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Looking for Mr. Gilbert: The Reimagined Life of an African American

by John Hanson Mitchell

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362674,595 (2.5)2
Looking for Mr. Gilbert is an account of the quest to uncover the heretofore unknown life of Robert A. Gilbert, an African American serving man who worked for the ornithologist William Brewster. A man of many talents, Gilbert went on to become the first African American landscape photographer.
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Biographical life of Mr. Gilbert is really welcome!

Not so great are the over abundance of Brewster and Gilbert's hunting and taxidermy details - where was compassion for The Birds?!?

As well, not including any of the mentioned photographs detracted from the essence of the book,
along with too many extraneous side journeys and boring Paris and F. Scott Fitzgerald.

That said, the author's descriptions of nature trails was fascinating!

(Just re-issue with photos and review will be at least 4 stars.) ( )
  m.belljackson | Sep 29, 2021 |
John Hanson Mitchell's Looking for Mr. Gilbert: The Reimagined Life of an African American (2007, Shoemaker & Hoard) is the sort of book that gives me fits. It's nicely written with some very fascinating details and much potential, but something about it just didn't quite work for me.

After stumbling across some old photographic plates long attributed to Harvard ornithologist William Brewster, Mitchell finds out that the photographer was likely Robert Gilbert, Brewster's longtime assistant. The book is the story of Mitchell's pursuit of knowledge about Gilbert, particularly regarding his role in the ornithological scene of the late 1800s and the aftermath of his time with Mr. Brewster (when he lived in Paris, &c.).

Unfortunately Mitchell decided he needed to move beyond what facts are known about Gilbert's life and offer significant and unwarranted speculations to fill in the gaps. Of course since nothing is footnoted the reader's never sure where fact stops and fiction begins, which is always a troubling state of affairs. If Mitchell wanted to write a novel about Gilbert, he ought to have done so (and easily could have, there's plenty of grist for the mill). Aside from the biographical details - imagined or real - Mitchell's discussion of his own travels in search of information about Gilbert is the more interesting part of the book. He meets some real characters along the way (even if he doesn't ever manage to learn much of relevance from them).

Mitchell's flights of fancy sometimes seem rather overwrought, as when Mitchell 'finds' Gilbert in an F. Scott Fitzgerald character from Tender is the Night and meanders on for pages drawing conclusions about Gilbert's life from Fitzgerald's novel.

Perhaps the most ironic deficiency of this book is the lack of illustrations. Considering that the man he's searching for was, er, may have been, a photographer, the number of photographs in the book is surprisingly meager. Instead, at many points find Mitchell describing photographs to the reader - hardly effective without the visual accompaniment.

Mitchell's prose is clear and pleasant, and his topic is certainly a worthy and interesting one. If you can overcome the difficulties I had with it, I'm sure it would be an enjoyable read.

http://philobiblos.blogspot.com/2007/04/book-review-looking-for-mr-gilbert.html ( )
2 vote JBD1 | Apr 14, 2007 |
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A 1.  PHOTOGRAPH IS ONLY A FRAGMENT, AND WITH THE PASSAGE OF TIME ITS MOORINGS BECOME UNSTUCK.  IT DRIFTS AWAY INTO A SOFT ABSTRACT PASTNESS, OPEN TO ANY KIND OF READING-SUSAN SONTAG.
2.  Time preserves everything, but as it does so, it fades things to the colorlessness of ancient photographs fixed on metal plates.  LIGHT AND TIME ERASE THE CONTOURS AND DISTINCTIVE SHADING OF THE FACES.  ONE HAS TO ANGLE THE IMAGE THIS WAY AND THAT UNTIL IT CATCHES THE LIGHT IN A PARTICULAR WAY AND ONE CAN MAKE OUT THE PERSON WHOSE FEATURES HAVE BEEN ABSORBED INTO THE BLANK SURFACE OF THE PLACE.  
Sandor MARAIS.
3.  PHOTOGRAPHS, WHICH CANNOT THEMSELVES EXPLAIN ANYTHING, ARE INEXHAUSTIBLE INVITATIONS TO DEDUCTION, SPECULATION, AND FANTASY.  SUSAN SONTAG
4.  THE PHOTOGRAPH MERELY REPEATS WHAT IS BEING SAID IN WORDS.  JOHN BERGER
5.   PHOTOGRAPHS DEALS EXQUISITELY WITH APPEARANCES, BUT NOTHING IS WHAT IT APPEARS TO BE. DUANE MICHALS  
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For my father James Archibald Mitchell 1892-1967.
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April 6, 1911, Concord Massachusetts:As far as the eye could see that day, nothing moved. 
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Looking for Mr. Gilbert is an account of the quest to uncover the heretofore unknown life of Robert A. Gilbert, an African American serving man who worked for the ornithologist William Brewster. A man of many talents, Gilbert went on to become the first African American landscape photographer.

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