Even as fans of Helium, The Mary Timony Band, and Wild Flag yearn for her next record, it should be noted that there are a lot of Washington, D.C. kids who know Mary Timony for a different, related reason: she is the coolest, and most dedicated, guitar teacher in town. Yesterday, The Washington Post Magazine ran a great profile of one of our fair city’s cultural gems. Nice piece, richly deserved, and we can’t wait to see the output from Mary’s next project.
Archive for the Uncategorized Category
Mary Timony As The Rock Star Next Door
Posted in Uncategorized with tags D.C., Helium, Mary Timony, The Mary Timony Band, Wild Flag on May 13, 2013 by johnbuckley100The Kind Of Day It’s Going To Be
Posted in Uncategorized with tags Leica M9, Noctilux 0.95 on May 11, 2013 by johnbuckley100Passing Through
Posted in Uncategorized with tags 28mm Summicron, Leica M9 on May 10, 2013 by johnbuckley100Before The Memory Of Cherry Blossoms Fade
Posted in Uncategorized with tags 35mm Summilux, Leica M on May 9, 2013 by johnbuckley100My New Novel, “The Geography Lesson,” Is Available Via Amazon Kindle And Other Sites
Posted in Uncategorized with tags "Family Politics", "Statute of Limitations", John Buckley, National Geographic, National Geographic Society, Robert M. Poole, The Geography Lesson on May 6, 2013 by johnbuckley100I’m very pleased to announce the publication of my third novel, The Geography Lesson, which is available via Amazon Kindle and other sites. In the days ahead, it will be available through the iBookstore, the Nook store, and all such upstanding digital retailers.
The Geography Lesson is a novel about the consequences emanating from a botched expedition by the National Geographic Society– which may be the last great Washington institution never to have come under the scope of a comic novelist. Forty years after the 1968 discovery, and subsequent looting, of a magnificent Anasazi ruin in Utah, the novel’s narrator, a retired National Geographic writer, spies in a magazine a photo of a vase he last saw in an obscure canyon out West all those years ago, and in an instant, he knows exactly who betrayed him — and one of America’s most storied institutions.
Ready to learn more, maybe even ready to buy it at the low, low price of $3.95? Well, you can go you can go directly to TheGeographyLesson.com.
Still need persuading? Well, here’s what Robert M. Poole, former executive editor of National Geographic and author of Explorers House: National Geographic and the World It Made, has to say about it: “With The Geography Lesson, John Buckley has produced a novel that is part mystery story, part adventure, and pure delight. He guides the reader on a fast-paced voyage of discovery, from the silent, unspoiled ruins of the Anasazi cliffs to the solemn grandeur of the Inca highlands to the Byzantine maze of the National Geographic Society. All serve as backdrop for Timothy Prescott’s journey of the heart, fueled by one man’s need to reconcile lost love, betrayed friendship, and what seems to be a brazen assault on a cultural treasure. Buckley is a masterful guide who writes with clarity and grace that never intrude on a narrative you will savor and remember.”
Ready to go to the website and buy it?
Look, we often don’t come out from behind the mask of Tulip Frenzy, but in this instance, allow me to say this. I believe The Geography Lesson is stronger than either of my two well-reviewed prior novels, Family Politics or Statute of Limitations. It’s a fun read, if I do say so myself.
If you read it, and like it, you could:
- Leave a review on the Kindle page.
- You could tweet out a link to your zillions of Twitter followers. (A cut-and-paste ready sample: “Go read the new novel by @johnbuckley100, The Geography Lesson, which is really terrific!” And then you could link to TheGeographyLesson.com. Oh, and by the way, go ahead and follow @johnbuckley100 on Twitter, and I’ll keep you posted on the book’s progress.
- Post a link on your Facebook page and alert your zillions of friends.
The most important thing, though, is reading the book, which I hope you enjoy.
On Meeting Eric, The D.C. Ice Cream Man
Posted in Uncategorized with tags "DC As I See It", 35mm Summilux FLE, Leica M9, Leica Store DC on May 5, 2013 by johnbuckley100
In this country, we have the right to take a picture of anyone in a public space. There is the separate question of whether people want to have their picture taken, or what morally is your right to do with that picture. The latter question is something I grapple with all the time.
The photo above was taken in September 2012 near Washington’s Verizon Center. I submitted it in the Leica Store’s “D.C. As I See It” juried competition, and it was one of my photos chosen. About ten days ago, the Leica Store contacted me to say that, having heard his picture was up on their wall, Eric, the man depicted in the image, had come to the store, and that he really wanted to get a copy of it. After connecting with him, we agreed to meet on Friday on the Mall, where he was selling ice cream to tourists.
