This large format hardback is laid out rather beautifully, hinting at CRM style in itself with the font and white space. The photographs are particularly useful and well-taken, while the surrounding text does tend to wax lyrical a little too much, too often. I think my main criticism, if indeed it is one, is that the short chapters are arranged in a not-particularly-chronological order, with certain designs gathered together into certain groups for each chapter. Whilst this is not at all awkward from an art and design viewpoint, it does feel a bit meandering from a biographical viewpoint. All told, I quite enjoyed this book and CRM has risen massively in my esteem. His life story is rather a sad one though, of a massive talent, misunderstood and underused (except in Austria), apparently because he was a fairly odd sort of bloke to get along with, as imaginative people might be expected to be, which is such a shame. Towns could've looked more interesting if some more of his architectural designs had been built throughout the UK. 4.25/5