Sioux City
ÒWith a poignancy peculiar to photographic images,
the past is captured while its
obliteration
is strongly implied.Ó—John Updike.
First view, December 26, 2005.
Second view, downtown, December 24, 2005.
Third view, the Missouri River, December
26, 2005.
Fourth view, December 26, 2005.
Fifth view, ice fishing hut, December 27,
2005.
Sixth view, Stone Park, December 28, 2005.
Seventh view, December 26, 2005.
Eighth view, the airport church, December
26, 2005.
Ninth view, Sioux City is in Iowa, December
27, 2005.
Tenth view, Loess Hills, Plymouth County,
December 23, 2005.
Eleventh view, the Big Sioux River, South
Dakota on the left, Iowa on the right, December 28, 2005.
Twelfth view, Christmas Eve, 2005.
Thirteenth view, Sunset: Iowa, South Dakota, and
Nebraska, December 28, 2005.
Fourteenth view, Loess Hills, Briar Cliff
University, Christmas Eve, 2005.
Fifteenth view, Floyd Monument, December
26, 2005.
Sixteenth view, Loess Hills, Briar Cliff
University, Christmas Eve, 2005.
Seventeenth view, the Missouri River, December
26, 2005.
Eighteenth view, South Dakota cemetary, from
Iowa, December 28, 2005.
Ninteenth view, December 28, 2005.
Twentieth view, December 26, 2006.
Twenty-first view, December 26, 2006.
Twenty-second view, December 26, 2006.
Twenty-third view, December 26, 2006.
Twenty-fourth view, December 26, 2006.
Twenty-fifth view, December 26, 2006.
Sioux City, Iowa,
a city of 80,000, sits at the confluence of the Missouri, Big Sioux, and Floyd
Rivers in the Loess Hills
of northwestern Iowa. South Sioux City, Nebraska is just across the Missouri
River; North Sioux City, South Dakota is just across the Big Sioux River. My
family moved to Sioux City, from Norfolk, Nebraska, in 1974, when I was in the
fifth grade. I lived in Sioux City until 1986, when I left for graduate school.