This first comprehensive overview of celebrated photographer Larry Sultan's work accompanies a major retrospective and features work from every significant series, including Homeland, his final body of work. At the time of his death in 2009, Larry Sultan was widely regarded as one of the most influential photographic artists of his time. The originality and diversity of his practice are demonstrated in this comprehensive overview. Included in this book are images from every major body of work: Evidence (1977), a sequence of appropriated still photographs made in collaboration with Mike Mandel and acclaimed by the New York Times as "a watershed in the history of art photography"; Pictures from Home (1982?92), a personal exploration of ideas about masculinity and domesticity through pictures of Sultan's parents along with movie stills from his childhood; The Valley (1998?2003), a deliberately fragmentary examination of suburban homes being used as pornographic movie sets; and Homeland (2006?09), Sultan's final series, showing day labourers posed in idyllic California settings. Also featured are additional collaborative works with Mandel, selected editorial work and writings by and interviews with Sultan elucidating his creative processes. AUTHOR: Rebecca Morse is Associate Curator of Photography at LACMA. Sandra Phillips is Senior Curator of Photography at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Philip Gefter was on staff at the New York Times for over fifteen years, where he wrote regularly about photography. He also produced the award-winning documentary film, Bill Cunningham New York. He lives in New York City. 170 colour illustrations