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Hardcover Endless Nevada Book

ISBN: 193217303X

ISBN13: 9781932173031

Endless Nevada

Nevada has long been a place of endless mystery, irony and flat-out wonderment for those who have taken time to experience it. The authors have probed every hidden region of Nevada to find and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Customer Reviews

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The best coffee table book on Nevada?

While there are quite a few similarly minded books out there, "Endless Nevada: A Photo Essay" rises to the top. This title balances the qualities of a coffee table book (a small amount of readable text with copious graphics) with essays that reflect a surprising amount of insightfulness, creativity and succinctness. First, the photographs are spectacular. The photos show a blend of natural and human subjects. Whether showing Reno, the Paiute or the Ruby Mountains, Larry Prosor's images are spectacular. Given the large size of the book, the photographic impact is increased. As a piece of eye candy, some may be tempted to skip the text. Eventually, however, that would be a mistake since the writing is just as powerful as the imagery. There are similarly minded books that give the sense that some eastern or foreign publisher hired an outsider to do something on the Battle Born State. In contrast, Richard Moreno's writing proves that he has street cred. It's not just his credentials which include being publisher of "Nevada Magazine" and author of several books on his home state including "The Roadside History of Nevada." He has insights that few can offer. More than anything else, it is the economy of his writing that most impresses me. Compared to previous readings on the Sagebrush State, Moreno has a talent for using relatively few words to cover the essential topics in a way that employs humor and a beauty of language. "Endless Nevada" flexes big guns as it even features a foreword by John L. Smith. Perhaps due to the author's residence in Reno, the book's emphasis leans on covering upstate. In terms of format, the book has chapters that thematically cover topics such as the people, the outback, the past and cities. The pacing works out so that for every dozen pages of stunning photographs, there are about four or five pages of text. While it may be the strongest book in its class, "Endless Nevada" seems to languish in terms of popularity. Granted, new copies are pricey, but at the time of review, a dozen used copies could be had for less than ten bucks. If you're looking for the ultimate overview of Nevada, here it is.

Endless Nevada is Endless Pleasure

By Sam Bauman, Nevada Appeal Staff Writer Coffee table books are common as snowflakes in December, but every once in a while one comes along that is photographically ahead of the rest.Such is the case with "Endless Nevada, a Photo Essay" by photographer Larry Prosor and Nevada magazine publisher and Nevada Appeal travel writer Richard Moreno.From the brilliant book jacket of embossed gold of a man fishing in the Truckee River to the picture of a lonely wagon road in the Jarbidge Wilderness, this is a treat to the eye.There's plenty to read as well as vistas to enjoy. John. L. Smith, Las Vegas Review-Journal columnist, offers a foreword. The late Robert Laxalt adds an introduction, ending on a magnificent panorama by Prosor of "Moonset Over Independence Ridge."Each chapter is headed by a slightly washed-out photo across two pages, with a small photo insert. The first chapter is titled "Overview." In it, Moreno offers a fast-moving history of Nevada, from geological formation millions of years ago to 1931, when the Legislature approved gambling and the six-week divorce residency.The next chapter, "The Land," is a stunning collection of Prosor photographs, such as an open trail in Thomas Canyon, Elko County, and a surreal vision of geysers in the Black Rock Desert. Subsequent chapters include "Searching for Wraiths," "The Past," "Mealtime," "The People," "Gathering Places," "The Places," "A Cowboy Needs a Poem," "The Cowboys," "America's Outback," "The Cities" and "End of the Road."Moreno writes of the Basque immigrants and the opening of their hotels and boarding houses, catering to the Basque sheepherders who descended from the hills for a good meal and soft bed.In "Gathering Places," Moreno writes:"Saloons have long been rural Nevada's social clubs, political meeting halls and psychiatry couches. Intimate secrets, heated words, unkeepable promises and tall tales have all be passed at least a time or two over a beer. In most small Nevada towns, the local watering holes are the places where nearly everyone meets, at least sometime during the week, to swap gossip, make deals, or just socialize. If a small town is perceived as something organic, then the saloon is its soul. It is where opinions are formed, decisions are made and, occasionally, consensus occurs."In the introduction to "The Places," an especially striking photo shows two tiny people atop a gigantic tower of rock in the Ruby Mountains. You know no helicopter brought them to that peak.In "A Cowboy Needs a Poem," Moreno writes:"Cowboys are part of what defines Nevada and the West. Despite having been overly romanticized in movies, books, songs and television shows, there is really something appealing about a cowboy. Perhaps it is the perceived freedom of living out under the stars, or the way the cowboy myth neatly parallels traditional American beliefs in self-determination and hard work. For whatever reasons, cowboys fascinate us."This is only a brief description of the wealth of beauty
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