From Publishers Weekly
New Jersey's shoreline gets the royal treatment in this robust collection of color photographs. Though heavy on images depicting Long Beach Island and Barnegat Bay, the book does offer images of beaches from Sandy Hook to Absecon, with the majority of the photos showing people fishing, sailing, sunbathing, surfing, eating ice cream and engaging in other beach activities. The book's summer section is a riot of people and color, while winter, spring and fall are more pensive, showing images of abandoned skiffs pulled ashore and Asbury Park's deserted amusement park. The essays-largely personal, though still accessible to the general reader-address the region's wildlife and landscape, the onslaught of part-time residents in July and August, and tasks such as looking for driftwood to make a fall fire and hanging wet beach towels on the clothesline to dry. Quotes from Bruce Springsteen songs and Walt Whitman poems complete this handsome volume.Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Four Seasons at the Shore: Photographs of the Jersey Shore SYNOPSIS
For generations, people who have lived or vacationed at the New Jersey Shore
have felt deeply connected to it - no matter where they live now, or how long it
has been since they've had Jersey Shore sand between their toes. The evocative
pictorial book Four Seasons at the Shore - while not offering sand for the toes
- immerses the reader in this coast. From the ocean to the bay, from the sand
dunes to the salt marsh, from boardwalks to the amusements and arcades, this
book of 332 photographs and five essays capture the essence of the Shore from
Sandy Hook to Cape May and along the Delaware Bay.
Featuring extraordinary work from more than four dozen talented
photographers, this full-color hardcover documents and celebrates the shore.
With intimate essays about each season by noted shore writers, the book is an
appreciation and a tribute to this beloved coastline.
As John T. Cunningham - the dean of authors about New Jersey - writes in his
Prologue, it is the sensual shore that is revealed to us in this book: "Anyone
seeking enduring links to this stretch of seacoast finds them only when the
senses come into full play."
Four other writers share their personal interpretation of the Jersey Shore in
each season. Rich Youmans, co-author of Down the Jersey Shore and editor of
poetry and literary anthologies of this coast, gives us spring - punctuated with
visits to Shore towns, north to south. Sandy Gingras, author and creator of the
"How to Live" series of books, including How to Live at the Beach, writes
poetically about the embrace of summer. Autumn at the beach is described by
Larry Savadove, co-author of Great Storms of the Jersey Shore, and the novel,
The Oyster Singer. Margaret Thomas Buchholz, the other co-author of Great
Storms, editor of historical anthologies about the Shore and author of New
Jersey Shipwrecks, lets us feel winter in the bungalow near Barnegat Bay where
she grew up.
The 332 color images in the book are by professional photographers and
dedicated amateurs. They offer an eye for the details, the colors, forms, slant
of light, and seascapes that combine to make the Jersey Shore a visual
experience unique in America.
FROM THE CRITICS
Ed Brown - The Beachcomber, 8/13/04
Four Seasons at the Shore is compelling and dramatic, the shore book of the year.
Maria Scandale - The SandPaper, 9/1/04
A real gift ...Beautiful.
ACCREDITATION
Gene Ahrens photographed the United States and Canada with a
4x5 Linhof Technika camera for four decades. Specializing in landscapes and
nature, his stock also includes all 48 contiguous U.S. states and each state
capitol.
Charles Arlia of Margate has been making fine art, abstract,
and scenic photographs since the early 1980s and his work is often found on
display in juried shows at the Atlantic City and Ocean City art centers.
David Barbara has traveled the Jersey Shore to photograph
marine life and coastal scenics since 1991. He gives lectures on whales,
dolphins, porpoises, and cetaceans to many organizations and lives in
Edison.
Rebecca Barger, a staff photojournalist for The Philadelphia
Inquirer since 1985, has been nominated for two Pulitzer Prizes. She has
traveled to 45 countries, however always finds time to vacation at the New
Jersey shore.
Michael Baytoff's photography has appeared in numerous
national and international publications such as Time, Natural History, Audubon,
and Wildlife Conservation as well as exhibitions including a traveling National
Geographic environmental exhibit. A photojournalist specializing in documentary
and environmental work, he is affiliated with the Black Star agency in New
York.
Bob Birdsall, along with his wife Jean, operates Birdsall
Nature Photography in Barnegat Light. They specialize in images of the New
Jersey Pinelands and the Jersey Shore.
