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Fallingwater Rising: Frank Lloyd Wright, E. J. Kaufmann, and America's Most Extraordinary House [Paperback]

Franklin Toker
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
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Book Description

April 19 2005
Fallingwater Rising is a biography not of a person but of the most famous house of the twentieth century. Scholars and the public have long extolled the house that Frank Lloyd Wright perched over a Pennsylvania waterfall in 1937, but the full story has never been told.

When he got the commission to design the house, Wright was nearing seventy, his youth and his early fame long gone. It was the Depression, and Wright had no work in sight. Into his orbit stepped Edgar J. Kaufmann, a Pittsburgh department-store mogul–“the smartest retailer in America”–and a philanthropist with the burning ambition to build a world-famous work of architecture. It was an unlikely collaboration: the Jewish merchant who had little concern for modern architecture and the brilliant modernist who was leery of Jews. But the two men collaborated to produce an extraordinary building of lasting architectural significance that brought international fame to them both and confirmed Wright’s position as the greatest architect of the twentieth century.

Fallingwater Rising is also an enthralling family drama, involving Kaufmann, his beautiful cousin/wife, Liliane, and their son, Edgar Jr., whose own role in the creation of Fallingwater and its ongoing reputation is central to the story. Involving such key figures of the l930s as Frida Kahlo, Albert Einstein, Henry R. Luce, William Randolph Hearst, Ayn Rand, and Franklin Roosevelt, Fallingwater Rising shows us how E. J. Kaufmann’s house became not just Wright’s masterpiece but a fundamental icon of American life.

One of the pleasures of the book is its rich evocation of the upper-crust society of Pittsburgh–Carnegie, Frick, the Mellons–a society that was socially reactionary but luxury-loving and baronial in its tastes, hobbies, and sexual attitudes (Kaufmann had so many mistresses that his store issued them distinctive charge plates they could use without paying).

Franklin Toker has been studying Fallingwater for eighteen years. No one but he could have given us this compelling saga of the most famous private house in the world and the dramatic personal story of the fascinating people who made and used it.

A major contribution to both architectural and social history.


From the Hardcover edition.

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From Publishers Weekly

An oddly "spiritual" agglomeration of rectilinear glass, concrete and stone masses set on a waterfall in the Pennsylvania woods, Wright's Fallingwater house made America fall in love with modernist architecture, according to this engrossing study. Architectural historian Toker (Pittsburgh: An Urban Portrait) approaches the building as a tense but fruitful collaboration between Wright's genius and the encouragement given it by his patron, Pittsburgh department store magnate E. J. Kaufmann, whom Toker credits with being "almost... the coarchitect" of the house. He gives a detailed, sometimes hour-by-hour account of Wright's planning process, the engineering hurdles surmounted in realizing his structurally daring design, the critical and public acclaim the house has elicited through the years and its impact on American culture in everything from Ayn Rand's The Fountainhead to motifs in suburban tract housing. He sets the story against an erudite but accessible history of the rise of modernism and Wright's antagonism toward the German Bauhaus and International Style architects, whose austere, mechanistic stylings he denounced even as he was adapting and humanizing them to suit American tastes. Toker sometimes makes too much, with little but speculation to go on, of Kaufmann's contribution to the project, at one point comparing the relationship between Wright and Kaufmann to Christ's bond with St. Peter. But the trenchant analysis of Wright's character and creativity, the often lyrical evocations of his buildings, and the opinionated but insightful overview of the modernist intellectual milieu of the 1930s make the book a wonderful exploration of the psychological and social meaning of architecture. Photos.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

