Also Available:
Praise for Camilo Vergara’s previous work:
A fresh view of America’s brutal urban shame. . . . Vergara has produced a document that should rub America’s conscience raw.
Vergara has refreshed the significant . . . genre of documentary photography.
With hundreds of beautiful, revelatory photographs of neighborhoods that many commuters refuse to see, Vergara brings before our reluctant eyes the stark devastation wrought over the last 30 years in the inner city.
In image and word, Vergara tells the story eloquently.

Unexpected Chicagoland
hardcover
$49.95
In a series of celebrated books, the eminent photographer and sociologist Camilo José Vergara has observed and recorded the evolution of America’s inner cities for over twenty years, documenting the effects of time, commercialism, culture, and neglect on the built environment, with an aesthetic vision that has been hailed by the New York Times as “persuasive and moving.”
Here, in a unique collaboration with Timothy Samuelson, Chicago’s leading architectural historian, Vergara probes the power and resonance of one of America’s greatest cities. Unexpected Chicagoland includes over two hundred stunning color photographs, accompanied by a fascinating original narrative of the hidden history of Chicago’s renowned architectural past. Vergara’s photographs are a treasure trove of historically and visually interesting buildings and environments, most of them on the abandoned urban fringes. Included are examples of rarely-seen work by some of the greatest architects of the twentieth century, such as Louis Sullivan, Frank Lloyd Wright, and William Burley Griffin, as well as dazzling examples of Art Deco design.
Unexpected Chicagoland presents an authentic and gritty view of the metropolis at a time when the public’s understanding of all American cities has become increasingly sanitized and homogenized. The book itself, in a large format and exquisitely designed, is packaged to be a lasting visual treasure.
Camilo José Vergara is the author of numerous books, including American Ruins, The New American Ghetto, and El Nuevo Mundo. His work was also the subject of a 1993 BBC documentary. Timothy Samuelson is curator of architecture at the Chicago Historical Society and author of Above Chicago. He lives in Massachusetts.
Fall 2001
hardcover
9 x 11, 188 pages
978-1-56584-701-9
For overseas orders, please contact your local representative from our
Sales & Distribution page.
