"Billy's book will go down in history as the best book about Warhol ... [he] invented the term 'Factory Foto.' He was the first and he was the last Factory photographer. Period. -Gerard Malanga
His photographs -- he took thousands, in a moody, high-contrast black and white -- did more than just capture Warhol's retinue, his "superstars" Edie Sedgwick, Brigid Berlin, Gerard Malanga, Mario Montez, Mary Woronov, Ondine, and Bibbe Hansen. They also documented the larger scene around the Factory, including fellow artists like Ray Johnson, Jasper Johns and John Cage; the members of the Velvet Underground; the filmmaker Barbara Rubin; and admirers like Bob Dylan and Salvador Dal�.--Randy Kennedy "The New York Times"
Name photographed everything and everyone, for the most part candidly, though there are a few posed compositions. This gives the book a powerful feeling of a documentary, of being in the moment with Warhol and his band of artists as they created their own counter-cultural universe.--Matthew Hays "The Gay and Lesbian Review"
There are few others that got a better, or closer look in to the mysterious goings-on of Warhol's Factory. Lucky for us, Andy gave Billy a Pentax Honeywell 35mm camera, with which he documented all that he saw during his time living in a tiny closet in the studio.-- "Country & Town House"