Fallingwater, daringly cantilevered over a waterfall near Pittsburgh, may well be "the most famous private house in the world," as Toker asserts. Conceived and built in the years 1935-37, this stunning weekend retreat's high-profile owner (department-store tycoon Kaufmann) and celebrity architect (Wright) guaranteed it would never be a well-kept secret. Fallingwater has already been the subject of numerous books, but Toker adds important new scholarship in debunking or clarifying four myths: that E. J.'s son, Edgar Jr., was father to the project; that Wright drew the complete plans in a two-hour burst of creativity; that Wright demonstrated engineering genius in his design; and that the world "spontaneously acclaimed it as the crowning achievement of modern architecture." If these points seem like insider quibbles, Toker also provides histories of the site, the men (Wright was in desperate need of a comeback when he got the commission), the house's chaotic construction, and the manner in which it became a byword even to architecture neophytes. A must-read for Wright fans, it will also intrigue architecture buffs. Keir Graff
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

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Most helpful customer reviews
Format:Hardcover
If you have any interest in a well-written story which weaves history, architecture, social and cultural conditions, PLUS unique personalities of wealth and power -- then this book is for YOU.
Read this engaging book, ostensibly about the creation of one of America's most famous private homes known as 'Fallingwater Rising'-- and you'll quickly discover that it is about so much more.
Professor Toker has done a wonderful job of telling this worthwhile tale.
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By J. Bova
Format:Hardcover
This is an excellently detailed book about the building of a remarkable house and the legends that surround it. It is scholarly without being boring and gives the reader a real feel for the time period in which this all occurred. I highly recommend this book not only to the Frank Lloyd Wright enthusiast but anyone with an interest in the culture of that time.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Educational and Interesting Mar 27 2004
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
This is an exceptionally well written book that gives insight to to not only Fallingwater, but the era in which it was built. Simply outstanding.
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Most recent customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars A compulsively readable classic for American Studies & Art
A model of art history, this deliciously gossipy, profoundly researched, pellucidly clear and eminently insightful overview of American social, cultural and modern art history from... Read more
Published on Feb 17 2004 by "bobgoldny"
5.0 out of 5 stars Definitely the "Wright" stuff
Last August, my 17 year old son and I visited Fallingwater. In December, said son bought me "Fallingwater Rising". The book is a tremendous read. Read more
Published on Feb 17 2004 by Andrew Flacks
5.0 out of 5 stars An Instructive Book That Establishes the Gold Standard
This book is an extraordinary education in the many facets of early twentieth-century American life and international architecture that bear on a house in the forest that has... Read more
Published on Feb 1 2004 by Ernest Yanarella
5.0 out of 5 stars Greatest Hoax of the 20C
Rich in detail, this book dispells the myth that Jr. was in charge of coordinating architect and client. Read more
Published on Jan 12 2004 by keen james
5.0 out of 5 stars Quirky but Very Good
This is probably the oddest book I've read in a while. It delivers what it promises in the title-it is a story about E.J. Read more
Published on Jan 2 2004 by P. Martin
5.0 out of 5 stars Fallingwater Rising...and Rising
Franklin Toker has constructed a masterpiece. The book's own architecture -- layout, typeface, illustrations, photos, and jacket, but mostly the GLORIOUS WRITING! Read more
Published on Dec 31 2003
5.0 out of 5 stars Structure, Architect, Client: A Fine History
Fallingwater is quite out of the way. It was a country house, a weekend retreat, and as such was placed way in the Pennsylvania woods. Read more
Published on Dec 14 2003 by R. Hardy
5.0 out of 5 stars Another Fallingwater Book ? This one is a page-turner !
Carefully researched social history of the time and place and revealing portraits of the larger-than-life key players ... Read more
Published on Dec 2 2003
5.0 out of 5 stars great book
I have been reading nonfiction for 50 years and this book makes my top ten list. This is a multi-faceted, muilt-level story written in a very informative and interesting fashion. Read more
Published on Nov 27 2003 by albert
5.0 out of 5 stars Fallingwater Rising
I just finished reading, Fallingwater Rising, and I found it an informative and very enjoyable book. The insight Dr. Read more
Published on Nov 26 2003 by Mathew B. Smith Jr.
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