Sierra Club, 1960. — 104 p.
His work meals a strange and compelling beauty; it is not obscure, oblique, mechanical, or intellectual, but is the evidence of a great insight and intuitive power. It moves the Spirit; then, because it is so simple and direct, it moves the mind and conscience...
What is offered here is not merely a collection of nostalgic and beautiful pictures and poetic text, but a profound revelation of a most uncommon tnan, who, despite avalanches ot problems and distractions, held fast to the essential dream. I regret there must be a date on this work, because, in essence, it is timeless.
Ansel Adams