Martin Stupich is an internationally recognized photographer of industry and landscape. His photography books include Red Desert: History of a Place, with Annie Proulx, and his work is extensively covered in Through the Lens of the City: NEA Photography Surveys of the 1970s by Mark Rice and The Altered Landscape: Photographs of a Changing Environment, edited by Ann M. Wolfe, and in numerous critical essays and exhibition catalogs over his forty-year career. Dagoberto Gilb is the author of three books from UNM Press, The Magic of Blood, winner of the PEN/Hemingway Award and a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award, the anthology Hecho en Tejas, winner of the PEN/Southwest Book Award, and A Passing West: Essays from the Borderlands, winner of the 2025 PEN/Diamonstein/Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay. His fiction and nonfiction have appeared in both the New Yorker and Harper's, and his work has been featured in Best American Essays and O. Henry Prize Stories.
Description
"This handsome and unusual book will fascinate general readers as well as students, historians, architects, and environmentalists. Martin Stupich spent years photographing ASARCO's entangled complex of pipes, furnaces, hearths, and smokestacks that produced great wealth for a handful of Gilded Age families. It also deeply scarred and polluted the earth. This unique postmortem study presents the entwined histories of American capitalism and environmental destruction." - Annie Proulx, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Shipping News "As most who will have the enormous pleasure of encountering this book, I strain to find description for the abandoned remains of an industrial slaughter ground for minerals. . . . Look through these photographs; be struck by what is shockingly beautiful to the mind." - Dagoberto Gilb, from the foreword

