Fifty buildings that represent Icon, Landscape, Styles and Masters, and Change are gathered by San Francisco Chronicle urban design critic King in this slim and delightful volume. As a different way to look at a city, King sees the value in the natural juxtapositions, contradictions, and unexpected moments that belong to evolving metropolises. “The focus is on specific works,” he writes, “but I hope that as a whole they convey something true to all great cities: the landscape becomes more intriguing with the ongoing accumulation of layers.” Ranging from 1879 to 2009, the buildings selected display both a continuity of community and a diversity of form. Each site is succinctly described in lively text and a couple of images, descriptions updated and enlarged upon from King’s “Cityscapes” newspaper column. Be sure to read the acknowledgments, as King discusses the origins of his column’s name, and gives a peek into dichotomous thinking between champion architecture critics and their editors.
Heyday Books; paperback; 128 pages; $14.95.