"Fascinating."
The Guardian
"Williams is an affable guide, breezy and smart. And brave. 'I hate Venice,' he declares in the first sentence."
The Spectator
'Why Cities Look the Way They Do is a great read. It's comfortable in voice but provocative in uncovering harsh truths and filled with fascinating visuals. To walk the city and travel the world with Williams is to journey to the brutal core of the power of image and to understand its sway over bodies and minds.'
Sharon Zukin, author of Naked City: The Death and Life of Authentic Urban Places
'Using our eyes to understand the social and psychological DNA of cities is the refreshing and important contribution of Richard J. Williams's new book. Read it and look around you with heightened vision!'
Richard Burdett, London School of Economics and Political Science
"Nicely spiky... Very enjoyable."
Diane Coyle, The Enlightened Economist
"I enjoyed Williams' insightful observations, his use of quirky sources [...], the introduction of fascinating off-piste examples and his beautiful writing. The book opens up questions rather than closing them down and, being relatively short and accessible, is likely to be on reading lists for some time."
Times Higher Education
Richard J. Williams is Professor of Contemporary Visual Culture at the University of Edinburgh.