this book also could be autographical
The book
is autobiographical. The title is
Henri Cartier-Bresson : photographe, meaning "I am Henri Cartier-Bresson, this is what I saw through the camera." It's not meant as These are my best pictures, or These are the pictures which conform with my ideas of art being about geometry. It's about his life—travels, the war, the artists he knew—and what he saw during his life. It's a memoir through photography rather than through words, because he was an observer, not a writer. These photos were taken by choice, because he had the choice. The choice to travel where he wanted, when he wanted. He had that luxury — it wasn't by assignment —, at a time when this type of travel was still possible, when it was still possible to go to China, or to the USSR, to travel throughout Europe and throughout the US, just because you wanted to see what was happening there.
He really is a fascinating character because you do get the strange sense that there's no distinct "who he is" and "what he saw", but that the two are somehow meshed together. The result, the how what he saw became photographs through who he is, is, of course, remarkable.