Published by Alfred A. Knopf / Melcher Media, 1997
ISBN 10: 0679454535 ISBN 13: 9780679454533
Language: English
Seller: Moe's Books, Berkeley, CA, U.S.A.
Hard cover. Condition: Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Good. Jacket is rubbed, with wear and creasing along edges. Small, one-inch tear from top edge of jacket spine. Cover is lightly rubbed. Spine is shaken, but binding is secure. Red Sharpie mark on bottom edge of text block, visible on lower edges of some pages, but not covering text. Pages are otherwise clean and unmarked.
Published by Chronicle Books, 2004., 2004
ISBN 10: 0811844137 ISBN 13: 9780811844130
Language: English
Seller: Sainsbury's Books Pty. Ltd., Camberwell, VIC, Australia
Landscape 4to, 127pp. Colour illustrations. A very good paperback copy with a slightly yellowed spine.
Published by Alfred A. Knopf, Melcher Media, 1997
ISBN 10: 0679454535 ISBN 13: 9780679454533
Language: English
Seller: ANARTIST, New York, NY, U.S.A.
Hardcover with dustjacket, 128 pages; very good condition; light rubbing to dj; no internal marks. Foreign shipping may be extra.
Published by Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1997
ISBN 10: 0679454535 ISBN 13: 9780679454533
Language: English
Seller: ERIC CHAIM KLINE, BOOKSELLER (ABAA ILAB), Santa Monica, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition
First edition. Oblong quarto. 128pp. Color photo dust jacket, yellow spine lettered in black. Color illustrated boards that mimic the d.j. Illustrated throughout with color photographs. A fine, as new copy. This book was the winner of "The International Center of Photography Infinity Award for Young Photographer." "From the affluent children of the Westside to the graffiti gangs and party crews of East L.A., the Los Angeles young are obsessed by the seductive lifestyle of the entertainment industry, with its emphasis on celebrity, looks, money, and things. Greenfield's pictures and text chronicle vastly disparate yet eerily similar child societies: an eight-year-old recording his own rap music in his father's home recording studio, a gay teenager experimenting with drag at the. Hollywood High School for the Performing Arts, a Latino tagger seeking recognition and respect by spray-painting the name of his crew on the city's walls and buses. L.A.'s children are indoctrinated early into the cult of image: Greenfield documents a competition for aspiring models, a teen recovering from a nose job, and a thirteen-year-old working out with her personal trainer. Copying their inner-city peers, rich Beverly Hills kids hang in crews and talk like. Gangsters; the poor and the affluent sport pagers and hip-hop fashion, step out at lavish proms, cruise in stoked-up cars. Through Greenfield's compassionate and incisive lens, we become witness to an arresting vision of our children and our society." Publisher.
Published by Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1997
ISBN 10: 0679454535 ISBN 13: 9780679454533
Language: English
Seller: ERIC CHAIM KLINE, BOOKSELLER (ABAA ILAB), Santa Monica, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
First edition. 4to. Oblong. 128pp. Pictorial glossy paper-covered boards in original dj. This book "is a powerful testimony to the ways in which Hollywood values are reflected in the everyday lives and rituals of the youth of Los Angeles. In seventy-nine unforgettable full-color photographs accompanied by poignant and unsettling interviews with children and their parents, the award-winning photographer Lauren Greenfield reveals the realities of growing up too fast in a culture that is, at once, irresistible and unforgiving." Signed by author on free front endpaper. Fine. From the affluent children of the Westside to the graffiti gangs and party crews of East L.A., the Los Angeles young are obsessed by the seductive lifestyle of the entertainment industry, with its emphasis on celebrity, looks, money, and things. Greenfield's pictures and text chronicle vastly disparate yet eerily similar child societies: an eight-year-old recording his own rap music in his father's home recording studio, a gay teenager experimenting with drag at the. Hollywood High School for the Performing Arts, a Latino tagger seeking recognition and respect by spray-painting the name of his crew on the city's walls and buses. L.A.'s children are indoctrinated early into the cult of image: Greenfield documents a competition for aspiring models, a teen recovering from a nose job, and a thirteen-year-old working out with her personal trainer. Copying their inner-city peers, rich Beverly Hills kids hang in crews and talk like. Gangsters; the poor and the affluent sport pagers and hip-hop fashion, step out at lavish proms, cruise in stoked-up cars. Through Greenfield's compassionate and incisive lens, we become witness to an arresting vision of our children and our society. (OCLC).