“Short Nights of the Shadow Catcher” by Tim Egan (The Big
Burn; Worst Hard Time). In this
biography (Mariner Books, 2012)
Egan tells the epic life of one Edward Curtis, sixth-grade
educated photographer whose cause became recording the ethnography of the
American Indian, circa 1900, before that entire way of life turned to so much
dust.
Egan’s work unveils of the dedication, hard work and soaring
triumphs of this man as well as the deep chasms of his despair at society’s
inability to grasp his concept.
Egan shares Curtis’s at-whatever-cost efforts to record the passing of
North America’s great cultures while selling the importance of his work to
presidents, philanthropists, movie moguls and the general public – too many
times coming up empty.
To me, and to many others, Edward Curtis’s life was that of
an unsung man – someone about whom I would know nothing were it not for the
efforts of a reporter such as Egan to bring his life to light. I have spent the afternoon thumbing
through the many volumes I have that tell of Native American Life in both words
and image. Many of those images
are the work of Curtis, but because of the inability of turn-of-the century
America to value his efforts, the rights to his most amazing work were sold for
a pittance.
That which we do this
day may not be rewarded in this life.
This is a good read that makes me want to walk further in
the footsteps of a remarkable man.
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