Hollywood foto-rhetoric - the lost manuscript

Surfacing for the first time after more than forty years, Hollywood Foto-Rhetoric is a remarkable long-lost manuscript written by Bob Dylan in the 1960s, inspired by renowned photographer Barry Feinstein's portraits of Tinseltown. These twenty-three prose poems are thought-provoking, witty, and thoroughly unexpected observations of a bygone era, and through the lens of Feinstein's camera they speak volumes about the faces and places that have graced the City of Angels. Images like those of Judy Garland, Marlene Dietrich, and Steve McQueen resonate with our collective memory, while photographs of hopeful starlets, movie studio backlots, and sunny, palm tree'd boulevards evoke the timeless allure of all things Hollywood.

Hollywood Foto-Rhetoric marks a unique collaboration: With his unerring eye, Barry Feinstein captured unforgettable moments in stunning black-and-white, such as Marilyn Monroe's swimming pool on the day she died, and Frank Sinatra celebrating at John F Kennedy's Inaugural Ball. In the provocative accompanying text, Bob Dylan's quixotic, expressive lyricism redefines silver screen nostalgia.

Författare
Bob Dylan
(Text by Bob Dylan photographs by Barry Feinstein)
Genre
Bok
Språk
Engelska
Förlag År Ort Om boken ISBN
Simon & Schuster cop. 2008 New York, New York xvii, 141 sidor. : ill. 27 cm 1-4391-1250-9, 978-1-4391-1250-2