Get 3 months of Audible free - Get this deal
Buy new:
$428.60

$6.49 delivery July 28 - August 6
Ships from: valerie books 89
Sold by: valerie books 89
$428.60
$6.49 delivery July 28 - August 6. Details
Usually ships within 4 to 5 days
$$428.60 () Includes selected options. Includes initial monthly payment and selected options. Details
Price
Subtotal
$$428.60
Subtotal
Initial payment breakdown
Shipping cost, delivery date and order total (including tax) shown at checkout.
Ships from
valerie books 89
valerie books 89
Ships from
valerie books 89
Returns
Eligible for Return or Refund within 30 days of receipt
Eligible for Return or Refund within 30 days of receipt
This item can be returned in its original condition for a full refund within 30 days of receipt. You may receive a partial or no refund on used, damaged or materially different returns.
Payment
Secure transaction
Your transaction is secure
We work hard to protect your security and privacy. Our payment security system encrypts your information during transmission. We don’t share your credit card details with third-party sellers, and we don’t sell your information to others. Learn more
$289.06
A book that has been read, but remains in clean and good condition. Spine and corners fine. A book that has been read, but remains in clean and good condition. Spine and corners fine. See less
$6.49 delivery July 28 - August 6. Details
Usually ships within 4 to 5 days
$$428.60 () Includes selected options. Includes initial monthly payment and selected options. Details
Price
Subtotal
$$428.60
Subtotal
Initial payment breakdown
Shipping cost, delivery date and order total (including tax) shown at checkout.
Ships from Canada and sold by valerie books 89.
Kindle app logo image

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet or computer – no Kindle device required.

Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.

Using your mobile phone camera, scan the code below and download the Kindle app.

QR code to download the Kindle app

Follow the authors

See all
Something went wrong. Please try your request again later.

[(A Field Guide to American Houses: The Definitive Guide to Identifying and Understanding America's Domestic Architecture )] [Author: Virginia Savage McAlester] [Dec-2013] Hardcover

4.8 out of 5 stars 1,148 ratings
4.4 on Goodreads
1,340 ratings

' + '' + decodeURIComponent(encodedIframeContent) + ''+''); doc.close(); } } this.iframeload = function () { var iframe = document.getElementById(iframeId); iframe.style.display = ''; setTimeout(function () { setIframeHeight(initialResizeCallback); }, 20); } function getDocHeight(doc) { var contentDiv = doc.getElementById("iframeContent"); var docHeight = 0; if(contentDiv){ docHeight = Math.max( contentDiv.scrollHeight, contentDiv.offsetHeight, contentDiv.clientHeight ); } return docHeight; } function setIframeHeight(resizeCallback) { var iframeDoc, iframe = document.getElementById(iframeId); iframeDoc = ((iframe.contentWindow && iframe.contentWindow.document) || iframe.contentDocument); if (iframeDoc) { var h = getDocHeight(iframeDoc); if (h && h != 0) { iframe.style.height = parseInt(h) + 'px'; if(typeof resizeCallback == "function") { resizeCallback(iframeId); } } else if (nTries < MAX_TRIES) { nTries++; setTimeout(function () { setIframeHeight(resizeCallback); }, 50); } } } this.resizeIframe = function(resizeCallback) { nTries = 0; setIframeHeight(resizeCallback); } } return DynamicIframe; });
{"desktop_buybox_group_1":[{"displayPrice":"$428.60","priceAmount":428.60,"currencySymbol":"$","integerValue":"428","decimalSeparator":".","fractionalValue":"60","symbolPosition":"left","hasSpace":false,"showFractionalPartIfEmpty":true,"offerListingId":"GeDHzj1Vbe0tZUhumhxn8VsSurqes28qPBn2TDT8FkP732yZwxQa4LnVfruapazDchAaSdaTlbiDrE4NCJklTpaX1dKApEJb%2B3HGyJ2MEGKtQXkuq36sVy%2BHPNYmJWJWp0UuAMwHsXny4JzND2untn6wyw1CCj72%2Bogr%2FTX39FUvxtRl0PIJzz4bV5KhuoHa","locale":"en-CA","buyingOptionType":"NEW","aapiBuyingOptionIndex":0}, {"displayPrice":"$289.06","priceAmount":289.06,"currencySymbol":"$","integerValue":"289","decimalSeparator":".","fractionalValue":"06","symbolPosition":"left","hasSpace":false,"showFractionalPartIfEmpty":true,"offerListingId":"GeDHzj1Vbe0tZUhumhxn8VsSurqes28qPBn2TDT8FkP732yZwxQa4LnVfruapazDchAaSdaTlbiDrE4NCJklTh8GRlh4D9%2Fhr196GRR%2BalHlAHWj64Zx25Ae2t33lPGBg5yywTBeUiHwHWSQd%2BQoz9bHFpR7h1pXzNJBoZhHUA%2FGSfLKXCt%2BNPp5TLhiPob2","locale":"en-CA","buyingOptionType":"USED","aapiBuyingOptionIndex":1}]}

