000 02044nam a2200253 a 4500
001 003601
005 20231009192024.0
008 210330s19781978nyua 000 u eng d
020 _a0810913259
050 0 0 _aPN1042
_b.H8
082 1 _aREF LAS 917.2 BRA
_2
100 1 _aBradbury, Ray
_d(, 1920-2012)
245 1 4 _aThe Mummies of Guanajuato
_c/ Ray Bradbury ; photography, Archie Lieberman
260 _aNew York
_b: H.N. Abrams
_c, 1978
300 _aunnumbered pages
_b: illus.
_c; 31 cm
520 _aIn the sleepy Mexican town of Guanajuato, with its neatly kept square and elegant neoclassical theater, is one of the most bizarre and compelling galleries in the Western world. It is not a museum, for this gallery is in a cemetery; its walls lined not with art but with human mummies, standing with mouths agape, eye sockets staring as if they had just returned from the other side of Hell. Indeed, they have literally returned from the grave--exhumed from the dry, desert soil by cemetery keepers because relatives of the dead were too poor to pay for maintenance. So fascinating are these "living dead" that noted author Ray Bradbury wrote a chilling short story after seeing them: so visually arresting that photographer Archie Lieberman was moved to quell his horror and create a pictorial record. The two artists' reactions comprise this unusual book. The photographs call up the deepest and most provocative human emotions. They will shock, disturb and terrify. But they compel viewing; they stimulate confrontation and, believe it or not, will be examined again and again. The story, like all Bradbury's writing, quivers with tension and evokes the thoughts and feelings that reside mostly on the dark side of the mind--stuff of nightmares. No one who experiences this book will ever forget it.
546 _aEnglish.
650 4 _aMummies
651 4 _aGuanajuato (Mexico)
_x-Antiquities
_x-Pictorial works
651 4 _aMexico
_x-Antiquities
700 1 _aLierberman, Archie
942 _cLAS
999 _c224405
_d224405