cover image Fallen Glory: The Lives and Deaths of History’s Greatest Buildings

Fallen Glory: The Lives and Deaths of History’s Greatest Buildings

James Crawford. Picador, $35 (640p) ISBN 978-1-250-11829-5

This well-researched and evocative work turns history into biography with the fascinating tales of the lives and deaths of 20 structures from around the world. Crawford, who manages communications and publications for Scotland’s National Collection of architecture and archaeology, reveals a witty and intelligent literary voice as he attempts to “rebuild these fallen glories in [the] mind’s eye and let them live again.” The 20 chapters cover the creation and desecration of a wide range of subjects, from the Tower of Babel to GeoCities. Most were destroyed by human hubris, with later attempts at resurrecting the sites often leading to further chaos and destruction. Though some of the early chapters seem more biographies of self-aggrandizing romantics such as Arthur Evans and Heinrich Schliemann, later chapters on the World Trade Center’s collapsed Twin Towers and the Islamic State’s obliteration of the ancient city of Palmyra reveal dramatic, startling connections between past and present, creator and destroyer, politics and culture. The book is sprinkled with illustrations and photographs, and it concludes with a welcome section offering suggestions for further in-depth reading. Although the book overly is descriptive at times, it’s archaeologist approach concludes with a compelling view of the future. (Mar.)