Metacritic Books

The Architecture of Happiness
by Alain De Botton

ISBN: 0375424431
Pantheon, 288 pages, $25.00
Nonfiction Art, Architecture & Photography, Philosophy, Social Sciences
Released 10/03/2006

The Architecture of Happiness is a tour through the philosophy and psychology of architecture that aims to change the way we think about our homes, our streets and ourselves.

Overall Metascore

This is an average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

72 / 100

Critic Reviews

Outstanding Kirkus Reviews
Gentle affection pervades these pages, as does knowledge of architecture that is both broad and deep. [1 Aug 2006, p.764]
Outstanding The Spectator James Delingpole
With The Architecture of Happiness [de Botton] has upped the ante still further by doing another of those things you do if you want to get really big, namely, launch an obscenely ambitious, society-changing campaign.
Outstanding The Observer Charles Saumarez Smith
It behoves us all to think carefully, as de Botton has done with perceptive clarity, as to what exactly are the qualities that make a good building.
Favorable New York Review Of Books Alison Lurie
The Architecture of Happiness is a perceptive, thoughtful, original, and richly illustrated exercise in the dramatic personification of buildings of all sorts.
Favorable Wall Street Journal John Massengale
Mr. de Botton's book is an interesting and perhaps important addition to the debate over the emotional effect that our cities and buildings have on us.
Favorable Washington Post Michael Dirda
For the most part, though, [de Botton] keeps his balance, largely through his quiet intelligence, passionate conviction and the charm of a personality lightly tinged with melancholy.
Favorable Bookslut Rachel J.K. Grace
I think The Architecture of Happiness is a beautiful book. I want everyone I know to read it. I want to invite them over to discuss these ideas with them, to talk about the homes we have chosen and why.
Favorable The Globe And Mail [Toronto] Katherine Ashenburg
If you are one of those for whom [de Botton] writes, exhilarated and dispirited in turn by your built environment, this book probably won't change your life, but it's guaranteed to sharpen your brain and eye.
Favorable The Independent Stephen Bayley
What de Botton has done is the equivalent of literary criticism based on jacket design: a very interesting idea, but not the full story.
Favorable Publishers Weekly
The strength of [de Botton's] book is that it encourages us to open our eyes and really look at the buildings in which we live. [28 Aug 2006, p.43]
Favorable Houston Chronicle Lisa Gray
Good-natured, academic de Botton still believes the world can be fixed, that our cities can be beautiful, that a building can make you happy. In other words, he can dream. And it's lovely to dream with him.
Favorable San Francisco Chronicle Ethan Gilsdorf
Gently pleading that we all take a closer look around us, de Botton's book is an altogether satisfying introduction to architecture's more vexing aesthetic problems.
Favorable The New York Times Book Review Jim Holt
[De Botton] makes the most of...his jolly (and handsomely illustrated) romp through the world of architecture.
Favorable The New Yorker
De Botton is a lively guide, and his eclectic choices of buildings and locations evince his conclusion.
Mixed The New York Times William Grimes
When he is not delivering sententious commonplaces or indulging in heavy whimsy, [de Botton] makes an agreeable guide.
Mixed Chicago Sun-Times Kevin Nance
It's bothersome...that beneath much of de Botton's affection for backward-looking architecture is his obvious contempt for modernism.
Mixed Library Journal
While the presentation is somewhat dry, architecture and history aficionados will appreciate this comprehensive and pictorially enhanced survey. [1 Sept 2006, p.166]
Mixed Los Angeles Times Matthew Price
De Botton is high falutin' but user friendly -- his trick, a la Oprah, is to throw in a feel-good twist, though his relentless geniality gets to be a bit much. [8 Oct 2006, p. R.4]
Mixed The Independent Marcus Field
All of this has been said many times before of course, if rarely so smartly.

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