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enlarge | Author: Bart Mcdowell Creator: James Stanfield Publisher: National Geographic Category: Book
List Price: $18.00 Buy New: $9.98 You Save: $8.02 (45%)
New (29) Used (15) from $7.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 16 reviews Sales Rank: 25493
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 232 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7 Dimensions (in): 10.9 x 9.3 x 0.6
ISBN: 0792252977 Dewey Decimal Number: 945.634 EAN: 9780792252979 ASIN: 0792252977
Publication Date: June 1, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Ships immediately! Perfect and New! Has a publisher remainder mark. 2005 Paperback.
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| Customer Reviews:
The Church that Peter Built - a Pictorial of the Holy Sea March 18, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The Vatican is the centerpoint for the world's Catholics and this is a picture book that captures the extraordinary architecture of Rome's most famous religious landmark. "Peter built the church on the rock of our faith" ... and what it became was The Vatican. Inside the Vatican is a stunning look at what happens when all roads lead to Rome.
Good pictures but ruined by the excessive glue September 24, 2006 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
Like most of National Geographic publications, this book has the flaw of excessive glue used in binding resulting in the center of two pages being glued together. It can not be spread apart without ruining the pictures. Interesting enough, this always happened at pictures of significance, which covers two facing pages, such as the creation of Adam from the ceiling of sistine chapel,the School of Athens by Raphael, and many others. If you are like me who adores beautiful images or paintings and can not tolerate imperfection, do not buy this book because most of the pictures are glued together in the central portion and can not be spread open without ruining it.
Skimpy on the ART January 2, 2002 30 out of 34 found this review helpful
If you can get this book used for under $10 dollars AND... You are interested in the whole workings of the Vatican National Geographic sytle, buy it it, is a great book from that perspective. It is not an over $20 dollar art book because a large number of pages which could have been used for images are wasted on oversize text. Five pages of the books text could have fit on one page. The photographs are great, but they are of everything including wasted full page close ups of guards. If you want a general book on the vatican this book delivers......but if you thought that "Inside the Vatican" meant a lot of art you might not see otherwise this is not the right book for the price. It is not an Art book like one thinks of with Konemann books, there are some good photos and enough for a general book like this but it does not have enough art to warrant the price, then again I guess no one really said it was supposed to be art book. I have written this review just as a warning for some people who might think that there is a lot of art here.....it is not an art book. This fact is kind of a shame because after 65% of the book is finished and it finally does get to the "Treasures section" the photographs are decent, however it makes you wonder why did we need a whole page close up of a guards face and only a quarter page on some of the art. The Wonderful frescoes of the Vatican are very few and most are the usual 4 token shots of the Sistine chapel. The wonderful Hall of Constantine isnt covered at all. I agree with all the other reviewers, if you are a National Geographic format fan, this is one of their best efforts. But....The wrong pictures are too big, the right pictures are too small, the really wonderful pictures never made it into the book, and way, way, too much space is dedicated to oversize text. I bought it used, do the same, it is not a new full price book, there is enough for under $10 even if your main interest is art but you will not get as "Inside the Vatican" as you might with other books about the Vatican Art. Good Pope pictures, Pope-Mobile pictures, and that sort of thing and good "Quick read history".
Wonderful--Makes me Proud August 22, 2001 4 out of 10 found this review helpful
I was proud to be a Catholic anyway, but gee the wonderful stories, history and people behind this book makes it a must own for Catholics!
Buy it! September 8, 2000 18 out of 18 found this review helpful
Jim Stanfield is one of the most accomplished photographers to work for National Geographic. I met Jim several years ago, and he's a fine gentleman as well as an outstanding photographer. He won one of the top photojournalism awards in the world, in 1986, based partly on this body of work as well as an essay on Isreal. Bob Gilka, who was Jim's boss at National Geographic, told me he thought Jim was the most technically accomplished photographer working for the magazine. When there was an especially difficult job to do, it was given to him. And Jim's technical expertise shows through, but there's more here than technically superior images. These are stunningly gorgeous photographs in their own right. But they are more than that, they give you an insight into life at the Vatican that will never be repeated. Buy it. I can't wait for more books by Jim Stanfield to hit the shelves.
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