Purchase options and add-ons

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0140EUCA4
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Item weight ‏ : ‎ 2.12 kg
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.8 out of 5 stars 1,148 ratings

About the authors

Follow authors to get new release updates, plus improved recommendations.

Customer reviews

4.8 out of 5 stars
1,148 global ratings

Review this product

Share your thoughts with other customers

Customers say

Customers find the book very useful, nice, and a great guidebook. They also appreciate the great bibliography of the books he has referenced. Readers describe the book as the Bible to true home design styles. They mention it compares and contrasts all the larger exterior structural shapes as well as the smaller ornamental choices. In addition, they say it's a must for North American architecture.

Select to learn more

9 customers mention "Informative"9 positive0 negative

Customers find the book very useful, nice, and a great guidebook. They mention it has lots of images and categories. Readers also say it's a must-read for the history of architecture over the last 300 years and an essential book on understanding American (and Canadian) residential architectural style. They also say each book provides a unique perspective and has a slightly different purpose.

"Great book!!" Read more

"...This book is highly relevant in understanding the history, style, construction and evolution of the single family dwelling...." Read more

"This is my favourite book explaining Anerican houses. As a Canadian architect, I am so grateful to have used this book for decades...." Read more

"This is the bible to true home design styles. A must for any designers library. I have owned mine for over 25 years. This one was a gift." Read more

5 customers mention "Style"5 positive0 negative

Customers find the book to be a bible to true home design styles. They mention it's divided into era and accompanying homes styles sections. Readers say it helps them identify different home styles by their exterior structural shapes and smaller ornamental choices. In addition, they say the book is a must for North American architecture and enjoys the history aspect of domestic architecture.

"...book to give you a nice quick overview of the history and styles of houses. The book is divided into time periods and their respective styles...." Read more

"...This book is highly relevant in understanding the history, style, construction and evolution of the single family dwelling...." Read more

"This is the bible to true home design styles. A must for any designers library. I have owned mine for over 25 years. This one was a gift." Read more

"THE essential book on understanding American (and Canadian) residential architectural style...." Read more

