Fascinating Text; Frustrating Lack of Illustrations
This book is loaded with odds and ends that run the gamut from well organized long form essays to factoids and bits of trivia. The structure is a touch idiosyncratic but makes reasonable sense overall. I guess that figures for a book drawn primarily from a popular podcast.
Here's the thing, though. No photos, no color, no detailed illustrations. Here and there is a bit of graphic doodling, or a little pen and ink sketch, or some clip art, and that's it. Consider this - an entire article about the distinctive colors and graphics used to identify emergency vehicles, illustrated with a black and white checkerboard stripe. An article about what the colored paint marks on sidewalks mean, with a single black and white diagram. A chapter about cityscape graphics, adverts, neon signs, and old time hand painted signage, without a single photo. This book refers often to matters of color, graphic design, visibility, and invisibility, yet offers no examples or images to illustrate a point, or to excite the reader's further interest or curiosity.
That said, there is in any event a lot here to like and enjoy. Especially when we get into discussions of infrastructure, power grids, traffic engineering, roadway design, elevators, and the like, a text based presentation serves perfectly well.
So, the content is fine and interesting, and the style of presentation is congenial and engaging. But the book could have been much more rewarding, entertaining, and informative. In that regard at least it felt like a lost opportunity to do something really exciting.
(Please note that I received a free advance will-self-destruct-in-x-days Adobe Digital copy of this book without a review requirement, or any influence regarding review content should I choose to post a review. Apart from that I have no connection at all to either the author or the publisher of this book.)