Anne Wilkes Tucker, curator at the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, said that until the book was produced few published interviews existed that "offer an extended view of the craft of conflict photography."
"The interviews in 'Photojournalists on War' give the experience a full voice, and I know of no other comparable collection for any-post Vietnam conflict... nothing approaches the depth of Kamber's book," she said.
Published by the University of Texas Press, the book was presented in New York on Wednesday in the presence of the author and several contributors.
"Photographers are storytellers: most love to talk," Kamber writes. "As a group, I believe we saw more of the war -- more of the actual ground war -- than any group of civilian observers, save for the Iraqis, of course."
Contributors include photojournalists working for the Associated Press, the Guardian, the Los Angeles Times, Paris Match, Reuters and Time.
In-depth interviews give first-person accounts of events from the long conflict that began with the 2003 US-led invasion such as the toppling of former dictator Saddam Hussein's statue and the battle for Fallujah.
They also touch on issues of censorship and the role of the media, as well as what journalists sometimes have to go through to capture images of conflict or human stories amid the chaos.
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"The interviews in 'Photojournalists on War' give the experience a full voice, and I know of no other comparable collection for any-post Vietnam conflict... nothing approaches the depth of Kamber's book," she said.
Published by the University of Texas Press, the book was presented in New York on Wednesday in the presence of the author and several contributors.
"Photographers are storytellers: most love to talk," Kamber writes. "As a group, I believe we saw more of the war -- more of the actual ground war -- than any group of civilian observers, save for the Iraqis, of course."
Contributors include photojournalists working for the Associated Press, the Guardian, the Los Angeles Times, Paris Match, Reuters and Time.
In-depth interviews give first-person accounts of events from the long conflict that began with the 2003 US-led invasion such as the toppling of former dictator Saddam Hussein's statue and the battle for Fallujah.
They also touch on issues of censorship and the role of the media, as well as what journalists sometimes have to go through to capture images of conflict or human stories amid the chaos.
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