This book is absolutely misleading! It is not a 'book' in the first place, but only a compendium of papers. The subtitle "an early history of the new AI" is ridiculous, for there is no history, not even a personal account of it! Even if Brooks is doing good science, I still think that most intelligent readers should go for the papers instead of paying for the very same thing in book form, because that is exactly why papers exist in the first place.
Anyway, these are the references that form such "early history of AI":
Chapter 1. A robust layered control system for a mobile robot, IEEE Journal of Robotics and Automation 2, 1986, 14-23.
Chapter 2. A robot that walks: emergent behaviors from a carefully evolved network. Neural Computation 1, 1989, 253-262.
Chapter 3. Learning a distributed map representation based on navigation behaviors. Proceedings of the 1990 USA-Japan Symposium on Flexible Automation, Kioto, Japan, 499-506.
Chapter 4. New approaches to robotics. Science 253, 12227-1232, 1991.
Chapter 5. Intelligence without representation. Artificial Intelligence 47, 139-160, 1991.
Chapter 6. Planning is just a way of avoiding figuring out what to do next. MIT AI Lab Working Paper 303, September 1987.
Chapter 7. Elephants don't play chess. Robotics and Autonomous Systems 6, 1990, 3-15.
Chapter 8. Intelligence without reason. Proceedings of the 1991 IJCAI, 569-595.
I just thought other readers might not appreciate being deceived the way I was...
AL