The photos are extremely compelling. It shows a side of the world, a dark side, that few see or even know about. I found it hard to put the book down--it's sort of like trying to not look at a train wreck! The book still sells for $170 (used) to $320. Don McCullum did a similar book in the 1980s--Hearts of Darkness. I heard him talking about his work on the radio once. He told how when photo'ing the Yugoslavic civil war he took photos of some people killed in a bomb blast. A very upset woman began yelling at him, asking him "why?" She turned out to be the wife of one of the dead. While he was pondering that, he learned that she too had been killed later that day. He said it was one of the reasons he left the field and switched to landscapes. The cumulative effect of all he had witnessed had brought him to his breaking point.
Kent in SD
There was a great BBC documentary of McCullin; I just had a look at my Favourites list, and was hoping to link it: gone! Bugger!
Thing is, any of his English landscape stuff that I have seen is also dark and bleak. I saw an exhibition of his stuff many moons ago in Glasgow, and there were some lovely, misty b/whites of Benares... Maybe dark and bleak's the way he sees Britain. After India, I can sympathise.
Ironically, to see David Bailey, I had to get my rope out, tie it in a knot around my waist and lower myself carefully over the edge of the world and find Kilmarnock! You couldn't make it up. As bad, when I got there, the prints on the wall all looked pretty tired. Must have been the trip.