William Bretzger is a staff photographer at The News Journal
in Wilmington Del., where he lives. A native of Eatontown, N.J., he first picked
up a camera as a journalism student at Trenton State College before studying
photojournalism at Ohio University. Documenting the Civil War battlefield of
Gettysburg is a long-term project he is pursuing.
Margaret Thomas Buchholz is the author of Shipwrecks: 350
Years in the Graveyard of the Atlantic, co-author of Great Storms of the Jersey
Shore, editor of the historical anthology Shore Chronicles: Diaries and
Travelers' Tales from the Jersey Shore 1764-1955, and Seasons in the Sun, a
pictorial history. She is editor of The Beachcomber, a weekly newspaper on Long
Beach Island, where she lives.
Donna Connor is a professional photographer with more than
25 years experience in photojournalism, portraiture and, most recently, travel
photography. Her work has appeared in publications ranging from People and Time
to Sports Illustrated and her clients include Atlantic City and Las Vegas
casinos, numerous healthcare organizations and colleges, and an international
law firm. Shooting in both corporate environments and real life situations, her
love of people and the discovery of their stories makes her portraiture a
collaborative effort. She resides with her family in Sweetwater, New Jersey.
Thomas Connor, a resident of Doylestown, Pa., and Beach
Haven, N.J., specializes in nature studies, landscapes and seascapes. He has
traveled extensively throughout North America for his subjects yet finds some of
his most satisfying material along the New Jersey Shore and in the pinelands.
His work is featured in various art shows and has been included in the Down The
Shore Calendar. He was honored with first place in the Tinicum (Bucks County,
Pa.) Arts Festival's 52nd annual juried exhibition for "Winter On The Island"
and "Happy Days."
John T. Cunningham, described by the New Jersey Historical
Commission as New Jersey's "best known popular historian" and by Rutgers
University as "Mr. Jersey" when it gave him an honorary degree, has written 48
books, more than 2,000 articles and 18 documentary films on the state. His first
book, This Is New Jersey, published in 1953, is still in print in its sixth
revised edition. He is currently finishing a book on the Revolutionary War "dark
winter" of 1779-70 in Morristown and is also at work on a revision of his
well-known, but long out-of-print classic, The New Jersey Shore.
Rosemary A. Dixon, of Lanoka Harbor, N.J., is a retired
C.P.A. who travels the world - from Holland to the Fiji Islands - to scuba dive
and photograph (lighthouses, in particular). Her published articles and
photographs about lighthouses include a recent profile of the creator of the
U.S. Lighthouse postage stamp series.
Keith Drexler, of Manville, N.J., makes his living as a
printing press operator, but spends his free time photographing beaches,
boardwalks, and lighthouses along the Jersey Shore.
Nancy L. Erickson's photographs have appeared in numerous
regional and national magazines, calendars and books. She and her husband Bill
have operated New Wave Photography in Laurel Springs, N.J., since 1991.
Susan Federici, a pilot for 33 years, has been a flight
instructor for most of that time, and worked as a corporate pilot for two
decades. Specializing in aerial photographs, she "wanted others to see the view
from a higher perspective," she says. "I have flown the Jersey Shore area for
most of my life and, whether speeding over it at 35,000 feet in a jet or flying
low and slow along the beach in a single engine airplane, I never tire of its
beauty."
Valerie Fenelon has been making photographs of the shore for
nearly 25 years, as well as fine art portraits and special occasions. A graduate
of Moore College of Art, in Philadelphia, she operates North End Trilogy, an art
gallery featuring local and shore artists, in Barnegat Light.
Ray Fisk joined college friends in 1977 to establish The
SandPaper on Long Beach Island - his first encounter with the Jersey Shore. He
worked there as Associate Editor, and then as a photojournalist for The New York
Times, United Press International, and The Philadelphia Inquirer throughout the
1980s, covering Atlantic City, the shore, and southern New Jersey. He founded
Down The Shore Publishing in 1984.
Sandy Gingras is the author and illustrator of The Uh-oh
Heart (2003), How to Live on an Island, How to Live at the Beach, How to be a
Friend and Reasons to be Happy at the Beach, and is the creator of At the Beach
House: A Guest Book. A graduate of Hamilton College, she received an M.A. in
English from Duke University and an M.A. in counseling from Rider College. The
owner of "How to Live," a design and gift company and retail store in Beach
Haven, she lives with her son Morgan, 14, on Long Beach Island.
