I began by reading the book straight through, chronologically, the way Howard organized it. I've since abandoned that discipline in favor of jumping around, reading episodically, chasing whichever chapter title catches my eye. This is partly because I wanted to post this review sooner rather than later. The book rewards this kind of reading almost as well as the linear kind. I am not finished. I don't think that disqualifies me from recommending it, and I'll explain why.
Howard organized Encounters with Architecture as a hundred short essays, two or
three pages apiece, each built around a specific place that lodged itself in
his memory over a career spanning early training in physics, years at
Christopher Alexander's Center for Environmental Structure, decades of teaching
at Berkeley, Texas, and Oregon, and fieldwork on six continents. The book runs
chronologically in seven parts of uneven length, from a childhood memory of
four shops on St. Johns Place in Brooklyn to encounters as recent as 2024.
Early on, reading straight through, I started to suspect the book isn't really
a hundred essays about architecture. It reads more like a memoir organized
around a hundred places, each entry depending on the ones that came before it,
even when Howard never says so outright.
I enjoy Howard's writing style, which is not academic, despite a career spent
producing the journal articles and conference papers that might have trained
the habit into him. I don't find a trace of that vocabulary here. The prose is
plain and direct but still evocative, and it avoids the jargon so much
architectural writing reaches for when it wants to sound serious. I suspect the
book's own structure has something to do with this, since two or three pages
per encounter leaves little room for throat-clearing, and Howard has to arrive
at what mattered about a place quickly. Whatever the reason, the result is a
book I can pick up for ten minutes or an hour, in whatever order suits me that
day, and come away from either with something worth keeping.
Take the chapter on the Inner Shrine at Ise, in Japan, which is the best one
I've read so far. Howard describes the whole approach on a day of drizzle: the
long train ride down from Kyoto, the stands of cypress and cedar, the bridges,
the stairs, the succession of gateways that keep the innermost shrine
perpetually out of reach. He counts it among the two or three most powerful
encounters in the book, and the chapter earns that claim through sheer
particularity: a specific day, a specific stretch of weather, a route walked in
a specific order, rather than anything Howard tells the reader to think about
it. That particularity is, I suspect, the book's real method when the method is
working; Howard doesn't explain a place so much as walk you through arriving at
it.
A chapter on a neighborhood in Cairo, by contrast, is the weakest one I've
come across so far. The neighborhood itself barely appears in any specificity. Howard writes
instead about a more general feeling for the city, which he extends outward to
"all great cities" rather than keeping it tied to the specific
streets he set out to describe. It's the one entry I've read so far where the book turns abstract.
One small thing worth noting, more as an aside than an argument: Howard gives
each chapter a subtitle that distills its lesson into a phrase, "The
sacred over the profane," "Sheltering daily life," and so on. It
reminded me of the pattern-naming he must have done firsthand during his years
working alongside Alexander.
I warmly recommend this book, partly because of Howard's like-mindedness with
concerns I've long circled: place, memory, what a life's worth of attention
leaves behind. And partly because of where I am in my own life right now:
retired, with the leisure to read a book like this the way it deserves to be
read, and enough architecture behind me of my own to recognize someone who
views architecture as I do. I'm not sure this is a book for everyone. If pressed to pass it on to only one actual person I know, it wouldn't be an architect. It'd be
a young twenty-something friend of mine, a philosophy graduate, who asks
better questions about buildings than most people who get paid to design them.
That says less about who's likely to buy the book than about the kind of mind
it rewards, which is one with a disposition toward noticing.
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