Synopses & Reviews
The first edition of this book was widely recognized for the unique service it performs. The review in the AIA Journal stated, "Here is the whole Frank Lloyd Wright catalog—not another thematic discourse, limited period or subject evaluation, art-book photo collection or the like, but an ambitious compilation of every built project designed by FLW, which has been needed for over a decade."
Progressive Architecture summarized the book's program and plan as follows: "This work is the only publication that documents all of the buildings designed by Wright. It also offers a short commentary on each building and a picture of each extant structure and, incidentally, includes over 100 buildings that have never before appeared in print. For each building, a unique name (usually the name of the original client) and a catalog number are assigned, and the date of conception and the location are given. The text describes methods and materials of construction, identifies the basic plan, and provides other information that serves to place the building in its context or to relate it to other buildings."
And the book was welcomed in the nonarchitectural press as well:
"William Allin Storrer has done for Frank Lloyd Wright admirers what Wright himself did for architecture. Storrer has put together a complete listing with drawings and photographs of every structure Wright was known to have designed or assisted in designing.... It is a remarkable collection that will become as timeless as the work of perhaps the greatest architect in history."
—The Cleveland Press
"...an indispensable book.... The foreword to the book was written by Henry-Russell Hitchcock and is an eloquent tribute to the lasting value and importance of Storrer's work."
—Choice
Henry-Russell Hitchcock, in the course of his appraisal, observes that "however thoroughly one may previously have known the work of Wright over the years—and I have had some familiarity with his work for forty years—there are innumerable surprises here, not merely as regards the work since the last war, never before brought together, but even for the early decades, the 'classic' years of the Prairie house before World War I and the less productive years that immediately followed."
This second edition replaces a number of photographs with new ones that show the buildings to better effect. In addition, corrections have been made in the text, and factual information that has come to light since the original publication in 1974 has been incorporated. The indexes have also been usefully expanded.
Review
"This very helpful list now comprises more than 430 built designs and is presented with revisions and additions to the text entries, with better reproduction of the photographs, about 30 different and better photographs, some better drawings of buildings difficult to photograph, and seven entirely new illustrations.... Storrer traveled 78,000 miles in search of Wright's work, becoming the first to perform a service often enough dreamed of by scholars and devotees of Wright. It was no small task, and his catalogue should well serve a wide audience as a guide to the buildings of an architect whose accomplishment continues to resist the limitations of any one author or any single volume."
- Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians
Synopsis
This very helpful list now comprises more than 430 built designs and is presented with revisions and additions to the text entries, with better reproduction of the photographs, about 30 different and better photographs, some better drawings of buildings difficult to photograph, and seven entirely new illustrations....
Synopsis
The first edition of this book was widely recognized for the unique service it performs. The review in the