What a delight it was to meet him, a really nice guy, who seemed to genuinely enjoy getting copies of the photo taken of him. He said that while working near Union Station, someone told him his picture was up on the walls of the Leica Store, and he should go check it out. He said it made his day to see the picture. I can only tell you that giving him a copy made mine.
The Iron Horse
Posted in Uncategorized with tags 28mm Summicron, Leica M9 on May 4, 2013 by johnbuckley100“Genesis” By Sebastiao Salgado Has Arrived
Posted in Uncategorized with tags "Genesis", Peter Fetterman Gallery, Sebastiao Salgado, Taschen on May 2, 2013 by johnbuckley100It’s getting harder and harder to find the ends of the Earth…
Fortunately, a near-septuagenarian Brazilian humanist has returned from the ends of the Earth with hundreds of SD cards full of glorious shards of the light that falls upon it…
We have been awaiting the arrival of Genesis by Sebastiao Salgado ever since we received a promotional postcard, around 2008, from his American gallerist, Peter Fetterman, depicting a Dinka cattle herd. We were familiar with Salgado — in fact we owned An Uncertain Grace, in which we first saw those pictures of the Brazilian gold miners at work in their pit, a photojournalist’s image that combined a little bit of Dante with Indiana Jones And The Temple Of Doom. We knew he was a great photographer, but we didn’t yet grasp his conceptual breadth, which is staggering, or the depth of his humanity, which is an inspiration. Somehow, a picture of an African cattle herder opened a door onto the project that Salgado was calling Genesis, which is nothing less than, in Salgado’s words, “a visual ode to the majesty and fragility of the planet.”
From that first glimpse of this project, we were hooked. And something in our life had changed.
In part through the images available on Peter Fetterman’s walls and website, in part through the updates that, like a 19th Century chronicle available from magazines and newspapers, kept a global audience apprised of the progress Salgado was making along the way — you can practically see the globe with the dotted line marking where he was in any given month — we came to view, oh, 50 or so of the images he was amassing from his travels north and south.
By New Years Day 2013, we’d seen, we’re guessing, maybe six dozen of the photographs that Salgado captured over the course of his seven-year journey around the globe, preserving in digital black and white those parts, and people, least despoiled by what Herman Melville called “snivelization.” And then, a few months back,through Peter’s generosity, we were able to meet Salgado when he came to Washington to show more of what would be included in the massive museum installations that launched just last month in London, and expand in a week or so to Toronto. After that slide show, we’d seen another, perhaps, 100 of the images, bringing the total of what we’d seen to somewhere near 200. Many of these images were instantly iconic, such as the photograph of Alaska’s Brooks Range, captured on the cover the book depicted above. Beyond individual images, the shear breadth of what he had accomplished was massive and staggering. And even then we had no idea, even then there were vast aspects of Genesis that we’d yet to see.
Even having had years to prepare for Genesis in its entirety, we still, tonight, were stunned to see the work in its entirety, more than 500 pages of images from Kamchatka to Antarctica, Angel Falls to Bryce Canyon, from those Dinkas in Africa to the sheathed-penis tribesman of West Papua’s Jayawijaya mountain range. Salgado’s “hymn to the planet,” captured fully in this stunningly gorgeous Taschen book, reveals him to be a one-man National Geographic Society, hacking his way for 55 days across the wilds of Ethiopia, spending time with the reindeer-herding Nenets of Siberia, communing with whales off the Valdes Peninsula, being dropped off to fend for himself in ANWR, so as to catch the migration of the caribou. To say the man went everywhere to joyously capture that half of the planet that he attests is still wild understates things.
Salgado is nearly 70, and yet over the course of just the past decade, he’s withstood hardship for months at a time in order to produce this work. Some have criticized the divine grandiosity in his naming of the project, but while he’s not God, the prodigiousness of his energy that enabled him to capture in such gorgeous images the world that he, perhaps uniquely, has seen in this entirety has given him a certain superhuman aura.
In the days, months, and years ahead, you will hear much about Salgado’s Genesis. The publication of the book is an epochal moment both in terms of photography and, we’d venture, conservation. You would do well to buy it, reasonably priced right now on a value basis, to see what the most accomplished photographer of our age has brought back, back from the ends of the earth. Not explicitly to chronicle things before they disappear, but with optimism, and joy in what’s still there.
Speaking Of The Element Of Light
Posted in Uncategorized with tags 35mm Summilux FLE, Leica Monochrom on April 28, 2013 by johnbuckley100On a very brief stroll while in San Diego on business, we were reminded of just how powerful that SoCal light is in the A.M., people walking on a flat surface yet seeming to have to push against it to get anywhere. Good things happen where light meets dark, photographers say, and we were reminded just how much of those contrasting elements West Coast photographers have to play with. We materialize in shadow in the lower right. Leica Monochrom, 35mm Summilux FLE, orange filter.







