
"After 1945 our plutocrats, bureaucrats, board chairmen, CEOs, commissioners, and college presidents undergo an inexplicable change. They become diffident and reticent. All at once they are willing
to accept that glass of ice water in the face, that bracing slap across the mouth, that reprimand for the fat on one's bourgeois soul, known as modern architecture."
"A search-and-destroy mission against architectural pretensions . . . a funny book." --New York
"Full of insight . . . marvelously right." --People "Wolfe's delightfully witty, biting history of modern architecture is a scintillating high comedy of big money, manners, and massive manipulation of public taste." --Publishers Weekly "No wonder . . . this book is the hottest topic in Manhattan's architectural salons." --The New York Times Book Review "Tom Wolfe has squeezed a funny tale out of glass and stone. . . hilarious." --The Wall Street Journal "Sharp serpent's-tooth wit, useful cultural insight, and snazzy zip! pop! writing." --Playboy