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Shutterbabe: Adventures in Love and War [Hardcover]

Deborah Copaken Kogan (Author)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (81 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 2, 2001
What if the protagonist in that age-old tale—boy goes to war, comes back a man—were a female? Shutterbabe, Deborah Copaken Kogan's remarkable debut, is just that: the story of a twenty-two-year-old girl from Potomac, Maryland, who goes off to photograph wars and comes back, four years and one too many adventures later, a woman.

In 1988, fresh out of Harvard, Kogan moved to Paris with a small backpack, a couple of cameras, the hubris of a superhero, and a strong thirst for danger. She wanted to see what a war would look like when seen from up close, to immerse herself in a world where the gun is God. Naïvely, she figured it would be easy to filter death through the prism of her wide-angle lens.
        
She was dead wrong.

Within weeks of arriving in Paris, after knocking on countless photo agency doors and begging to be sent where the action was, Kogan found herself on the back of a truck in Afghanistan, her tiny frame veiled from head to toe, the only woman — and the only journalis — in a convoy of rebel freedom fighters. Kogan had not actually planned on shooting the Afghan war alone. However, the beguiling French photographer she'd entrusted with both her itinerary and her heart turned out to be as dangerously unpredictable as, well, a war.

It is the saga of both her relationship with this French-man and her assignment in Afghanistan that fuels the first of Shutterbabe's six page-turning chapters, each covering a different corner of the globe and each ultimately linked to the man Kogan was involved with at the time. From Zim-babwe to Romania, from Russia to Haiti, Kogan takes her readers on a heartbreaking yet surprisingly hilarious journey through a mine-strewn decade, her personal battles against sexism, battery, and even rape blending seamlessly with the historical struggles of war, revolution, and unfathomable abuse it was her job to record.

In the end, what was once adventurous to the girl began to weigh heavily on the woman. Though her photographs were often splashed across the front pages of international newspapers and magazines, though she was finally accepted into photojournalism's macho fraternity, with each new assignment, with each new affair, Kogan began to feel there was something more she was after. Ultimately, what she discovered in herself was a person -- a woman — for whom life, not death, is the one true adventure to be cherished above all.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

To pursue her dream to cover wars as a photojournalist, Kogan moved to Paris upon graduation from Harvard in 1988. Pretty and petite, with a sharp eye for good-looking, virile colleagues who, incidentally, could help her career, she embarked on a series of adventures that she breezily chronicles with a somewhat disingenuous na?vet?. Although her publisher compares her to Christiane Amanpour, readers may find more similarities with Candace Bushnell in these episodic vignettes describing both her far-flung assignments and intimate relationships with colleagues. She traveled with Pascal to Afghanistan and Pierre to Amsterdam; Julian helped her in Zimbabwe, but forbade further intimacies; Doru was with her in Romania. When she met Paul, her husband-to-be, Kogan's commitment to photojournalism waned: she blames her distaste on the wartime horrors she witnessed. Calling photojournalists vultures who feed on other people's misery, she conflates paparazzi with photojournalists, expressing disgust at their role in Princess Diana's fatal accident. Upon her return with Paul to the U.S., she began a new career as assistant producer for NBC's Dateline, which she eventually left to become a full-time mother. Kogan's swiftly paced story easily holds the reader's interest as she moves from her carefree days as an aspiring photojournalist to the responsibilities and dilemmas facing a working mother. First serial rights to Talk magazine in the February issue should boost interest in this sassy debut. First serial to Talk. Agent, Jennifer Rudolph Walsh at The Writers Shop. (Jan. 25)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Christiane Amanpour meets Melissa Banks! So says the publicist. Actually, Kogan is a top photojournalist who recounts her coverage of the world's hot spots while battling discrimination in the ranks.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Villard; First Edition edition (January 2, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0375503641
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375503641
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.5 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (81 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,771,342 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

1966-1970: The preschool years; fuzzy memories of hippies, astronauts.

1970-1978: Moved from Adelphi to Potomac, MD. Attended flower-shaped elementary school that had no walls; first writing award; weird obsession with Jonestown massacre.

1978-1981: Hormones.

1981-1984: Gigantic public high school; reams of angsty poetry; first pieces published in Seventeen.

1984-1988: The college years, which coincided with the crack/AIDS years: mugged at gunpoint unrelentingly, mated cautiously; made films, shot photos, wrote articles for the school paper, performed in school plays and one film, Key Exchange; rejected by every creative writing course in the Harvard catalogue.

1988-1992: The croissant/photojournalism years; stored clothes, personal items in Paris, France, while parachuting in from conflict to conflict (Afghanistan, Israel, Romania, Zimbabwe, the USSR, etc.) Won awards, had exhibitions; images published in Time, Newsweek, The New York Times, L'Express, Libération, Géo, Stern, etc.

1992-1998: Moved from Moscow to New York; produced TV for ABC then NBC News; got married, had a couple of babies, won an Emmy, inexpertly juggled work and kids; loudly whined for subsidized daycare, secretly pined to be a writer.

