Book review: Disappearing Shanghai by Howard W. French and Qiu Xiaolong
Even for a Shanghai native like me, the side of the city depicted in Howard W. French's photography is unfamiliar. Dotted by construction sites everywhere, Shanghai is not the same place I remembered growing up. The images document the lifestyle, architecture and neighbourhoods, which were gradually fading away from my childhood memory.

by Howard W. French and Qiu Xiaolong
Homa & Sekey Books
Vivian Chen
Even for a Shanghai native like me, the side of the city depicted in Howard W. French's photography is unfamiliar. Dotted by construction sites everywhere, Shanghai is not the same place I remembered growing up. The images document the lifestyle, architecture and neighbourhoods, which were gradually fading away from my childhood memory.
Most impressive about the images in this black-and-white photobook are the subjects - the average Shanghainese - and how they opened up to a foreigner lensman.
They welcomed him and his camera into their everyday lives, neither flattered nor intimidated by the photographer's presence.