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Hardback

Long May You Run

$34.99
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Few people know Brooklyn like Tom Roma does and he has traversed and photographed nearly every inch of it for six decades. Here he turns his attention on his favorite cars he’s shot from 1973-1988. Growing up in Brooklyn, we kids considered parked cars as part of the landscape. We’d hide behind and under them, and if the play involved a chase, felt free to hop up and run across a hood or a trunk to evade capture. Afterwards, when we were just hanging out, a fender would become the furniture in our open-air living room. But for the car’s owners it was sometimes a different story – a car and its parking place could become contested territory, and we’d be forced to move on if they exercised their right to it.

For the adults, cars were beasts of burden, pack animals harnessed for work. But for us, with names like Barracuda, Mustang, Falcon, and Impala, they were more like wildlife. As teenagers, before any of us had a license, we made a game of seeing who could be the first to call out the make, model and year of a car coming down the block. We’d all stare at it as it got closer and closer, and declare the winner as it passed by.

I never stopped staring at cars. These pictures were taken in Brooklyn from 1973 to 1988.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
powerHouse Books
Date
20 September 2022
Pages
38
ISBN
9781576878903

Few people know Brooklyn like Tom Roma does and he has traversed and photographed nearly every inch of it for six decades. Here he turns his attention on his favorite cars he’s shot from 1973-1988. Growing up in Brooklyn, we kids considered parked cars as part of the landscape. We’d hide behind and under them, and if the play involved a chase, felt free to hop up and run across a hood or a trunk to evade capture. Afterwards, when we were just hanging out, a fender would become the furniture in our open-air living room. But for the car’s owners it was sometimes a different story – a car and its parking place could become contested territory, and we’d be forced to move on if they exercised their right to it.

For the adults, cars were beasts of burden, pack animals harnessed for work. But for us, with names like Barracuda, Mustang, Falcon, and Impala, they were more like wildlife. As teenagers, before any of us had a license, we made a game of seeing who could be the first to call out the make, model and year of a car coming down the block. We’d all stare at it as it got closer and closer, and declare the winner as it passed by.

I never stopped staring at cars. These pictures were taken in Brooklyn from 1973 to 1988.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
powerHouse Books
Date
20 September 2022
Pages
38
ISBN
9781576878903