Publishers Weekly (03/12/2012):
Perhaps best known for his iconic photo of a Spanish soldier as he is
being shot known as "Death of Loyalist Militiaman," which hangs in New
York's Museum of Modern Art, Robert Capa (born Endre Erno Friedmann) was
one of the progenitors of modern-day war photojournalism, covering the
Spanish Civil War, D-Day, the beginnings of the Vietnam conflict, and
many other momentous occasions during his tenure behind the lens.
Though
these milestones and others are addressed in war correspondent Lebrun
(Normandie 44) and Le Monde journalist Lefebvre's biography of Capa,
their primary focus here is the work he and his colleagues produced
while based out of an apartment in Paris' fourteenth arrondissement.
Led
largely by Capa, the collective's commitment to immersing themselves in
the moments they sought to document had serious consequences as Capa's
longtime collaborator and girlfriend Gerda Taro was crushed and killed
by a tank while covering the Spanish Civil War but their commitment to
documenting life in a war zone, from both a military and civilian
perspective, revolutionized reporting and brought the battles home.
Historians and photographers alike will be rewarded by the authors'
excellent blend of narration and academic analysis, coupled with a
generous helping of groundbreaking photos, many of which have never been
published before. Photos & illus. (Mar.) Copyright 2012 Reed
Business Information.
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