Barry Lopez



Selected Works

Fiction
Resistance
Nine interrelated stories. H.L. Davis Award for Short Fiction 2005 (Knopf 2004, Vintage 2005)
Vintage Lopez
This collection includes five essays and an excerpt from Arctic Dreams in addition to six short stories. (Vintage 2004)
Giving Birth to Thunder
Retold tales of Coyote as trickster and sage, from the traditions of Native America. (Andrews and McMeel 1978, Avon 1981)
Interviews
"The Leadership Imperative: An Interview with Oren Lyons by Barry Lopez"
BL talks with Oren Lyons, Orion (January/February 2007)
Interviews of BL
Michigan Quarterly Review (Fall 2005), Northwest Review (Spring 2006), Georgia Review (Spring 2006), No Bottom (2008)
Nonfiction
"Eden Is a Conversation"
BL's closing remarks at Quest for Global Healing, Ubud, Bali, Portland Magazine (Autumn 2006)
"Une phrase de Primo Levi"
Libération (June 24-25, 2006). Also published in English as chapbook ˇNunca Más! (Red Dragonfly Press 2007)
Home Ground: Language for an American Landscape, edited by Barry Lopez and Debra Gwartney
With an Introduction by Barry Lopez (Trinity University Press 2006)
"Out West"
Introductory essay by Barry Lopez in Emily Ballew Neff's The Modern West (Yale University Press 2006)
"Waiting for Salmon"
Granta (Summer 2005)
"A Scary Abundance of Water"
Memoir of Lopez's childhood in California's San Fernando Valley. Nominated by LA Weekly for a Pulitzer Prize. (January 11-17, 2002)
Of Wolves and Men
25th Anniversary Edition with an Afterword by BL. Photographs and marginalia throughout. (Scribner 2004)


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About This Life

CONTENTS

Part One: Out of Country

Searching for Depth in Bonaire
A Short Passage in Northern Hokkaido
Orchids on the Volcanoes
Informed by Indifference
Flight

Part Two: Indwelling

Apologia
In a Country of Light, Among Animals
The American Geographies
Effleurage: The Stroke of Fire
The Whaleboat

Part Three: Remembrance

Replacing Memory
A Passage of the Hands
Learning to See

Part Four: An Opening Quartet

Death
Murder
Speed
Theft
___________


Learning to See

In June 1989, I received a puzzling letter from the Amon Carter Museum in Fort Worth, Texas, an invitation to speak at the opening of a retrospective of the work of Robert Adams. The show, "To Make It Home: Photographs of the American West, 1965-1985," had been organized by the Philadelphia Museum of Art and would travel to the Los Angeles County Museum and the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., before being installed at the Amon Carter, an institution renowned for its photographic collections, in the spring of 1990.

     Robert Adams, an un-self-promoting man who has published no commercially prominent book of photographs, is routinely referred to as one of the most important landscape photographers in America, by both art critics and his colleagues. His black-and-white images are intelligently composed and morally engaged. They're also hopeful, despite their sometimes depressing subject matter--brutalized landscapes and the venality of the American dream as revealed in suburban life. Adams doesn't hold himself apart from what he indicts. He photographs with compassion and he doesn't scold. His pictures are also accessible, to such a degree that many of them seem casual. In 1981 he published Beauty in Photography: Essays in Defense of Traditional Values, one of the clearest statements of artistic responsibility ever written by a photographer.

     If there is such a thing as an ideal of stance, technique, vision, and social contribution toward which young photographers might aspire, it's embodied in this man.

–opening paragraphs, "Learning to See"



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