Great book that focuses on exteriors
5 out of 5 stars
Great book that focuses on exteriors
If you are into domestic (homes) architecture you probably are humming and hawing about which domestic architecture book to get between these three books on 鶹: American House Styles: A Concise Guide by John Milnes Baker American Homes: The Landmark Illustrated Encyclopedia of Domestic Architecture by Lester Walker A Field Guide to American Homes: The Definitive Guide to Identifying and Understanding America’s Domestic Architecture by Virginia Savage McAlester It can be so hard to tell exactly what each book has to offer in itself as well as and has to offer over it’s competitors. But you are in luck, because I have all three and I will compare them to help you decide which book or books would most satisfy what you are looking for in a domestic architecture book. I really enjoy having all three in my collection, for their different strengths and focuses; and I think if you really love domestic architecture, you will also love having all three in your collection. Each book provides a unique perspective and has a slightly different purpose, so you won’t be frustrated with content overlap if you get more than one of these books or already have some other books in your collection. American House Styles by Baker: An excellent book to give you a nice quick overview of the history and styles of houses. The book is divided into time periods and their respective styles. Each section starts out with several pages of general introduction on the time period and general details of the house styles to come in the section. Nothing too detailed, but the important essential information is there. Then each section features several different house styles of the period and each style (Queen Anne, Greek Revival, etc.) all have one page of text that details the pertinent essential information and beside that text page is a colour drawing of the exterior facade as well as a floor plan. Now what I LOVE about this book is this: it can be hard to define which styles have grand entryways and which don’t or which styles feature large living rooms and etc. when you are looking at all these different house layouts. The author has a genius method for cutting all that confusion away. He shows you how each style would look with the same modern floor plan (a bottom floor that includes a dinning room, kitchen, living room, bathroom, entry, and laundry room). Because the kitchen is always in the same place and etc., you can flip easily between the styles and clearly and quickly understand: okay this style has a lot of hallways or angles or closets, decorative wall insets, a grand living room, the house is generally bigger than other styles. It also makes it really easy to see which styles involve major internal/structural shifts in design/innovation and which styles are closer offshoots of already formed ideas and their stylistic differences are mainly ornamental. Fabulous! This book is a great place to dip your toe into domestic architecture enjoyment as a hobby. American Homes by Walker truly is an encyclopedia, but still somewhat concise. This book truly truly covers every single home style in the history of America, right from the American Indians, to the settlers though to today, even including a page on motor homes and different types of mobile homes! Most styles have two pages committed to them, but some of the more iconic styles or the styles that include more variations have four to six pages dedicated to them. Each home style features several paragraphs on the style itself and the time period. There are lots of drawings on each page with little notations in the drawings (like "oversized dormers on hipped roof"). The drawings of the houses with floor plans are set an angle vs. face on, so you can see two sides of the exterior facade. I love this choice because it’s not often utilized but you can really get a good sense of the height, width, and length of each style as well as simply more visuals of the facade. Essential floor levels are also shown underneath in descending order under the "floating" picture of the 3D facade. Soft lines connect the main corners of the homes so you won’t get lost between levels about how it all lays out and where certain levels end before or after other levels. A lot of the homes featured also include their location as well as the architect. Real homes! I can go on the internet, if I like a home, and see real pictures of it/learn it’s history. Fabulous! There is a concise glossary at the end that includes some comparative diagrams like the differences between roof styles like hipped and gable roofs. The author does an amazing job of really adding in a lot of history as well as information on building and styling techniques, but doesn’t overwhelm. Each page has an excellent balance of white space, which helps with balancing information overload. Finally, a great bibliography of the books he has referenced so that you can use this book as a solid jumping off point to find other great architecture books. This book is for you if you have more than a passing interest in domestic architecture or have been a casual hobbyist for a while and if you really want to dive in deep. Also a great book if you enjoy the history aspect of domestic architecture and little factoids everywhere. A Field Guide to American Homes by McAlester is a book that is very clearly encapsulated by it’s title: a book that helps you identify different home styles by their exterior (not a lot about interiors, like floor plan drawings, in this book) by comparing and contrasting all the larger exterior structural shapes as well as the smaller ornamental choices. One could literally use this book as a field guide while walking around neighbourhoods and enjoying beautiful homes. Would you like to know all the common dormer and window surrounds/styles for Queen Annes? You’ll get that in this book with its many identification drawings. Would you like to know every single type of roof between all the styles? You’ll get that and more in the pictorial key. Are you renovating an old house and you would like to see how certain styles are accomplished through the physical building of the home to help you get an idea of what might be involved in your renovation. You’ll get that as well. This book is divided into era and accompanying homes styles sections. Each section, say the Victorian era, has two intro pages about the time period and its general styles. Then each of those section is divided into subsections: Second Empire or Queen Anne, and etc. These subsections start with maybe four to six pages on the important information about that style as well as a few diagrams and drawings. Then you will get maybe 6 to 14 black and white pages, each containing several pictures, showing the variations of that style with location and building information. This is the book you’ll want if you would like to have a lot of side-by-side full page comparison diagrams showing all the different column styles, roof pitches, exterior cornice choices, and etc. This book also features the most exterior style pictures of the three books, so you’ll really get a good sense of the kind of real-life variation you my see in a style. Great for identifying homes on a walk as real life homes vs. idealized drawings will often dip into more than one style or blend two similar styles together in a way that you are not quite sure which style the house is truly rooted in. This is also a great book to get if you already have another domestic architecture book that you are satisfied with that focuses heavily on interiors/floor plans.
Thank you for your feedback
Sorry, there was an error
Sorry we couldn't load the review

