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Cuba

Cuba

List Price: $50.00
Your Price: $31.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: cuba
Review: A colorful well laid out book with good use of photographs in the National Geo style taken by a optimistic photographer with a quirky eye that obviously has a lot of passion for this country. looking forward to the next one.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: This book celebrates the passion and sensuality of Cuba but.
Review: Cuba is a visual delight and, with more than 100 color photographs, David Alan Harvey shows you why. Combine Harvey's images of life in Cuba with Elizabeth Newhouse's terse yet thorough style and you have a perfect match for this book.

I have recently visited Cuba and found that Harvey's photography captures the essence of Cuba's greatest resource - the Cuban people. Strong and proud, though materialistically impoverished, the people of Cuba are rich in relationships, music, dance and defiance. Harvey, a photographer for National Geographic, has spent the last 20 years photographing Latin America and is skilled at capturing people in their everyday environment.

Newhouse's chapter on the turbulent history of Cuba is excellent. Without pulling any punches about the glaring deficiencies of Castro's totalitarian Communist government, she writes with objectivity about life in Cuba and she is able to show, with sensitivity to the culture, the strength found in the people of Cuba. "But above all Cuba is music," Newhouse writes, "expressing Cubans' intense joy in life, sensuality and machismo. Garcia Marquez calls Cuba 'the most dance oriented society on earth. And that Fidel Castro is the only Cuban who can't dance, should have warned the people about him from the start.'"

The downside of this book is the publisher/printer's very poor reproduction of Harvey's photos. Almost all of the photos are too dark and thus rob the effect that David Harvey intended. Considering that National Geographic is distinguished for its stunning photography, I called the publisher and asked about this blunder and was told that the printer, not the photographer, was culpable.

This book celebrates the passion, color and sensuality of the Cuban people, and, even with the gray backdrop of Communism framing their existence, and the deficiency in the photo reproduction, the Cubans are still able to shine through the gloom and darkness. Recommended.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: This book celebrates the passion and sensuality of Cuba but.
Review: Cuba is a visual delight and, with more than 100 color photographs, David Alan Harvey shows you why. Combine Harvey's images of life in Cuba with Elizabeth Newhouse's terse yet thorough style and you have a perfect match for this book.

I have recently visited Cuba and found that Harvey's photography captures the essence of Cuba's greatest resource - the Cuban people. Strong and proud, though materialistically impoverished, the people of Cuba are rich in relationships, music, dance and defiance. Harvey, a photographer for National Geographic, has spent the last 20 years photographing Latin America and is skilled at capturing people in their everyday environment.

Newhouse's chapter on the turbulent history of Cuba is excellent. Without pulling any punches about the glaring deficiencies of Castro's totalitarian Communist government, she writes with objectivity about life in Cuba and she is able to show, with sensitivity to the culture, the strength found in the people of Cuba. "But above all Cuba is music," Newhouse writes, "expressing Cubans' intense joy in life, sensuality and machismo. Garcia Marquez calls Cuba 'the most dance oriented society on earth. And that Fidel Castro is the only Cuban who can't dance, should have warned the people about him from the start.'"

The downside of this book is the publisher/printer's very poor reproduction of Harvey's photos. Almost all of the photos are too dark and thus rob the effect that David Harvey intended. Considering that National Geographic is distinguished for its stunning photography, I called the publisher and asked about this blunder and was told that the printer, not the photographer, was culpable.

This book celebrates the passion, color and sensuality of the Cuban people, and, even with the gray backdrop of Communism framing their existence, and the deficiency in the photo reproduction, the Cubans are still able to shine through the gloom and darkness. Recommended.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A sublime work by a master photojournalist
Review: David Alan Harvey, long one of the most outstanding photographers at an outstanding publication, National Geographic, has produced that captures well the beauty, spirit, and reality of life in Cuba. Harvey's masterful compositions with his trademark use of strong, vibrant color remind one of Alex Webb's photographs of Haiti and the tropics.

I suspect that those who complain about "dark pictures" have missed the point; the photographer seems to deliberately have exposed for the highlights, leaving his shadow areas to fall to blackness and lending the subjects in his photos a timeless anonymity.

