A New Chapter for EJC Photography: My Book Is Now Published
There are moments in a creative life that feel bigger than the rest—moments that make you stop, breathe, and realise you’ve crossed a line you can’t uncross. Today is one of those moments for me.
My book is officially published.
It’s out there in the world, sitting on Amazon’s digital shelves, waiting for whoever might pick it up:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0GX7QNRMG
This project has been years in the making, even if I didn’t always know I was writing it. Every photograph, every story, every quiet moment behind the camera has shaped it. It carries my voice as EJC Photography—honest, reflective, sometimes raw, sometimes funny, always rooted in the way I see the world through a lens.
The scary part
Pressing publish was far more terrifying than pressing a shutter ever has been. A photograph reveals a moment; a book reveals the person behind the camera. It’s one thing to share an image. It’s another to share the stories, the failures, the lessons, the memories, and the parts of yourself that shaped those images.
But fear is often a sign you’re doing something that matters.
What’s inside
The book blends photography, personal history, and the journey of learning to see—really see—the world. It’s about the places that changed me, the people who shaped me, and the craft that has been my constant companion. It’s for photographers, for storytellers, and for anyone who’s ever tried to make sense of life through a creative medium.
Why this matters to me
Photography has always been more than a profession. It’s been a way of understanding where I’ve been and who I’ve become. Publishing this book feels like opening the door to that journey and inviting others to walk through it.
If you’ve followed my work, supported my projects, or simply enjoyed the images I share, I hope this book gives you something meaningful—whether that’s inspiration, connection, or just a moment of recognition.
Thank you for being part of this path.
This is a new chapter, and I’m excited (and slightly terrified) to see where it leads.