
Robin Langley Sommer
Author of Atlas of World War II
About the Author
Robin Langley Sommer is a writer and editor specializing in architectural history, on which she has written ten previous books. A native of New York City, she has lived in Florida and Louisiana and now makes her home in Greenwich, Connecticut
Works by Robin Langley Sommer
Frank Lloyd Wright: American Architect for the Twentieth Century (Gallery of Art Series) (1993) 157 copies, 1 review
The Old Barn Book ~ A Pictorial Tribute to North America's Vanishing Rural Heritage (1997) 30 copies
The Ultimate Book of Historic Barns: History, Legend, Lore, Form, Function, Symbolism, Romance (2000) 25 copies
Great Cons & Con Artists: The Incredible Stories of the Masters of Deceit (1994) 17 copies, 1 review
Associated Works
A Jane Austen miscellany: Sisters, suitors, families, friends (1996) — Editor, some editions — 20 copies
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Reviews
Art Nouveau is probably my favourite art movement, so when I spotted this book in a charity thrift shop I figured I would pick it up to try and get a better understanding of Art Nouveau’s preceding and overlapping movement: Arts and Crafts. Unfortunately, my reaction to this book was much the same as it often is with art books: bored and confused by the text, dissatisfied with the imagery, and overall underwhelmed. The text borders on academic, jumping from topic to topic throughout and show more name dropping artists with little reference to their actual work, so I inevitably quit reading to focus on the imagery - which is the most important part of an art book anyways. Unfortunately, the authors didn’t include nearly enough examples of artworks to satisfy me, and those that they did show were rather underwhelming. From the introduction, I figured that I would be able to enjoy the pieces because they were influenced by much of the same as those from Art Nouveau (albeit with less extravagance), but with few visual samples I was left wanting by the final pages. I’m not going to keep this book for my collection, but I think I’ll try to find some more books on the subject, since it’s an artistic movement I definitely feel like I should explore more. show less
I picked up this big coffee table book for a buck at a used bookstore. It's alright, a rambling collection of ancedotes, but only a few stories rise above the mundane.(Van Meeregen's Vermeer frauds revealed when he defended himself against charges of selling priceless masterpieces to the Nazis, and Clifford Irving's Howard Hughes biography). Mostly, this is just a collection of insane lies, and not particularly comprehensive or well-researched.
Comphrehensive with excellent maps and sufficient supporting narrative
Great Book, the maps, though mostly black/white/green, are superior and fun to look at. I heartily recommend this book.
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Statistics
- Works
- 47
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 2,032
- Popularity
- #12,649
- Rating
- 3.4
- Reviews
- 10
- ISBNs
- 117
- Languages
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