Steve Greer, who grew up in the Canadian Rockies - "a
magical place in which to learn the fundamentals of landscape photography," is
an award winning photographer and natural history writer whose work has been
featured in hundreds of publications worldwide. His images have appeared on
magazine covers, calendars, greeting cards, advertising and educational
materials. With an appreciation and enthusiasm for the natural world, he
believes that honest, compelling photography can change the way people react to
their environment, enabling them to make better decisions concerning the
protection of open spaces.
Henry R. Hegeman, a resident of southern Ocean County, N.J.,
works for a consulting engineering firm, but has been a freelance writer and
photographer for 30 years, specializing in hunting and fishing subjects. His
work has appeared in numerous books, magazines, and calendars.
John Henrici is an amateur photographer residing in
California, but whose heart is somewhere between Tuckerton and Leeds Point. He
spent summers as a child in Lavalette, where he learned to surf, and graduated
in 1976 from Stockton State College, living in and around pre-casino Atlantic
City. "Invariably sunset would find me somewhere around the Mullica or Wading
Rivers," he says, and he'd "follow the creeks up into the pines a bit. Rusty
places. Old boats. There was simply too much to shoot. I learned to appreciate
the awesome beauty of the bayshore." With his wife, Michelle, he moved to
California, where they are both teachers, but "had these vivid South Jersey
dreams, the residue of having stared at it so much."
Susan P. Hill-Doyle grew up on Long Beach Island and began
capturing her native shore in pictures at age nine. She received a B.A. in
studio art from the University of California, Santa Barbara, and now divides her
time between photography, teaching elementary school art, and raising her sons
Harry and Jack. Her work has appeared in numerous publications, galleries, and
art shows. "Capturing a moment when everything is in perfect balance - light,
subject, and atmosphere - is what my work is all about," she says.
Cornelius Hogenbirk served as a U. S. Army Signal Corps
photographer in Japan during the occupation, covering the Yokohama war crimes
trials. His first camera was a Brownie Hawkeye box camera, at age 10 in 1927.
His scenic photographs of southern New Jersey, the Pine Barrens, and the shore
have appeared in many regional publications. Retired, living in Waretown, N.J.,
he now devotes his time to gardening and nature photography.
Stephen Jasiecki has been photographing in the southern New
Jersey shore for the past 20 years. He works as an electrician and resides in
Egg Harbor Township, N.J..
Mike Jones spent ten years as a photojournalist, six of
those years as the staff photographer with The Coast Star in Manasquan, before
pursuing a full time freelance career. His father taught him to use his old
Pentax SLR at age 10, and by the end of high school he was using a 4x5 Graflex.
During summer vacations in Maine, he would climb around the rocky shore with a
camera and tripod rather than visiting downtown Bar Harbor with his family.
Currently shooting travel images and landscapes across the U.S., he makes use of
a Toyo view camera and Mamiya RZ-67 medium format camera. He lives in Toms
River.
With stock of over 25,000 images, Donald T. Kelly's nature and travel
photographs have been published in formats ranging from calendars, postcards,
notecards, and bookmarks to electronic media, encyclopedias, and other books and
magazines, as well as displayed in exhibitions. A resident of Mays Landing, he
makes his living as a union electrician, but has been a dedicated photographer
for more than 25 years, selling his work professionally for the last seven.
Photography is only one of his artistic passions, however; he is also a writer
and painter, and has been a pianist and composer for over 30 years, having
written over 100 compositions for piano, duets for piano and violin, and choral
anthems.
For over a decade, photographer Patti Kelly has documented the environment
along the Jersey Shore from the beaches to the back bays. Her award-wining work
appears in magazines, newspapers, and books illustrating the people and places
of New Jersey. Patti Kelly received a BA in Journalism from Temple
University.
Michael J. Kilpatrick operates a nature photography guide
service specializing in New Jersey coastal marsh and seashore subjects. A
resident of Lindenwold, N.J., and originally from North Wildwood, his work has
appeared in national publications, including Nature Conservancy magazine and
Ducks Unlimited.
