I am a deeply admirer of japanese arquitecture.
This book reflects that feeling.
With lots of photography in a glossy paper (I love smell books!) seems to be "the perfect book" (at least for me).
A couple of words can describe it: zen priest, shinto, buddhism, Muromachi & Momoyama periods, minimalism, simpleness.
In the Introduction, in the first paragraph, remind us that "housing design took place in Japan during the 14th century.(...) Eliminate the inessential, and seek the beauty in unembellished humble things".
That idea resonated for the next 600 years.
Incredibly, actual ideas about modular grids, prefabrication and standardization had been the raison d'être of japanese building tradition.
The summun of surprises comes with this statements: "The ethos is of co-existence with nature, not control over it" or "the goal is to please rather than impress the visitor" or this zen verse "shiki-soku-ze-ku" which means "all is vanity or "every form in reality is empty".
Too much wisdom for an architectural book.
A glimpse of a millennium culture.