Postcards from Mecca: The California Desert Photographs of Susie Keef Smith and Lula Mae Graves, 1916-1936
Edited by Ann Japenga and Warner V. Graves III
With chapters authored by Robert B. Smith, Ronald V. May, Steve Lech, Russell L. Kaldenberg, Buford A. Crites, Warner V. Graves III, and Ann Japenga
Susie Keef Smith was seeking escape from a troubled home life and the havoc of childhood polio when she took a job as postmaster in Mecca, on the edge of California's Salton Sea. She and her cousin Lula Mae Graves set out to photograph the last of the prospectors, burro packers and stage stops in the remote desert to the east. They traveled by burro, foot and Ford though sandy washes and roadless canyons, armed with a .38 revolver and a large format camera. While making postcards for the Post Office spinner rack, the women were remade in the wilderness and wound up creating an unparalleled portrait of one of the lesser-known deserts in the West.
Susie Smith's photos were nearly lost to history when—upon her death—they were tossed out by a county estate administrator. A savvy archaeologist jumped into a dumpster and rescued many of the photos in this book. Postcards From Mecca presents portraits of a mysterious land along with the story of its heroic chroniclers, self-taught documentary photographers of the 1920s and '30s.
First edition
184 pages
6.75 x 9.5 x 1.0 inches
Paperback, Perfect BindingTales of the Mojave Road Publishing Co.
ISBN 978-0-914224-41-9
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$20.00Price
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