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These black and white photographs and poems reveal the cultural
geography of a vanishing America, using images of New Jersey that
look back to a place in our collective memory: old state highways,
greasy roadside diners, abandoned movie theaters, the vanishing
Main Streets of Woolworth's five and dimes and of post-industrial
inner-cities. It is an unusual collection in that the photographer
is also a poet who documents the beauty amid the desolation of
rust-belt America. In both verbal and visual imagery, Hillringhouse
gives us a shadowed world caught between elegy and silence and that
moves us from vastness to intimacy. Between Frames weaves family
history, personal guilt, feelings of loss with meditations on the
strangeness of being in a world fraught with beauty and decay. As
the poet Gerald Stern says in his blurb, "The absolute sadness of
America is in these poems and these photographs; and all the old
hopes and dreams--and the rage--scattered throughout..." And as the
writer Phillip Lopate states in his blurb, ..".they conjure another
world, shadowy and haunted, a royal vision lurking just beyond the
everyday, like de Chirico's streetscapes."
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