"Architecture at the End of the Earth is at once an art book, a travel guide, and a personal document about the discovery of this bleak but beautiful region of Russia that most readers will see here for the first time."
-- Anna Sorokina Russia Beyond the Headlines
“The extraordinary William Brumfield has done it again with another great book about Russian architecture. Brumfield is a legend and, despite living in New Orleans where he is a professor at Tulane, a Russian national treasure.”
-- Pravoslavie
“Brumfield's absorbing text and 200 color photographs are excellent. This book will appeal to readers interested in historic church architecture or traditional Russian village culture.”
-- David R. Conn Library Journal
"Brumfield captures the sometimes crumbling, sometimes resplendent cathedrals, chapels and other structures of the Russian North. Nearly 200 full color images of brick and wood buildings in varying degrees of neglect and upkeep, as well as a travelogue and careful, compelling documentation of the edifices are combined to offer a beautiful and daunting portrait of the region."
-- Melanie Warner Spencer New Orleans Magazine
"The work is a major contribution to knowledge of a neglected area. While there is a thorough discussion of the structures, the lack of a bibliography and index gives the false appearance of a picture book, when it is far more than that. This fascinating book should have a wide appeal. Highly recommended. All readership levels."
-- T. J. McCormick Choice
"Without doubt, the stunning photographs are the main attraction here, but the book is also a travel memoir, and in many ways, a love letter to this wild and often inaccessible part of Russia. . . . In the last resort, this book, like so much of Brumfield’s work, may be most valuable for documenting a crucially important part of Russia’s cultural heritage, a part that has suffered irreparable harm, particularly in Soviet times, and now faces an uncertain future."
-- Daniel Rowland Russian Review
"Without Brumfield’s contribution of photographs of these northern village churches, so difficult to reach given the taiga, permafrost, climate, and lack of passable roads, little photographic architectural history of this regional church architecture would exist. The publication of this book of photographs and travelogue speaks of a world almost lost to architectural history. Recommended for library collections including Russian architecture, art, history and culture."
-- Kathleen Duff ARLIS/NA Reviews
"[Brumfield] has produced a text that is historical, factual, and geographically situated. At the same time he has ‘painted’ pictures in words. These descriptive views can then be experienced on another level through the artistry of the superb photographs, which create a sense of space in the book.... Elegantly designed and produced, this volume reaffirms the value of the printed book in our electronic age. It is in itself a work of art."
-- Natalia Berg East-West Review
"The rich yet imperiled architectural heritage of the Russian North is beau-tifully presented in this large-format book by the leading English-language historian of Russian architecture, William Brumfield. The result of decades of exploration in often difficult-to-reach areas near the White Sea, the book pro-vides an elegiac journey through the outstanding architectural monuments of the Russian North, particularly churches.... The book will be of interest to everyone who wishes to know more about Russian architecture, regional artistic identity, and the Russian North."
-- Susan Smith-Peter Region
"Architecture at the End of the Earth is a splendidly successful work, undertaking to capture, in word and stunning photography, the enigma of the Russian North: its architectural wonders in silent harmony with landscapes and people. Part of the author’s monumental ongoing project to map the history of Russian architecture, the book illustrates that this vast yet little-known part of Russia—a kind of Russian outback—is emphatically not ‘cold and imponderable,’ but enchanting, full of life and warmth, as well as sadness."
-- Julia Konstantinovsky Sobornost
"The book fascinates, yet is splendidly readable. Replete with adventure, gentle humor and details of architectural marvels and wondrous encounters, the narrative is a vibrant story-telling impossible to put down. It is a must to have—and to carry on their person—for every would-be traveler to the North of Russia."
-- Julia Konstantinovsky St Vladimir's Theological Quarterly
"This book is remarkable in many ways. Apart from being a threnody for the vanishing of the remarkable churches of North Russia, it is both an engaging record of the exciting and difficult journeys made by Brumfield in his efforts to record the last remnants of this culture, and an indispensable record of what still survives. . . . Brumfield’s achievement is never likely to be superseded: his is a record of achievements that will, inexorably, be swallowed up by the march of human history. Without Brumfield’s hard-won record and account of these churches, they would pass from human memory altogether."
-- Andrew Louth Journal of Ecclesiastical History