Kastner was the official historian at Hearst Castle for more than 30 years—around the same amount of time Morgan worked on the estate with William Randolph Hearst. The author goes beyond the architect’s most famous projects into her incredible fortitude and singleness of purpose to be in a profession that didn’t want her kind (i.e., female). The first woman to accomplish many things—study architecture at École des Beaux-Arts, graduate from UC Berkely in engineering, get licensed in California, win an AIA Gold Medal (posthumously)—Morgan certainly paved the way for female architects, though it continues to be a bumpy road. Upon her death in 1957, her nephew implored historians to look at more than the architecture, stating that no author had “described what Miss Morgan was, or what she really did, or what she was trying to do, or why.” Well, now one has.
Chronicle Books, 2022, 240 pages, hardcover, $32.50.