"Modern Housing has special interest for Americans, not because of what we have done but because of what we have not done."—The New York Book Review (1934, R. L. Duffus)
"It should not be thought that this book is intended only, or even mainly, for technicians; on the contrary, it is entirely suitable both in manner and matter for anyone interested in its subject."—The Spectator (1935)
"Catherine Bauer’s Modern Housing shows how we lag behind Europe in good homes for all."—The Washington Post (1934, Theodore Hall)
"In discussing Modern Housing, which deals largely with European achievements of the last fifteen years, it is difficult to exercise restraint and to avoid fulsome praise."—Lee M. Brooks, University of North Carolina (1935)
"Planners, architects, and builders today should be equally interested in this book."—Daphne Spain, University of Virginia
"Modern Housing has special interest for Americans, not because of what we have done but because of what we have not done."—The New York Book Review (1934, R. L. Duffus)
"It should not be thought that this book is intended only, or even mainly, for technicians; on the contrary, it is entirely suitable both in manner and matter for anyone interested in its subject."—The Spectator (1935)
"Catherine Bauer’s Modern Housing shows how we lag behind Europe in good homes for all."—The Washington Post (1934, Theodore Hall)
"Almost a century later, the ideas in her book still burn. She draws her utopian image of a different America in so much detail that it begins to feel like a real destination. Republished at an opportune moment, her dispatch from another crisis provides context, and perhaps inspiration, for a movement whose like she desperately longed to see."—The New Yorker
"The opening case for Bauer’s Modern Housing is both simpler and more elusive. Written by a relatively recent Vassar graduate in art history who would become a key protagonist in the development of U.S. housing policy, Modern Housing argues straightforwardly for the emulation, in the United States during the Depression, of European social democratic housing programs and their architecture"—Places Journal
"Bauer's book now is as timely as it is welcome."—Daily Dose of Architecture Books
"It’s a refreshing read, even today."—Municipal World Journal