
Jessica Helfand|Books, Observer Decameron
December 31, 2009
The Observer Decameron—Second Day

Carl de Keyzer, DavidVan Reybrouck, and Geoff Dyer, editors.
A stunning and haunting reminder of the Great War and its horrors, as viewed from the front lines,and elsewhere. An extraordinary book.

Laia Abril
A circumspect examination of one family’s unspeakable loss in the wake of a young daughter’s untimely death, from complications of bulimia. Abril is a slow looker—a photographer who bears witness with candor and compassion.

Tim Marshall
For designers who thrill to the idea of the infographic, maps are like crack. This is the mothership of essential data, and it’s well researched and written, too.

Sven Birkerts
Looking closely at the questionable technological practices by which we are often unwittingly united, Birkerts takes his cues from art, philosophy, and literature. He’s a (self-described) crank, but a deeply thoughtful and highly articulate one.

Sherry Turkle
Meditations on communication in the digital age. Turkle is a magnificent writer who writes with honesty and scrutiny about the impact of technology on all that is human.

Elizabeth Alexander
Heartbreakingly written and brave, a poet and professor examines her own profound loss when her husband dies unexpectedly.

Julie Halls
A mesmerizing visual collection of the dashed optimism of a forgotten age. Exquisite.

C. Huhne
The behemoth of the year—weighing in at approximately fourteen pounds—with large-scale reproductions of iconic images from the golden age of airline travel.

Jennifer Gross, editor
Thoughtfully compiled and richly illustrated, and a reminder that drawing lies at the core of so much of what we see and remember.

Maira Kalman
From our beloved Maira—what is there to say? The book, its author, its subject: perfection.
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