1998-now: Wrote bestselling Shutterbabe, followed by unpublishable drivel, followed by Between Here and April, Hell is Other Parents, and The Red Book; published essays in The New Yorker, The New York Times, Elle, More, Slate, Paris Match, O, and others; shot photo assignments; produced and shot a documentary in Pakistan for CNN in the wake of 9/11; became a columnist for The Financial Times; performed live on stage with The Moth, Afterbirth, Six Word Memoir, and Eve Ensler's tribute to Anita Hill; adapted Hell is Other Parents for the stage; wrote several screenplays and a TV pilot that were never produced; watched Shutterbabe (the big and small-screen versions) languish in development hell; had another baby; lost appendix, father, Upper West Side home, bearings, socks, sanity, and several nouns; found Harlem, yoga, and occasional serenity. But not the socks. Or the whatchamacallit. Nouns.


 

Customer Reviews

81 Reviews
5 star:
 (28)
4 star:
 (23)
3 star:
 (10)
2 star:
 (10)
1 star:
 (10)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (81 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

55 of 65 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars BarbieCam in the jungles, March 31, 2001
This review is from: Shutterbabe: Adventures in Love and War (Hardcover)
As a literary theme, "adventures in love and war" is a timeless subject, allowing infinite variations, fascinating nexus of extremes in human relations, and life's game of chance.

Alas, "Shutterbabe" does not risk belonging to the best of this genre.

I wouldn't hold against the author her boasting of sexual exploits, never missing an attempt to seduce surrounding men from their girlfriends, or even for naming chapters after her casual lovers. All this can add spice and fullness to the narrative. The problem is that there is little else beside self-absorbed chatter, looking more like a reminiscence of a romp during an extended spring break vacation than a credible journalistic work.

As a young girl just out of college, she was expected at first to know little about the places she planned to visit. But it almost seems she makes a point of deliberately staying clueless throughout her travels. In Zimbabwe, where she went specifically to see elephant poachers being hunted down by special military squads, she find herself totally unprepared in the middle of nowhere, until being rescued by Australian soldiers. May be if she wasn't so busy sleeping with other women's boyfriends, she could at least learn something about the regional geography and what to put in her backpack.

Her version of feminism, expounded at length throughout the book, sounds more like a trivial egotism rather than a principled position. She expects as a given support, comfort and sex from men she encounters when she needs it, but is never too long to resort to petulant tirades in the "male chauvinist pigs" fashion whenever things turn out not exactly to her liking.

Deborah Copaken Cogan describes her brief - less than four years - career as a photojournalist in miscellaneous messy spots around the globe. She offers no shortage of sentiments about making it in a "notoriously macho", male-dominated world of adventure and war photography, but one is left with doubt whether she was really trying.

She started to seek adventures at the end of her Harvard years in readily available and marginally thrilling places, such as the "Combat Zone" - puritanical Boston's puny version of a red-light district, with drug addicts, pimps and flashers. Then In February 1989 she goes abroad to war-torn Afghanistan hoping to "... see some dead or bloody mujahed, or some dead or bloody Russian soldier, or some mujahed firing off his Kalashnikovs, or one of those great big Soviet tanks whose names I can never remember, or, well, something that looks vaguely warlike".

Apparently, nobody told her that Soviet Army was practically withdrawn by that time. Russians didn't blast the mountain slopes with artillery shells - various bands of mujaheds did it to each other. No Mi-24 helicopters swooping down the valley to destroy rebel convoys and guerillas shooting them out of the sky with "Stingers". Instead we are treated with war stories about crushed packs of tampons and passing Tic-Tacs as medicine to dirt-covered children. She makes herself a nuisance to her hosts because of their strict privacy customs, resulting in one rebel soldier getting his legs blown off by a mine when checking a pathway for her so she could go pee off the road.

D. Copaken is genuinely surprised that these Stinger-supplied rebels often shout "Down with America!" while perpetually cleaning their AK-47. Oh, she must have thought all they wanted to do was go to the Disney World, if only Soviet troops just let them.

One of the persistent impressions throughout the book is how little empathy she feels towards the objects she seeks with her camera. Her only human interest is some thrills for herself and another photo opportunity for her career. In Zimbabwe the author finally got her lens on a freshly killed (almost by her request) poacher - an unlucky fellow probably just trying to feed his family, and now left to rot in the jungles. In her own words she "descended on him like a vulture" for the best photo shot. When finding herself in one of the Romania's worst orphanages, for the most crippled and deformed children, she descends into shrilly hysterics - not because she feels anything for these kids, but because hideous surroundings offend her aesthetic comfort.

Later, in Moscow, in the midst of the August 1991 coup the author encounters a crowd of protesters carrying anti-coup slogans, written in Russian. She then seriously advises the carrier of one banner to rewrite the slogan in English instead - otherwise what's the point of the whole thing if cameras of western reporters would not be attracted to some familiar words. Is she for real? From somebody who has been around the world, one could expect a bit more sophistication than this uniquely American form of solipsism - that things aren't happening unless they are on CNN. Not from this girl - throughout the book she seems to make a point of firmly sticking to the flattest of media stereotypes.

