Presents some suggestions for making photographic stories out of events and their impact on people, such as 1) carry a camera, 2) go where the action is, 3) try to get multipicture stories, 4) be critical of the results.
Excitable Junie B. Jones manages to find trouble both before and during a trip to Hawaii and records each incident in a photo journal given to her by her teacher.
Stories within a story, written as separate chapters by a number of noted authors who each contribute to the life of the mysterious George "Gee" Keane, photographer, soldier, and adventurer.
Clea, not sure if her soul mate Sage is alive or dead, begins having dreams of him with another woman and decides to team up with his enemy in an effort to locate him.
Showcases the work of one hundred "LIFE" magazine photographers, including Margaret Bourke-White, Alfred Eisenstaedt, and Robert Capa, featuring images of some of the most significant people and events in history.
Discusses the ways in which photojournalism became the public's window to newsworthy people and events in the early decades of the twentieth century, and explores the influence of muckraking, yellow journalism, and censorship on the medium.
A pictorial work at one hundred years of life in the United States including the devastation of Hurricane Andrew in 1992; Native American powwows; and natural sights like prairies, mountains, and rivers.
The Pulitzer Prize has come to represent the pinnacle of achievement in news photography. Here, in one beautifully produced volume is every Pulitzer Prize winning photograph from 1942 to the present.