a keen photographer in black and white and marvellous colour. glenn took his 16mm film camera through kandahar and helmand. he toured through villages and deserts. sometimes, he just let the camera run. people chatter horses gallop foster s family kept the films in a trunk at home, and they kept a reel of tape, noting his impressions as plain as the day he recorded them. their calm and optimism surprises our 21st century heirs.
in black and white and marvellous colour. glenn took his 16mm film camera through kandahar and helmand. he toured through villages and deserts. sometimes, he just let the camera run. people chatter horses gallop foster s family kept the films in a trunk at home, and they kept a reel of tape, noting his impressions as plain as the day he recorded them. their calm and optimism surprises our 21st century heirs.
a keen photographer in black and white and marvellous colour. glenn took his 16mm film camera through kandahar and helmand. he toured through villages and deserts. sometimes, he just let the camera run. people chatter horses gallop foster s family kept the films in a trunk at home, and they kept a reel of tape, noting his impressions as plain as the day he recorded them. their calm and optimism surprises our 21st century heirs.
a land full of life and hope. they tell a special chapter of our story that s almost forgotten. half a century ago, an american, glenn r foster, from california arrived in southern afghanistan. he stayed on for seven years, a keen photographer in black and white and marvellous colour. glenn took his 16mm film camera through kandahar and helmand. he toured through villages and deserts. sometimes, hejust let the camera run. people chatter. horses gallop. foster s family kept the films in a trunk at home, and they kept a reel of tape, noting his impressions as plain as the day he recorde them. their calm and optimism
he stayed on for seven years, a keen photographer in black and white and marvellous colour. glenn took his 16mm film camera through kandahar and helmand. he toured through villages and deserts. sometimes, hejust let the camera run. foster s family kept the films in a trunk at home, and they kept a reel of tape, noting his impressions as plain as the day he recorded them. their calm and optimism surprises our 21st century heirs.