Photography

The Gardens of Frank Lloyd Wright

Best known for his strikingly modern structures, Frank Lloyd Wright was also a highly influential landscape designer. The Gardens of Frank Lloyd Wright is the first book in full color to focus on Wright’s four most famous residential landscapes: his first home and studio in Oak Park, Illinois; his magnificent 3,000-acre summer home Taliesin, in Wisconsin; his 600-acre winter home Taliesin West, in Arizona; and Fallingwater, in Pennsylvania, the commission that made him world famous. The product of extended visits to properties associated with Wright, as well as extensive interviews with surviving colleagues and students, the book also explores the Japanese and Mayan landscapes that inspired Wright and his appreciation of the stone meeting circles and naturalistic prairie plantings of the great landscape architect Jens Jensen. Planting plans allow readers to create prairie- and desert-style gardens of their very own.


The Gardens of Frank Lloyd Wright