HOLDING
OUT and HANGING ON
Surviving Hurricane Katrina
Thomas Neff
Hardbound,
10" x 10½",
128 pages
2007, University of Missouri Press
T ext by Thomas Neff
Foreword by David Houston
From the publisher:
Marketing Words cannot adequately convey the human dimension of
the devastation wreaked on New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina. Thomas
Neff's photographs can. As a volunteer in the city in the early
days after the flood, this Baton Rouge photographer witnessed
firsthand the confusion and suffering that was New Orleans-as
well as the persistence and strength of those who stuck it out.
Neff subsequently spent forty-five days interviewing and photographing
the city's holdouts, and his record is a heartbreaking but compelling
look at the true impact of the disaster. At a time when New Orleans
residents felt isolated and abandoned, Neff provided the ear that
many needed. The friendship he extended enabled him to capture
remarkable images and to write sensitive commentaries that approach
his subjects from a uniquely personal perspective. Here are Antoinette
K-Doe assessing the future of her ruined Mother-in-Law Lounge;
Juan Parke, who ferried scores of people to safety in his silver
canoe; Ashton O'Dwyer defending his property from looters; Ride
Hamilton pausing in his work as a freelance medic. These portraits
and dozens more tell the story of the storm through many voices-and
collectively they tell a story of their own. Other books have
documented the wrath of Katrina, but none has captured the human
dimension as powerfully as Holding Out and Hanging On.
Through these intimate, intense images, readers will meet people
from all walks of life who are exhausted by grief and shock but
who are determined to hold on to their culture and their city.
Neff's gripping black-and-white images and equally poignant narratives
show individuals who are reorganizing their lives, trying to maintain
their individuality, and even enriching their souls as they help
one another. These are the stories that New Orleans citizens old
each other-a view of the disaster not captured by the news cameras-and
photographs that show the city as it knows itself. Together, Neff's
portraits and stories form a sensitive documentary of survival
and stand as a testament to the extraordinary individuals who
endured one of the most calamitous disasters of our time.
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