BY MAURICE SHERIF
University of Texas Press, 2011. $150, 384 pages.
Like its multibillion-dollar namesake, photographer Maurice Sherif’s seventeen-pound, trilingual, quadritoned, two-volume book The American Wall: From the Pacific Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico is a physically imposing monument that is hard to ignore — and should not be ignored. Since mid-2006 (when the U.S. started construction of “the wall”), Sherif has been making photographs along the U.S.-Mexico border, one hundred of which are presented in book one of this project. Book two is made up of the writings of authors, artists, academics, and activists Charles Bowden, Miguel Diaz-Barriga, Margaret E. Dorsey, Denise Gilman, Scott Nicol, James Tryon, and Martha Davidson, each exploring, from their varied perspectives, the issue of immigration between Mexico and the U.S. Sherif’s images, photographed…
