11/73
Functionalist design by George H Marcus reads more like a competent historical survey than a book that wants to argue with you. If you already know the broad Bauhaus story, much of this will feel familiar in outline and intention. Marcus spends a lot of time on names, dates, institutions, and formal developments, which makes the book reliable but rarely surprising. The emphasis is on what happened and who did what, not on building a strong theoretical lens for why functionalism mattered beyond its moment. As a result, the book explains functionalist design as a historical tendency rather than interrogating it as an ongoing intellectual position. That approach makes it easy to read but also limits how much you can take from it conceptually. Overall, it is a serviceable reference and context-setter, but not a book that reshapes how one thinks about design or modernism.