Michael Sorkin: 5 books

Book cover of What Goes Up

What Goes Up

The Right and Wrongs to the City

by Michael Sorkin
Language: English
Release Date: May 1, 2018

A radical architect examines the changing fortunes of the contemporary city Michael Sorkin is one of the most forthright and engaging architectural writers in the world. In What Goes Up he takes to task the public officials, developers, “civic” organizations, and other heroes of big money,...
Book cover of Twenty Minutes in Manhattan
by Michael Sorkin
Language: English
Release Date: March 12, 2013

Every morning, the architect and writer Michael Sorkin walks downtown from his Greenwich Village apartment through Washington Square to his Tribeca office. Sorkin isn't in a hurry, and he never ignores his surroundings. Instead, he pays careful, close attention. And in Twenty Minutes in Manhattan,...
Book cover of All Over the Map

All Over the Map

Writing on Buildings and Cities

by Michael Sorkin
Language: English
Release Date: February 12, 2013

Robert Hughes once described Michael Sorkin as “unique in America––brave, principled, highly informed and fiercely funny.” All Over the Map confirms all of these superlatives as Sorkin assaults “the national security city, with its architecture of manufactured fear.”
Book cover of Starting From Zero

Starting From Zero

Reconstructing Downtown New York

by Michael Sorkin
Language: English
Release Date: December 2, 2013

Architect and social critic Michael Sorkin develops his own vision of the future lower Manhattan through a series of chronologically organized essays illustrated with full-color images of his own plans. Mixing his inimitable brand of social criticism with more personal reflections, Starting From Zero...
Book cover of New Orleans Under Reconstruction
by Carol M. Reese, Michael Sorkin, Anthony Fontenot
Language: English
Release Date: July 8, 2014

When the levees broke in August 2005 as a result of Hurricane Katrina, 80 percent of the city of New Orleans was flooded, with a loss of 134,000 homes and 986 lives. In particular, the devastation hit the vulnerable communities the hardest: the old, the poor and the African American. The disaster...
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