"Brechin presents a book rich in historical anecdotes, taking the reader from the gold rush to World War II, when UC Berkeley, which had been heavily financed by the Hearst family and other elites, oversaw aspects of the Manhattan Project. His insights on the propaganda of civic monuments prove provocative. The profiles of San Francisco's yellow journalists-Irving Murray Scott, Michael deYoung, and William Randolph Hearst-expose the ability of the press to communicate visions of empire, to indoctrinate the community in those visions, and to obscure the silent mechanisms of urban power that propelled those visions forward. Based on the portrait Brechin paints, one wonders if Orson Welles was too kind to Hearst."
— Environmental History
"Imperial San Francisco is written in an accessible manner, with clear graphic representation. The city grows, devours, and transforms the world as you read."
— Economic Geography
"A classic of urban history, environmental history, California history, and socially oriented architectural criticism, this work contains scholarship that is thrilling in its comprehensiveness. Never before have the inner dynamics of the regional civilization centered in San Francisco been so comprehensively integrated."—Dr. Kevin Starr, State Librarian of California, author of Americans and the California Dream
"Imperial San Francisco is a great gift of a book, the product of extraordinary research, insight, and hard work that connects a lot of dots and gives me a reinvigorated focus and curiosity [about] what California culture was and what might become of it all."—Gary Snyder