He Photographed Everything
He found it in a yellow box at the department store, tucked behind rows of radios and electric razors and things grown men studied with serious faces. The camera looked small enough to fit in the palm of destiny itself, black plastic with silver edges that caught the light like something from the future. KODAK written across the front in letters that promised permanence. His father turned it over once in his hands, nodded, and said, “Don’t waste the film.” Those words carried the weight of scripture. Film cost money. Pictures were not endless then. They were chosen. Measured. Earned. And atop the camera sat the cube flash, clear and magical, four tiny suns waiting their turn to burn. The first picture he took was of his mother standing in the yard beside the roses. She squinted because she did not trust cameras and sunlight at the same time. He held the Kodak carefully, finger trembling near the shutter, feeling the strange authority of deciding what deserved remembering. T...