Architecture • See
List of works by Clough Williams-Ellis Writings •
Reconography (by student in BEF, pseudodonym Graphite) Pelman (1919 and 4 editions) •
England and the Octopus, London, Geoffrey Bles (1928) •
Cottage Building in Cob, Pise, Chalk and Clay: a Renaissance (1919) •
The Architect, London, Geoffrey Bles (1929) •
Cautionary Guide to Oxford, Design and Industrial Association (1930), 32 pages •
Cautionary Guide to St Albans, Design and Industrial Association (1930) 32 pages •
Laurence Weaver – a Biography, London,
Geoffrey Bles (1933) •
Architecture Here and Now, London, T Nelson and Sons (1934) •
The Adventure of Building: being something about architecture and planning for intelligent young citizens and their backward elders, London, Architectural Press (1946), 91 pages •
An Artist in North Wales, London, Elek (1946), pictures by Fred Uhlman, 40 pages •
On Trust for the Nation (2 vols), London, Elek (1947), pictures by Barbara Jones, 168 pages •
Living in New Towns, London (1947) •
Town and Country Planning, Longmans, Green, London and British Council (1951), 48 pages •
Portmeirion, The Place and its Meaning, London (1963, revised edition 1973) •
Roads in the Landscape, Ministry of Transport (1967), 22 pages •
Architect Errant: The Autobiography of Clough Williams Ellis, London, Constable (1971), 251 pages •
Around the World in Ninety Years, Portmeirion (1978) ;With others • Clough & Amabel Williams-Ellis,
The Tank Corps (A War History), London (1919) • ____
The Pleasures of Architecture London, Jonathan Cape (1924) • ____ and Introduction by
Richard Hughes,
Headlong Down the Years, Liverpool University Press (1951), 118 pages • Susan, Charlotte, Amabel and Clough Williams-Ellis,
In and Out of Doors, London, Geo Routledge and Sons (1937), 491 pages • With
John Maynard Keynes,
Britain and the Beast, London, Dent (1937), 332 pages • With
John Strachey,
Architecture (1920, reprinted 2009), 125 pages • With
Sir John Summerson,
Architecture Here and Now ==Sources==