Look him up on YouTube. His lectures are similar to his books in their content and presentation.
I did
here. More than an hour of this:
"The best way to take a photograph is to let the photograph take you."
"An interesting plainness is the most difficult thing to achieve."
"You want to take a photograph as if the person looking at it was standing in the same place you were when the photograph took you."
"Have thoughtful thoughtless thoughts and do the right thing at the right moment without thinking about doing it."
"Practice doesn't make perfect. Perfect practice makes perfect."
"Know the camera as well as you know yourself, you will know the outcome of every photograph. Know your camera half as well as you know yourself, you'll get half the shots and lose half the shots. But don't know your camera and you'll be truly lost."
"Your biggest critic sits in the same chair as you do."
"We blame ourselves for the faults of technology, and we blame technology for the faults of our own."
"If you travel in a circle, do it in a straight line."
"There is a reason why I carry in my backpack all these lenses.
70-200mm f4-5
70-200mm f2.8
70-210mm push/pull
24-120mm
80-400mm
70-300mm
28-300mm"
"The photograph tells one story, but there is a different story behind the photograph."
"Minimize the cumulative and negate the multiplicative."
"Shoot your portraits like landscapes and your landscapes like portraits."
"At the point you say it doesn't matter in your image is the point at which you say your image doesn't matter."
"Bokeh is like the Caesar salad dressing of optics. It's made up of anchovies (strong), raw garlic (strong), red wine vinegar (strong), Colman's hot mustartd (strong), Parmesan cheese (strong), olive oil (not so strong). Put it all together, and what do you get? A mild dressing."