Top reviews from Canada

  • Reviewed in Canada on January 21, 2023
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    If you are into domestic (homes) architecture you probably are humming and hawing about which domestic architecture book to get between these three books on 鶹:

    American House Styles: A Concise Guide by John Milnes Baker
    American Homes: The Landmark Illustrated Encyclopedia of Domestic Architecture by Lester Walker
    A Field Guide to American Homes: The Definitive Guide to Identifying and Understanding America’s Domestic Architecture by Virginia Savage McAlester

    It can be so hard to tell exactly what each book has to offer in itself as well as and has to offer over it’s competitors. But you are in luck, because I have all three and I will compare them to help you decide which book or books would most satisfy what you are looking for in a domestic architecture book. I really enjoy having all three in my collection, for their different strengths and focuses; and I think if you really love domestic architecture, you will also love having all three in your collection. Each book provides a unique perspective and has a slightly different purpose, so you won’t be frustrated with content overlap if you get more than one of these books or already have some other books in your collection.

    American House Styles by Baker: An excellent book to give you a nice quick overview of the history and styles of houses. The book is divided into time periods and their respective styles. Each section starts out with several pages of general introduction on the time period and general details of the house styles to come in the section. Nothing too detailed, but the important essential information is there. Then each section features several different house styles of the period and each style (Queen Anne, Greek Revival, etc.) all have one page of text that details the pertinent essential information and beside that text page is a colour drawing of the exterior facade as well as a floor plan. Now what I LOVE about this book is this: it can be hard to define which styles have grand entryways and which don’t or which styles feature large living rooms and etc. when you are looking at all these different house layouts. The author has a genius method for cutting all that confusion away. He shows you how each style would look with the same modern floor plan (a bottom floor that includes a dinning room, kitchen, living room, bathroom, entry, and laundry room). Because the kitchen is always in the same place and etc., you can flip easily between the styles and clearly and quickly understand: okay this style has a lot of hallways or angles or closets, decorative wall insets, a grand living room, the house is generally bigger than other styles. It also makes it really easy to see which styles involve major internal/structural shifts in design/innovation and which styles are closer offshoots of already formed ideas and their stylistic differences are mainly ornamental. Fabulous! This book is a great place to dip your toe into domestic architecture enjoyment as a hobby.

    American Homes by Walker truly is an encyclopedia, but still somewhat concise. This book truly truly covers every single home style in the history of America, right from the American Indians, to the settlers though to today, even including a page on motor homes and different types of mobile homes! Most styles have two pages committed to them, but some of the more iconic styles or the styles that include more variations have four to six pages dedicated to them. Each home style features several paragraphs on the style itself and the time period. There are lots of drawings on each page with little notations in the drawings (like "oversized dormers on hipped roof"). The drawings of the houses with floor plans are set an angle vs. face on, so you can see two sides of the exterior facade. I love this choice because it’s not often utilized but you can really get a good sense of the height, width, and length of each style as well as simply more visuals of the facade. Essential floor levels are also shown underneath in descending order under the "floating" picture of the 3D facade. Soft lines connect the main corners of the homes so you won’t get lost between levels about how it all lays out and where certain levels end before or after other levels. A lot of the homes featured also include their location as well as the architect. Real homes! I can go on the internet, if I like a home, and see real pictures of it/learn it’s history. Fabulous! There is a concise glossary at the end that includes some comparative diagrams like the differences between roof styles like hipped and gable roofs. The author does an amazing job of really adding in a lot of history as well as information on building and styling techniques, but doesn’t overwhelm. Each page has an excellent balance of white space, which helps with balancing information overload. Finally, a great bibliography of the books he has referenced so that you can use this book as a solid jumping off point to find other great architecture books. This book is for you if you have more than a passing interest in domestic architecture or have been a casual hobbyist for a while and if you really want to dive in deep. Also a great book if you enjoy the history aspect of domestic architecture and little factoids everywhere.

