Serengeti Spy: Views from a Hidden Camera on the Plains of East Africa by Anup Shah

Serengeti SpyI haven’t been in much of a mood to read lately (strange, I know). So I’ve been picking up some of the very cool photography books we’ve gotten at the library lately. In December I looked through Dancers Among Us (and reviewed it). I also looked through and enjoyed Underwater Dogs by Seth Casteel. Recently I picked up Serengeti Spy by Anuup Shah, a beautiful book filled with pictures taken by a hidden camera in the Serengeti National Park in Tanzania and the Maasai Mara Natural Reserve in Kenya.

Shah captured the images in Serengeti Spy by hiding a camera in a small housing that was then covered in mud, grass, and other materials. There was a video link with the camera that allowed Shah to see the remote image his camera was going to capture. The resulting images are interesting and beautiful. These are close-up images captured without the interference of having a human being right there to take them. The camera clicking did attract the attention of some of the animals, but many ignored the camera or ran right by it.

This is not a text heavy book, but each image has a caption about the animals pictured and how they survive on the Serengeti. There are images of elephants, baboons, cheetahs, gazelle, hyenas, and lions, to name a few. There are images of animals eating, playing, checking out the camera, fighting, stampeding, and more. It’s an up close view most of us will never get of some gorgeous wildlife and well worth a look through.

Dancers Among Us by Jordan Matter

Dancers Among Us by Jordan Matter is subtitled “A Celebration of Joy in the Everyday” and it’s a very fitting subtitle. The book is a collection of photographs interspersed with just six very short illustrative stories by Matter about the subjects of dreaming, loving, playing, exploring, grieving, working, and living. The stories are just one to two pages long, leaving the emphasis on the dancers and the beautiful photographs that capture them in action.

What these dancers can do with their bodies is simply amazing. Some of them appear to be levitating. Some are perched precariously from high places. Others are jumping in the rain or snow, and still others are posed in ways that my body certainly does not bend to demonstrate extreme emotions like shame, grief, love, and joy.

The photographs in this book were taken all across the US, plus a few in Canada, in places both well-known and not. The differences in scenes and weather conditions make the photos more visually interesting and lend themselves to the different types of situations and emotions Matter set out to capture.

To learn more about the project and to see videos of how some of these images were captured, go to http://www.dancersamongus.com/.