An excellent and thorough work on the history, philosophy, psychology and physics of American building practices. Contains brilliant insights on the national psyche, the adaptation of traditional styles to locally-available materials, aesthetics and formalism and, in the latter third, a generous helping of urban planning and social theory. Not all books make you better read, this one does.
Excellent review of America's architectural history to date (at the time of writing, into the late 70s). As concise as such a broad study can be, and rarely dry. Roth offers edifying insight into society, and the various forces that shaped and were shaped by architecture, at the corresponding times.
This is an ok review of the history of American architecture, but it skips over a lot too. I would recommend this supplemented with other American Architecture books.