    A Field Guide to American Homes by McAlester is a book that is very clearly encapsulated by it’s title: a book that helps you identify different home styles by their exterior (not a lot about interiors, like floor plan drawings, in this book) by comparing and contrasting all the larger exterior structural shapes as well as the smaller ornamental choices. One could literally use this book as a field guide while walking around neighbourhoods and enjoying beautiful homes. Would you like to know all the common dormer and window surrounds/styles for Queen Annes? You’ll get that in this book with its many identification drawings. Would you like to know every single type of roof between all the styles? You’ll get that and more in the pictorial key. Are you renovating an old house and you would like to see how certain styles are accomplished through the physical building of the home to help you get an idea of what might be involved in your renovation. You’ll get that as well. This book is divided into era and accompanying homes styles sections. Each section, say the Victorian era, has two intro pages about the time period and its general styles. Then each of those section is divided into subsections: Second Empire or Queen Anne, and etc. These subsections start with maybe four to six pages on the important information about that style as well as a few diagrams and drawings. Then you will get maybe 6 to 14 black and white pages, each containing several pictures, showing the variations of that style with location and building information. This is the book you’ll want if you would like to have a lot of side-by-side full page comparison diagrams showing all the different column styles, roof pitches, exterior cornice choices, and etc. This book also features the most exterior style pictures of the three books, so you’ll really get a good sense of the kind of real-life variation you my see in a style. Great for identifying homes on a walk as real life homes vs. idealized drawings will often dip into more than one style or blend two similar styles together in a way that you are not quite sure which style the house is truly rooted in. This is also a great book to get if you already have another domestic architecture book that you are satisfied with that focuses heavily on interiors/floor plans.
    Customer image
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Great book that focuses on exteriors

    Reviewed in Canada on January 21, 2023
    If you are into domestic (homes) architecture you probably are humming and hawing about which domestic architecture book to get between these three books on 鶹:

    American House Styles: A Concise Guide by John Milnes Baker
    American Homes: The Landmark Illustrated Encyclopedia of Domestic Architecture by Lester Walker
    A Field Guide to American Homes: The Definitive Guide to Identifying and Understanding America’s Domestic Architecture by Virginia Savage McAlester

    It can be so hard to tell exactly what each book has to offer in itself as well as and has to offer over it’s competitors. But you are in luck, because I have all three and I will compare them to help you decide which book or books would most satisfy what you are looking for in a domestic architecture book. I really enjoy having all three in my collection, for their different strengths and focuses; and I think if you really love domestic architecture, you will also love having all three in your collection. Each book provides a unique perspective and has a slightly different purpose, so you won’t be frustrated with content overlap if you get more than one of these books or already have some other books in your collection.

    American House Styles by Baker: An excellent book to give you a nice quick overview of the history and styles of houses. The book is divided into time periods and their respective styles. Each section starts out with several pages of general introduction on the time period and general details of the house styles to come in the section. Nothing too detailed, but the important essential information is there. Then each section features several different house styles of the period and each style (Queen Anne, Greek Revival, etc.) all have one page of text that details the pertinent essential information and beside that text page is a colour drawing of the exterior facade as well as a floor plan. Now what I LOVE about this book is this: it can be hard to define which styles have grand entryways and which don’t or which styles feature large living rooms and etc. when you are looking at all these different house layouts. The author has a genius method for cutting all that confusion away. He shows you how each style would look with the same modern floor plan (a bottom floor that includes a dinning room, kitchen, living room, bathroom, entry, and laundry room). Because the kitchen is always in the same place and etc., you can flip easily between the styles and clearly and quickly understand: okay this style has a lot of hallways or angles or closets, decorative wall insets, a grand living room, the house is generally bigger than other styles. It also makes it really easy to see which styles involve major internal/structural shifts in design/innovation and which styles are closer offshoots of already formed ideas and their stylistic differences are mainly ornamental. Fabulous! This book is a great place to dip your toe into domestic architecture enjoyment as a hobby.