Incidentally, I've recently read a better work of reporting and memoirs involving love, sex, adventure and war, by a Russian journalist Daria Aslamova (some excerpts available at www.aslamova.df.ru) in her "Adventures of a bad girl" series. She describes her experience from countless flings in the university dormitory to liaisons with celebrities and politicians and to wars in Caucasus, Nagorny Karabakh and the former Yugoslavia. Once she was captured and raped at a gunpoint by a militant of one warring side - a condition for sparing the lives of her companions, captured together. From love and lust to danger and death, she covered it with far more warmth, wit, and vigor than the author of the "Shutterbabe". Interestingly, judging by the descriptions in both books of the coup in Moscow, she and D. Copaken Kogan could be within a few feet from each other during the decisive night of August 20, 1991. Game of chance can produce interesting patterns, indeed.

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41 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Self-obsession without self-awareness, February 8, 2001
This review is from: Shutterbabe: Adventures in Love and War (Hardcover)
I really don't understand all these glowing reviews. The small blurb in the "New Yorker" had this about right---something to the effect that there is little value in a memoir exhibiting self-obsession without self-awareness. Imagine that this was written by a male photo-journalist, and entitled, say, "Photostud." The narrator brags about his numerous "conquests" and "seductions" and writes in detail about the number of women he beds while covering exciting wars in exotic far-off places. He informs the reader that in college he "practically majored in the sport (of seduction)." He names his chapters not after the locations they purport to be about, but after the women with whom he is having sex at the time. He prides himself in the fact that he is able to seduce women with live-in boyfriends, but draws the line at married women. This would generate ridicule, at best, in the unlikely event it was even published, but this in reverse is what Ms. Kogan presents to us as an account of her relatively short career as a photojournalist. I was initially interested in the book as a feminist viewpoint on a notoriously male-dominated profession, but here the emphasis is definitely on the "babe" and not the journalist. The author ventures to Afghanistan, Zimbabwe, Romania and the USSR without the faintest notion of the politics, culture, history, or language of the countries she visits, and worse, seems proud of it. One comes from this book without any sense of where she stands on the issues behind the news events she photographs, and convinced that she could not care less about the people or places she visits, except for the men she beds. For example, in Afghanistan, she is led off the beaten track to pee by a nameless mujahideen, who steps on a mine and has his leg almost blown off. It has to be amputated. A few pages later, here is the author describing Afghanistan to a guy she hopes to seduce: "You want to know why Afghanistan was so horrible? There was this guy..." She's not talking about the permanently maimed soldier, but about a creepy and violent French journalist whom she accompanied to the country, and who not surprisingly soon betrays her and everyone else in sight in short order. She is so ill-informed that she travels to Zimbabwe expecting to cover a war, which turns out to be a local action against some game poachers. When she succeeds in getting a photo of a killed poacher, he is treated as merely a photo opportunity, without any reflection on how the economic conditions there force these hard choices. This has got to be the most comically and infuriatingly self-absorbed narrator since "Pale Fire"'s Charles Kinbote. The last fifty pages or so, when she ditches journalism for the bliss of married life and motherhood, should come with a high sugar content warning. As one might expect, the prose style throughout is on the level of a badly-written high-school confessional. I'm glad I picked this one up at the library.
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20 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining, Self-Indulgent and Frustrating, February 19, 2002
By A Customer
This book is an easy, entertaining read. I noted in the other reviews that the book is either loved or hated, and many of the negative reviews mention her sexual promiscuity as a point of criticism. Too bad--I found it refreshing that she was both honest and unapologetic, and she actually doesn't go into detail in describing any of the encounters.

What frustrated me is Kogan's complete lack of explanation (or perspective?) in the cultural ethnocentrism with which almost all of her foreign interactions take place. Presenting herself as a role model, I felt that she should explain or even just mention how inappropriate her expectations within cultures other than her own really were. A prime example of this is the section in which she becomes tired of wearing a burka in Afghanistan and demands to be dressed as a man (taking protective clothing from the people on whom she is completely dependent), although she assumes none of the cultural responsibilities associated with the male gender role and, in fact, a man loses his leg performing his very male duty of checking for landmines, so that she can urinate. What a beautiful example of American, cultural grace overseas.

My other complaint is the unending vanity and self-promotion, the inclusion of every single award and honorable mention to her credit, every unsolicited glance or comment related to her appearance, the pretentious name-dropping and endless mention of her Harvard education. Conversely, there was very little recognition of the people who supported and loved her, such as her family and little detail relating to the people with whom she interacted, except in how their comments affected her directly.

Lastly, I found it somewhat ironic that, as such a self-pronounced revolutionary, she ends up quitting work to be with her children. I would find this honorable, if she didn't actually quit in order to pay some, poor immigrant to raise them, while she hangs out in Starbucks writing. Perhaps this is what you call an ivy league revolution.

I think that this book could have been so much better with a bit more self-deprecation, grace and humor. Who knows? If she continues to write, maybe she'll gain persepctive.

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