The hell with the risk of coming across as an overrater. I'm dealing out another 5 stars. If only to keep the average rating of this book at the maximum. I'm not going to be the one to bring this average down.
Highlights of this volume of Sasek's series of picture book guides to interesting places include the two page spread of Pontoon, the idyllic pictures of 'subtropical' Glengarriff, and the view of O'Connoll Street (twelve lanes full of cars). But my favourite is the two-page spread of an Irish landscape at the beginning: green hills, low walls, scattered rocks, gray mountains in the back, gray sky above, a few cottages and two sheep. No people. After a short introduction Sasek shows and tells that Ireland "really is green--... every imaginable green-- " Then you turn the page, get the majestic spread, and the minimal caption, finishing the sentence: "green and silent."
This is the stuff that 5 star books ar e made of.
I noticed a slight change in Sasek's style with respect to the earlier books I've read. Those were from the fifties, this one's from 1964. The style seems looser, more impressionist than cubist. In one instance, the ruins of Dunluce Castle, perhaps a bit too impressionistic. I also see some added texture.
I'm glad that a new reprint volume is on the way (This is Greece, IIRC). AFAIK, Universe published these books at the rate of two a year, at the same time. Now they appear to have stepped up to three a year, but spread over the whole year. I can't wait to finally have the whole (18-volume?) series.
And I'd like to go to Blarney Castle in county Cork tomorrow, to kiss Blarney Stone "and get invincibly eloquent." I have to talk about innovation in high renaissance art next Friday, so I need all the eloquence I can get. Perhaps I should do it the Sasek way: "Leonardo's work really is innovative-- ...every imaginable shade of..." etc.