Gary Saretzky Photo Books
Friedman, Susan. A Separate Place. Photographs by Susan Friedman. Text by Charles Jones.
Friedman, Susan. A Separate Place. Photographs by Susan Friedman. Text by Charles Jones.
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Sierra Club, 1974. First edition in cloth, ex-library, good plus with usual library evidence and small spot of shelf wear along bottom front edge, in fine protected dust jacket with library spine label. 144 pages with Friedman's black-and-white photos taken of people and places in and around La Honda, 50 miles from San Francisco, California, and the redwoods on the Pacific side of the Santa Cruz Mountains. The photos on this book are nicely printed one-to-a-page on glossy stock, unlike the text pages. Both the author and photographer were La Honda residents and knew the area well. Some of Friedman's photographs were published in the magazine, Creative Camera, May 1978. Summary:
A Separate Place (1974) is a lyrical photo-documentary that captures the spirit and landscape of La Honda, a small town tucked into the Santa Cruz Mountains of California. Published by the Sierra Club, the book is a meditation on the concept of "place" and the desire for isolation in a rapidly developing world.
Core Narrative and Text
The text, written by Charles Jones, is a deeply personal and observational account of living in a rural enclave. Jones wrote much of the material while living in various makeshift dwellings—including a blue tent, an old ranch building, and a cabin—and even while writing from the back room of a local saloon.
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Atmospheric Insight: Jones explores the feeling of being "hidden" by the ancient redwoods and the unique social fabric of a community that deliberately exists on the margins of mainstream society.
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Environmental Connection: Typical of Sierra Club publications of the era, the text emphasizes a profound, almost spiritual connection to the rugged terrain and the necessity of preserving such wild, "separate" spaces.
Photographic Style
Susan Friedman’s black-and-white photographs provide the visual soul of the book. Her work avoids the grand, sweeping vistas often associated with nature photography of the time, opting instead for an "intimate landscape"approach:
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Focus on Detail: She captures the play of light through thick canopy, the texture of weathered wood, and the quiet, fog-heavy atmosphere characteristic of the Santa Cruz Mountains.
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Human Presence: Her images document the modest structures and the subtle marks left by the inhabitants, reinforcing the book's theme of a humble, harmonious coexistence with nature.
Key Information
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Published: 1974 by Sierra Club Books.
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Format: 143 pages, featuring high-quality monochrome plates.
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Significance: The book is a quintessential artifact of the 1970s "back-to-the-land" movement, serving as both a local history of La Honda and a broader philosophical inquiry into how humans find sanctuary in the natural world.
Summary: A Separate Place is a quiet, evocative tribute to a specific California valley, celebrating the beauty of seclusion and the profound influence that a specific geography can have on the human spirit.
