I purchased my copy of this book in paperback at the gift shop in the Empire State Building when visiting New York City in December 2021. My wife and I had bought tickets and gone up to the building's observation decks on the 86th and 101st floors, and the weather blessed us with spectacular views of the Big Apple, so it seemed a slam dunk to pick up this book in the gift shop on the way out. This book has been a challenge to read, not because of the way it is written, but more related to my difficulties in finding time to sit down with a physical book. But it was worth the long reading time. At almost 400 print pages, it is a complete chronicle of the iconic building, starting with the trends in engineering, materials, and architecture during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries that enabled the construction of ever higher buildings. The book covers the NYC zoning laws that forced so many of the city's tall buildings to take on a similar sequential setback design, then covered the history of the site on which the building was constructed, the financiers, the architects, the constructors, the building management and staff once it was opened, and a million other interesting facts. What I found most interesting was a complete chapter on the dirigible mooring mast at the top of the building, a feature added late in the design and apparently sold to the public as a valuable addition, but which was a completely insane and unworkable proposition and was really included to add to the building's height. The idea of hooking a 1000 ft long dirigible, filled with flammable hydrogen and fuel for its engines, to the top of a building located in one of the most densely populated areas on the planet just boggles the mind. I mean, what could possibly go wrong? The book tells how, to keep up the illusion that the mooring mast might actually be workable, a couple of attempts were made to secure blimps to the top of the building early in its life, before the whole dirigible docking business was quietly shelved. Still, the mooring mast section of the building is spectacular to look at. If you want the complete story of one of America's most famous landmarks, this is the book to read. Five out of five stars.