    American Homes by Walker truly is an encyclopedia, but still somewhat concise. This book truly truly covers every single home style in the history of America, right from the American Indians, to the settlers though to today, even including a page on motor homes and different types of mobile homes! Most styles have two pages committed to them, but some of the more iconic styles or the styles that include more variations have four to six pages dedicated to them. Each home style features several paragraphs on the style itself and the time period. There are lots of drawings on each page with little notations in the drawings (like "oversized dormers on hipped roof"). The drawings of the houses with floor plans are set an angle vs. face on, so you can see two sides of the exterior facade. I love this choice because it’s not often utilized but you can really get a good sense of the height, width, and length of each style as well as simply more visuals of the facade. Essential floor levels are also shown underneath in descending order under the "floating" picture of the 3D facade. Soft lines connect the main corners of the homes so you won’t get lost between levels about how it all lays out and where certain levels end before or after other levels. A lot of the homes featured also include their location as well as the architect. Real homes! I can go on the internet, if I like a home, and see real pictures of it/learn it’s history. Fabulous! There is a concise glossary at the end that includes some comparative diagrams like the differences between roof styles like hipped and gable roofs. The author does an amazing job of really adding in a lot of history as well as information on building and styling techniques, but doesn’t overwhelm. Each page has an excellent balance of white space, which helps with balancing information overload. Finally, a great bibliography of the books he has referenced so that you can use this book as a solid jumping off point to find other great architecture books. This book is for you if you have more than a passing interest in domestic architecture or have been a casual hobbyist for a while and if you really want to dive in deep. Also a great book if you enjoy the history aspect of domestic architecture and little factoids everywhere.

    A Field Guide to American Homes by McAlester is a book that is very clearly encapsulated by it’s title: a book that helps you identify different home styles by their exterior (not a lot about interiors, like floor plan drawings, in this book) by comparing and contrasting all the larger exterior structural shapes as well as the smaller ornamental choices. One could literally use this book as a field guide while walking around neighbourhoods and enjoying beautiful homes. Would you like to know all the common dormer and window surrounds/styles for Queen Annes? You’ll get that in this book with its many identification drawings. Would you like to know every single type of roof between all the styles? You’ll get that and more in the pictorial key. Are you renovating an old house and you would like to see how certain styles are accomplished through the physical building of the home to help you get an idea of what might be involved in your renovation. You’ll get that as well. This book is divided into era and accompanying homes styles sections. Each section, say the Victorian era, has two intro pages about the time period and its general styles. Then each of those section is divided into subsections: Second Empire or Queen Anne, and etc. These subsections start with maybe four to six pages on the important information about that style as well as a few diagrams and drawings. Then you will get maybe 6 to 14 black and white pages, each containing several pictures, showing the variations of that style with location and building information. This is the book you’ll want if you would like to have a lot of side-by-side full page comparison diagrams showing all the different column styles, roof pitches, exterior cornice choices, and etc. This book also features the most exterior style pictures of the three books, so you’ll really get a good sense of the kind of real-life variation you my see in a style. Great for identifying homes on a walk as real life homes vs. idealized drawings will often dip into more than one style or blend two similar styles together in a way that you are not quite sure which style the house is truly rooted in. This is also a great book to get if you already have another domestic architecture book that you are satisfied with that focuses heavily on interiors/floor plans.
    Images in this review
    Customer imageCustomer imageCustomer imageCustomer imageCustomer imageCustomer imageCustomer imageCustomer imageCustomer image
    9 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in Canada on November 17, 2021
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    I do new and renovated homes of many styles. This book is highly relevant in understanding the history, style, construction and evolution of the single family dwelling. Terrific for understanding the "Authentic" in the building you may be involved with, and how you may handle that going forward.
  • Reviewed in Canada on June 3, 2020
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    This is my favourite book explaining Anerican houses. As a Canadian architect, I am so grateful to have used this book for decades. I just gave this updated fancier version to my oldest friend for his birthday after we walked through a heritage part of Toronto and he kept asking what style were this house and that house. I then knew what gift to give him!
    One person found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in Canada on September 1, 2020
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    This is the bible to true home design styles. A must for any designers library. I have owned mine for over 25 years. This one was a gift.
  • Reviewed in Canada on October 14, 2022
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Very useful book , bought it used but very good condition
  • Reviewed in Canada on January 20, 2022
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Great book!!
  • Reviewed in Canada on January 8, 2018
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Nice guidebook with lots of images and categories. Just what I was looking for.
  • Reviewed in Canada on June 15, 2016
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Great book!