Rich A. King spends much of his life, since the mid-1980s,
in the back bay marshes of Island Beach State Park, often sitting in a blind
poised with his cameras. He is, admittedly, obsessed with the estuary, and when
not making photographs there, he is giving lectures, slide shows, and
educational programs on the estuary food chain, wildlife, and the bayshore
environment. He makes his living as a plumber in Toms River. Of his passion for
this ecosystem, he says: "What I look for is to open people's eyes."
A doctor of optometry in Freehold, Edward Kulback, finds his creative outlet
working with his camera equipment in manual mode to "slow down the process, and
think about what is being captured on film."
The nature and scenic photography of Daniel Leach, of Hatfield, Pa., has gone
from a serious hobby in the 1980's to a part-time profession since 1996.
Manny Lekkas received his photography education at the New
York Institute of Photography, has won awards for his work at numerous New
Jersey art shows, and has been published in Nature Photographer, Peterson's
Photographic, New Jersey Outdoors, and other publications. He currently resides
in Winston Salem, N.C.
Burton E. Lipman's photographs have been widely published in
magazines and newspapers and have won top prizes in juried contests. A resident
of East Brunswick, N.J., he has had a varied career: as president and C.E.O. of
a Lehman Brothers Co. subsidiary; founder and president of a heart-pacer
component manufacturer; and vice-president of operations for Wyeth and Lever
Brothers companies. He is also the author of technical books published by John
Wiley, Prentice-Hall, and Bell Publishing.
Judie Lynn, a retail store manager in Ocean County, laments
that she has little time for her photography anymore. However, with a career
change into real estate, she looks forward to more flexible scheduling that will
allow her to once again to pursue her passion of photography.
Robert Manners grew up in Trenton, and served as a
photographer in the U.S. Army. He resided in Manahawkin for many years and now
lives in Atlantic City, where he works for the Hilton Casino.
Bob Manning is employed as a Senior Business Analyst at
Computer Aid Inc. in Wilmington, Del., and is a part time wedding photographer.
His love of photography began in the first grade when he took a picture with an
old Brownie box camera. He was influenced by his mother, who as a single parent
working out of the home, supported Bob and his brother by hand coloring and
painting photographs for the top photographers of the day. A graduate of
the New York Institute of Photography, his photographs have been exhibited in
shows from northern New Jersey to the Jersey Shore to the Pocono Mountains of
Pennsylvania.
Thomas A. McGuire became an award-winning photographer,
focusing on the Jersey Shore and participating in art shows throughout the
state. During the 1990s, many of his images were included in the Down The Shore
calendars. He delighted in sharing his work, and when praised for it, would say,
"God created the image. I just snap it." He died in 2003, after a valiant battle
with cancer, but his work lives on to inspire us.
Don Merwin resides in Cape May.
Michael S. Miller's work has been published in calendars and
in local and national publications and is included in private collections and
galleries. A graduate of the Art Institute of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., he is also
a long-time guide for the Monmouth County Park System, and resides with his wife
in Avon-by-the-Sea.
Robert S. Misewich bought his first 35mm camera while
serving overseas in the army in 1960. He became a dedicated nature photographer
in 1996, after retiring from a 31-year career as a field engineer with Lucent
Technologies. A resident of Turnersville, N.J., his travels up and down the east
coast have produced images published in Birder's World and other
publications.
Melissa Molyneux is a freelance photojournalist in the New
York region, working for magazine and newspaper clients such as the Star Ledger,
The New York Times, and stock agencies from her home in Basking Ridge. A
graduate of the Pratt Institute with a B.F.A. in photography, she studied at
Central Saint Martins School of Art and Design in London. Staying true to her
fine art roots she applies her fine art training to her passion for
photojournalism.
Peter Keenen O'Brien has contributed to the Down The Shore
calendars for a decade and one of his photographs appears on the cover of the
novel Tales From An Endless Summer. He follows in the footsteps of his father
and grandfather as a photographer, first borrowing his father's camera for a
cross-country trip during high school. Born and raised in Bayonne, he graduated
from Seton Hall in 1978 and earned a masters of divinity at the university's
graduate school of theology. With an interest in ecclesiastical art, he has
contributed to documentaries, most recently as an associate producer on the film
"An Unreliable Witness" during filming in Ireland.
