Time to Move on (to Arctic Drilling)
The books arrived today. Fortunately, we were able to allocate them around the world for the various upcoming exhibits and signings, so only 30 crates of books had to be hoisted up the five flights of stairs. I need the workout.
Now that the finished product is in hand, the pain of creation fades. It has been a long year. When we finally had the book outline approved and deadlined, the BP gulf spill occurred. I remember thinking 2 things: can I go down and do something that has not been done by all of the journalists convening on the gulf, and what is this going to do to the book deadline?
As it was, I did go down, and got some amazing images. The memory of waiting in the Mobile airport, begging the airline counter people for the last ticket back to New York (more than once) and all the while pulling out the laptop whenever I had a quiet moment and writing, writing, writing. Being the world’s worst at deadlines, I was supposed to keep all of the contributors on schedule as well? Some, especially Dr. Hansen, did not sign on until after the deadline. And how can you rush James Hansen?
Then there are always the re-writes. Trying to craft clear language that expresses complex issues while simultaneously having a lyrical tone is the hardest thing in the world.
Of course, we missed the deadline, primarily because of all of the time I spent shooting the Gulf. At the time it seemed like a tragedy: missing the Christmas season. It turned out to be one of those mysterious blessings. What could be more timely than to have the book come out when I have two shows up in New York, and a raft of press? The book became a catalyst magnifying the impact of all of the events.
Time to move on and tackle Arctic drilling.
At the warehouse
They tell us the books are arriving at the warehouse any day. Very exciting.
So much has happened that the book seems like an old friend: visual memory almost forgotten; what remains is the sense and smell.
And in spite of the anxieties about arrival date and disappointment from missing the season of Christ, the timing could not be better with the two exhibitions opening in NYC.
I look forward to having this testament in my life.
So many thanks to the different contributors.
DAT B-Side
Thanks to my awesome publisher, powerHouse Books, a beautiful B-Side is now available for my new book, The Day After Tomorrow: Images of Our Earth in Crisis. Check it out!
Have you reserved your copy of DAT yet? Don’t wait any longer! The book will be flying off bookstore shelves, come Feb 2011!
Real Life Heroes
It’s nice to have heroes, and nicer to meet them and have them live up to your anticipation.
Jim Hansen is just such a man: an honest, skeptical citizen looking for the truth, and willing to keep saying it, in spite of opposition. He recently received the Blue Planet Prize and his message rings no less powerful.
I’m honored to have him as a contributor in The Day After Tomorrow: Images Of Our Earth In Crisis.
What to Cover
After all the work and dialog about the content of the book, going over picture choice and text editing endlessly, re-editing and corrections and rules of English, we come finally to the cover.
Of course the first question is image selection; everyone has their preference, and valid reasons for the choice.
Once the image is agreed, then text.
Trips to bookstores to see which designs on the shelves grab the eye.
And then you start to ponder how the books are displayed; how the placement decisions are made and handed down, whether the book’s landscape format will handicap it in a portrait world.
Of course these are imponderables, but you grapple anyway.
And ultimately you have to go with what your gut tells you, after absorbing as much input as possible.
Remember your initial impulse and stay on that line.
Trust yourself.
DAY AFTER TOMORROW Headlines
Thanks to the good advice of the folks at Really Social Strategies, we set up the book blog and a book web page well in advance of the time when they would be needed (or so we thought.) The book is scheduled for a January release, perfect timing for the Gerald Peters vernissage in New York City .
Turns out, Dr. Hansen really likes the piece he wrote for the book, Activist, and has been talking about it in recent interviews in the New York Times and The Guardian.
Fortunately, though, the pages were ready to go live as soon as we heard about the interviews.