Slow Seconds
Shortlisted, New Brunswick Book Award for Non-Fiction
George Taylor's vivid New Brunswick of yesteryear comes to life.
Read more
Read a sample of the book: |
![]() |
Check digital book availability at your public library |
![]() |
Find it at your local book seller |
View more Atlantic book sellers
Buy online from the publisher |
Hardback With printed dust jacket |
$35.00
|
Description | About the author | |
Shortlisted, New Brunswick Book Award for Non-Fiction The photographs of George Taylor (1838-1913) offer viewers a fascinating glimpse into nineteenth-century New Brunswick. Taylor's career coincided with a period when photographers began to provide Canadians with images of the "wilderness." Drawing on the knowledge and expertise of Indigenous guides, Taylor travelled not only through settled parts of New Brunswick, but also into the wilderness of the north, providing views of hitherto unfamiliar and unknown terrain and helping to popularize the outdoors as a venue for canoeing, hunting and fishing. Taylor's work is also a record of rural and farm life on the rich floodplains and intervals of the Saint John River valley, of daily life in Fredericton, and of the large-scale expansion of railways in the province. Captured in the "slow seconds" of his camera, George Taylor's photographs illumined landscapes, people, and the seismic changes taking place at the cusp of the new century. The first book of Taylor's photographs, Slow Seconds presents a curated selection of one hundred photographs together with an account of the beginnings of photography and Taylor's life and work. |
Page length | 184 |
Publication date (yyyymmmdd) | 20190924 |
Publisher | Goose Lane Editions |
ISBN: | 9781773101361 |