Synopses & Reviews
Given extraordinary access by the U.S. Army, Barry Goldstein spent two years photographing and interviewing more than fifty actively serving members of a veteran battalion, including two month-long trips during which he lived and patrolled with the unit. No one indicts war more powerfully than experienced professional soldiers, and no one enumerates more eloquently the reasons for serving. is a collection of photographic portraits of veterans accompanied by excerpts from candid, unsupervised interviews and images documenting the realities of life in a war zone. The nobility and wisdom of these men and women will change the way we see war.
Review
"Perhaps you think a photography book on Iraqi soldiers that comes out on Veterans Day is predictable, and that's too bad because what you are about to see is not.... Each searing image (there I go with a cliché again, forgive me) is accompanied by unforgettable excerpts of a conversation we wish we could hear in full." Christal Smith
Synopsis
No one indicts war more powerfully than experienced professional soldiers, and no one enumerates more eloquently the reasons for serving.Gray Land is a collection of photographic portraits of veterans accompanied by excerpts from candid, unsupervised interviews and images documenting the realities of life in a war zone. The nobility and wisdom of these men and women will change the way we see war.
Synopsis
Photographs of, and candid interviews with, soldiers of the Iraq War, documenting the extraordinary challenges they face.
About the Author
Photographer Barry Goldstein is a professor at the University of Rochester and New York University. He is author of Being There: Medical Student Morgue Volunteers Following 9/11. He lives in North Adams, Massachusetts.