Synopses & Reviews
These 1,956 miles through Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California on the U.S. side and Nuevo León, Coahuila, Chihuahua, Sonora, and Baja California Norte on Mexico's side are the beautiful, rugged, blood-stained borderlands that once lured conquistadors, missionaries, scalp hunters, bandits, smugglers, pioneers, and colonists from Spain, Mexico, and the United States. Annerino canoed the Río Grande/Río Bravo del Norte through the legendary Big Bend Frontier, walked treacherous immigrant trails like Arizona's Camino del Diablo (Road of the Devil), explored borderlands jaguar country on foot, and came to know the resilient people who live, work, and cling to the traditions on both sides of the border. Along the way he chronicled his perilous journeys through this "geography of chaos," capturing in remarkable photographs and evocative essays the stunning landscapes whose fragile environment is threatened by today's politics.
Synopsis
John Annerino, famed photographer of the Amerian Southwest, portrays the astonishing beauty of the U.S.-Mexico borderlands and contrasts those with images of the conflict that threatens to destroy them.
About the Author
Throughout the past 20 years, acclaimed author and photographer John Annerino has become intimately acquainted with the lands and peoples of the U.S.-Mexico borderlands while producing 11 photography books and 21 single-artist calendars from his journeys, including the critically-acclaimed border saga Dead in Their Tracks. He's been consulted on both sides of the border for many news, documentary, and feature film projects, including ABC Primetime, Life, Newsweek, and National Geographic Adventure, among others. He's also the author of the Countryman titles Grand Canyon Wild (a Book-of-the-Month Club selection), Canyon Country, Desert Light and The Photographer's Guide to the Grand Canyon (both Southwest Books of the Year), The Photographer's Guide to Canyon Country, and Indian Country. He lives in Tucson, AZ.