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<entity>
  <id>1017995</id>
  <title>The Ongoing Moment</title>
  <author>Geoff Dyer</author>
  <image>http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51FGZY6FSWL._SX80_.jpg</image>
  <rating>9</rating>
  <description>In his most recent book, Yoga for People Who Can&amp;#8217;t Be Bothered to Do It, Geoff Dyer confessed that not only did he not take pictures in the course of his travels but that he does not even own a camera. With characteristic perver-sity&amp;#8212;and trademark originality&amp;#8212;Dyer has now come up with an idiosyncratic history of . . . photography. Seeking to identify their signature styles, Dyer looks at the ways in which such canonical figures as Alfred Stieglitz, Paul Strand, Walker Evans, Andr&#233; Kert&#233;sz, Edward Weston, Dorothea Lange, Diane Arbus, and William Eggleston, among others, have photographed the same things (barber shops, benches, hands, roads, and signs, for example). In doing so, he constructs a narrative in which these photographers&amp;#8212;many of whom never met&amp;#8212;constantly encounter one another.Great photographs change the way we see the world; The Ongoing Moment changes the way we look at both. It is the most ambitious example to date of a form of writing that Dyer has made his own: the nonfiction work of art.</description>
  <reviews_count>1</reviews_count>
</entity>