For Rob Pietri, the Jersey Shore was a great place to grow
up in the mid 1960s and the 1970s. Summers were spent fishing with his Dad for
stripers, blues, and blowfish or snorkeling off the jetties, spear fishing,
crabbing; then, as a teen, surfing and lifeguarding. "Now, at midlife crisis
stage, I am glad I can capture in my photography some of the feelings and
flavors of what was once enjoyed by myself and others. Open your eyes and hear
the music," he says. Over the last ten years J.J. Raia has tried to
photograph every corner of New Jersey in all seasons for his calendars and
continues to discover new places all the time. In addition, he has now begun to
photograph the landscapes of the western U.S. but continues to make a living
running trains for Amtrak and lives in Edison with his wife and two
children.
Dan Rogers lives in Lancaster County, Pa., and works as a
construction manager but has been shooting scenic photography for almost 30
years. His serious interest in photography began while doing documentary
photography as an archeologist in West Virginia.
Dan Ryan, of Highlands, N.J., has been taking pictures since
his father gave him a Kodak pocket camera with flash cubes as a teenager. He
works in the field of training support and incorporates photography into his
work.
Larry Savadove is the author two novels - The Oyster Singer
and The Sound of One Hand - a cookbook, Melting Pot West, and co-author of Great
Storms of the Jersey Shore. A graduate of Harvard College, he has lived in
Japan, Latin America, and Los Angeles, but spent every summer of his boyhood on
Long Beach Island and returned to settle there after years of wandering the
world as a sailor, a soldier, a journalist, an adman, and a maker of
award-winning documentaries, most notably "The Undersea World of Jacques
Cousteau." His two children are also veterans of Long Beach Island; he is at
work on two more novels, also set at the shore.
After working in television for over twelve years, Brien Szabo switched
careers to become a professional nature photographer and stay-at-home dad. He
specializes in capturing diverse natural images of his home state of New Jersey
and the northeast. He's been published in magazines, teaches photography, and
hosts nature photography workshops throughout the region.
Pat Totten has been photographing the Jersey Shore for the
past 30 years. Since retiring from teaching chemistry she has traveled
extensively, taking her camera to every continent to pursue her passion for
photography. Much of her travel is centered around astronomical events, such as
eclipses and meteor showers. In November 2003 she was part of a small group of
the first humans ever to see a total solar eclipse from Antarctica.
Frank L. Varkala has concentrated on the Jersey Shore and
the mountains of Vermont and New Hampshire as a photographer for 13 years, and,
recently, has begun shooting casual portraits and weddings. A 1974 graduate of
Fairleigh Dickinson University, and long-time resident of southern Ocean County,
N.J., he now lives in Vermont.
Sally Vennel and her husband divide their time between Surf
City, N.J. and Crested Butte, Colo. Her work has been featured in calendars and
art shows in both locations and in California. She says her photography takes
her "to many beautiful places, including numerous safaris in Africa."
Rick Vizzi has been photographing nature and subjects of his
interest since he was 10 and, although he received a B.A. in art from William
Paterson University and Rutgers, never had "professional" jobs as a photographer
other than a few years shooting weddings and some newspaper features. "I decided
not to try to make a living at it, which allowed me to pursue it my way." A
historic restoration contractor for almost twenty years, his latest pursuit is
woodturning. His goal is to make fine prints of as many of his photographs as
possible, and to exhibit them. "I have some things I'd like to communicate," he
says, "more than just showing a collection of photos."
David Lorenz Winston's lifelong love of the natural
landscape has taken him on travels from his home in Philadelphia throughout the
U.S. and to Siberia, Peru, India, Nepal, Tibet, Greece, Portugal and Nova
Scotia. His work has appeared in calendars and on cards published by
Pomegranate, Brown Trout, UNICEF, the National Wildlife Federation, Hallmark,
and Recycled Paper Products. He is working on the photography for a series of
children's books about farm life, the first of which was the award-winning Life
on a Pig Farm.
Rich Youmans is a magazine and book editor who has
specialized in the history and literature of the Jersey Shore. He is the editor
of Shore Stories: An Anthology of the Jersey; co-editor, with Frank Finale, of
Under a Gull's Wing: Poems and Photographs of the Jersey; and co-author, with
Russell Roberts, of Down the Jersey.