Top reviews from other countries

Translate all reviews to English
  • Rick C.
    5.0 out of 5 stars New and different; surprisingly the same
    Reviewed in the United States on June 8, 2014
    Verified Purchase
    After a decade of consulting my softbound copy of the earlier edition, I eagerly awaited this one. It is, at once, both familiar and new. My first impression was, "Wow, it's big; and heavy!" It's probably now out of the "field guide" category in the sense of portability. Perhaps the current one is similar to the hardbound 1st edition I never knew but the smaller, lighter softbound book was easier to toss under my arm and take off.

    I'm a clinical pharmacist by training - not an architect or architectural historian - so content accessibility is very important to me. Like the earlier edition, the book shines in this department but even brighter. I find the layout more logical, with the pictorial key and glossary up front, not buried in the early pages. At first I couldn't figure the organization of the pictorial key but now I see it's clearly aimed at the sidewalk house viewer, e.g., me. Start at what you can see over the hedge and work down: Roof form, Dormers, Roof-Wall Junction, Chimneys, Porches, Windows, etc. Unfortunately, the typeface for the category headers is less eye-catching in the new edition, making it harder to skim to your section.

    The meat and value of the book is in the text. I haven't read it all, being most interested in the styles found here in southern California, but the content is again extremely accessible to the average reader. There continues the excellent use of line drawings, many that have been improved from the 1st edition. The photographs are much clearer on fine white paper than they were on the buff colored pages of the softbound previous edition. In my selective review I notice there are some new house photos and some different photos of 1st edition houses. There are also some photos deleted in this edition - so don't throw away your 1st edition!

    If I had to pick a single best new feature of the book, it would be the 45-page chapter, "Neighborhoods: The Grouping of American Houses," with historic photos, aerial line drawings and elevations of neighborhood types, and discussion of the history, growth and problems of neighborhood development. With some historic neighborhoods being nibbled to death by individual variances and code exceptions until they've lost their defining character, this chapter makes clear that individual houses - no matter how remarkable - are usually part of a collection worth recognition in its own right.

    Final assessment? This tome is no longer suitable for my backpack and the typeface choices make it less friendly for skimming but the expanded material is so good and so well integrated into the original [including the line drawings that look like they could have been there since 1984] that this "field guide" is still a must-have book for anyone interested in historic [or some-day historic] houses.
  • smartypants
    5.0 out of 5 stars The detail, the detail!
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 5, 2022
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Everything you could ever want to know about American houses is here. The most comprehensive book on this subject you could hope to find. Excellent.
  • Julian
    5.0 out of 5 stars Anschaulich und informativ
    Reviewed in Germany on September 5, 2020
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Das Buch hat sehr viele anschaulich Grafiken in schwarz-weiß und ist ausführlich sowie informativ verfasst.
    Report
  • Fabián Dávila
    5.0 out of 5 stars Un libro de consulta clásico
    Reviewed in Mexico on May 12, 2021
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Contenido muy extenso, gran cantidad de ilustraciones, explicaciones sencillas y correctamente estructurado. La manufactura excelente, tanto la tipografía como la calidad del papel, la tinta y la impresión.
  • RIM NB
    4.0 out of 5 stars CONCISE & WELL ORGANIZED
    Reviewed in the United Arab Emirates on December 25, 2019
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Detailed illustrations, hundreds of photos and examples.