And the harsh reviews that Harvey has "misunderstood" Cuba seem to be misguided on the part of some reviewers. I guess they'd rather deny that the poverty reflected in some of his photographs actually exists, and bash him for merely bringing a non-Cuban perspective to the land they love with rose-tinted vision, rather than address the actual points his work raises.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A sublime work by a master photojournalist
Review: David Alan Harvey, long one of the most outstanding photographers at an outstanding publication, National Geographic, has produced that captures well the beauty, spirit, and reality of life in Cuba. Harvey's masterful compositions with his trademark use of strong, vibrant color remind one of Alex Webb's photographs of Haiti and the tropics.

I suspect that those who complain about "dark pictures" have missed the point; the photographer seems to deliberately have exposed for the highlights, leaving his shadow areas to fall to blackness and lending the subjects in his photos a timeless anonymity.

And the harsh reviews that Harvey has "misunderstood" Cuba seem to be misguided on the part of some reviewers. I guess they'd rather deny that the poverty reflected in some of his photographs actually exists, and bash him for merely bringing a non-Cuban perspective to the land they love with rose-tinted vision, rather than address the actual points his work raises.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Modern-Day Henri Cartier-Bresson
Review: David Allen Harvey is a veteran National Georgraphic photographer. His style reminds my of one of the most significant photographers of the 20th century, Henri Cartier-Bresson, who photographed exclusively in duotone. But Harvey's photos are in glorious color, and are striking for their lack of artificial style. I have not been to Cuba, but having studied Harvey's deceptively simple photos, I feel I have gotten as close as I can legally, given US restrictions. And the book makes me want to go I do not believe, as other reviewers say, Harvey is exploiting anyone. Like the best Geographic photographers, he simply took pictures of things as they are, not as he wishes they were. I do not believe he glorifies poverty by any means -- quite the contrary. Harvey's pictures do reveal an impoverished culture -- a proud one -- struggling to keep up with the rest of us. I strongly recommend the book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Spectacular
Review: First the book gives a nice resume of cuba's history, then a summary of current living conditions for Cubans. This puts you in the right mindset to fully appreciate Harvey's work. But the story told by David Alan Harvey is simply spectacular. Harvey gets off the beaten track and takes you to the heart of Cuban's daily lives, but with an incredible sense of beauty and a touch of sensuality. Buy this book, take it slow, and you won't regret it.
If you have a minute go check out this link where Harvey explains his experience and lets you get a glimpse of the content of this great book.
http://dirckhalstead.org/issue9910/cubaintro.htm

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Brilliant Evocative Loving
Review: I have traveled to Cuba and I have followed the photographic work of David Harvey for more than 20 years. While neither makes me an expert I do know that the Cuba Harvey captured is the Cuba I saw and felt when I visited several years ago while on a teaching visa. Harvey caresses his subjects with intensity and love. He blends in - he becomes a part of the scene - while not changing the scene. He is both a photographer's photographer and a man of the people. We hang with the saxophone player in Trinidad on page 45, we roam the late night streets of Havana on pages 92-93, we are unseen as we observe the barbershop/front bedroom on page 166. I highly recommend this book to those who love photography, those who love people and want to learn something about another place, to those who desire to sit awhile in a culture other than their own, and to those who simply love images and the gift a fine photograph can bring to your life. It is a true gift. This captures the vibrant yet gentle Cuba of today, of now, not of tightly clutched notions that died 50 years ago.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Puerile and Exploitative
Review: The text of this book demonstrated a very superficial appreciation of Cuban culture. While some of the photographs were interesting, the photographer seemed more interested in showing off his style rather than in honoring the subject matter. Cuba was just used as a vehicle for this writer and photographer to make some money. Not recommended.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Insulting to Cubans
Review: This book should have been called "Two Gringos Go to Cuba". It is insulting to Cuban people everywhere, whether they live in Cuba now or other places. The book seems to say that poverty is something that is fun to look at it and should be photographed. Most of the photographs are too dark or out of focus anyhow. If you want to buy a book about Cuba, get one written by a Cuban.


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