Europe Books
Related Subjects: Germany Malta Netherlands Portugal Switzerland United Kingdom Serbia and Montenegro
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GREAT! for a driving holiday "off the beaten track"Review Date: 2000-09-16
Nice guide, well researchedReview Date: 2006-06-12
At the beginning of each section the book provides a narrative regarding the larger cities in each area. I have listed these cities in brackets after the regions below.
This book has outlined 25 tours through Italy these are as follows:
Piedmont, Lombardy, Emilia-Romagna, Veneto (Torino, Milano, Bologna, Rimini, Asolo, Verona)
Tour 1: The Foot of the Mountains
Tour 2: Of Alps, Lakes & Plain
Tour 3: La Grassa - the Fat Country
Tour 4: Of Mosaics, Sun & Sea
Tour 5: The Gentle Veneto
Tour 6: Beyond Venice - Inland Veneto
Liguria & Tuscany (San Remo, Genova, Pisa, Firenze)
Tour 7: The Lingurian Hilltowns
Tour 8: The Riviera of Levante
Tour 9: Treasures of Tuscany
Tour 10: The Cradle of the Renaissance
Umbria & The Marches (Perugia, Ancona, Urbino)
Tour 11: The Green Heart of Italy
Tour 12: Italy's Best Kept Secret
Tour 13: The Northern Marches
Lazio, Campania, Abruzzo (Roma, Napoli, Pescara, L'Aquila)
Tour 14: The Apennines & the Adriatic
Tour 15: Abruzzo - the Remote Interior
Tour 16: Roman Country Retreats
Tour 17: The Roman Countryside
Tour 18: In the Shadow of Vesuvius
Tour 19: Small Cities of Campania
Calabria, Basilicata, Puglia (Catanzaro, Cosenza, Matera, Bari, Brindisi, Foggia)
Tour 20: The Toe of the Boot
Tour 21: The Highlands of Calabria
Tour 22: Forgotten Basilicata
Tour 23: Ancient Puglia
Tour 24: The Heel of Italy
Tour 25: The Gargano Peninsula
For each tour the book provides the following information:
1. Time required
2. Total distance in both kilometers and miles
3. Distance between towns
4. Driving directions
5. Brief narrative about each city on the tour
The book does provide limited lodging information in the back of the book. However, I don't find it to be adequate to make an informed decision. I would recommend a lodging only book to make those decisions.
If you were interested in driving to the smaller cities and towns in Italy, I would also recommend "Italy on Backs Roads" by Hunter Publishing and "Driving Tours of Italy" by Macmillan Travel.
The book does contain some pictures, although fewer than the typical guidebook. I would also recommend that you supplement this book with a good map of Italy. I use the Michelin map of Italy. That way if you get a tip from a local you can venture even further off the beaten path. Some of our best memories of Italy were as a result of a tip from someone in a restaurant or a shop. Italians love to chat and share their country. If you ask them questions they will point you to some of the most lovely places.
This book is a small size and fits easily into a big purse or suitcase. I find it works best to copy the sections of all the guidebooks that apply to my trip and bind these together as a personal guidebook that also saves space in my suitcase.
Bella Italia from behind the wheel or by zooming with a VespaReview Date: 2006-02-10
Excellent guide to seeing Italy with a car or a Vespa moped. You will enjoy some great driving tours and routes through Italia.
Frommers has recently come out with a "Best-Loved Driving Tours" series ... guides that are not very inexpensive, but are very well researched and quite comprehensive. One will have plenty of driving tours and routes to chose from, whether you like arts and museums, scenic roads and breathtaking views, urban towns and shopping, or just want to experience a regione's culture and life.
Unlike the other Frommer guides that are fatter and heavier, this little book gives you not too many specifics on lodging or eating. It is geared strictly for the person behind the wheel and her or his passengers.
I have had a great experience using this guide and will recommend it to anyone who can afford it. Also, you might want to check to see if your library carries it and check it out for the duration of your visit abroad.
When I backpacked 4 months through Europe I had a copy of the Lonely Planet for Europe (a thick and heavy book) because it covered more cities and esoteric towns, a ripped chapters of all the international youth hostals Europe of the countries I visited, and as primary guide for nominal cities and capitals I used Frommers (ripped the book and kept only chapters of countries planning to visit - so I can keep the weight down).
If you only buy one guide book for Italy, buy this one.Review Date: 1999-11-08
Convenient,, 25 Great Itinerary Choices, Easy to Use...Review Date: 2001-04-09
I was going to be in Italy for two weeks, half of which I would be in Venice, floating in gondolas with my girlfriend, eagerly explaining to her why my voice sounds like Dean Martian's when signing "Amore" but the wind and the slap of the gondoliers paddle made me sound different, really. She didn't by it either.
With two weeks in Italy, one by train and the second in an Audi, I used "Frommer's Italy's Best-Loved Driving Tours" to travel through the Alps and Lake District in Northern Italy.
Though not my only guide, it was the "big picture" guide that allowed my preliminary planning.
You can select from twenty-five great itinerary loops that cover Italy from the Italian Alps to the tip of the boot. Each has a map that highlights a half a dozen to dozen places that are unforgettable.
Good maps (although not detailed) and enticing site descriptions kept this book in use throughout my driving tour. Recommended.

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Absolutely Life ChangingReview Date: 2002-11-04
view of prophecy from common man's standpointReview Date: 2002-10-18
Brutal & BlessedReview Date: 2002-06-12
Insightful, intelligent and relevantReview Date: 2002-06-10
FantastiqueReview Date: 2002-05-15
Keep up the good work Mr. Wade

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great reference book Review Date: 2007-08-01
I was saddened not to find "Anzio Annie" (aka Leopold and Robert) referenced as such, but comparing google articles I found it to be the "28cm Kanone 5 in Eisenbahnlafette".
I was disappointed to find, as did another reviewer, that mortars and self propelled artillery were not included. Luckily, I had the "German Military Vehicles" catalog to refer to for "Karl" and "Thor".
I would have liked a more comprehensive index by popular names of various artillery. More history of the various railroad guns would have been an added attraction.
Overall, I do like the book. With other reference books and google, it adds to my library.
A Perfect Reference for German Artillery of WWIIReview Date: 1999-04-06
Great BookReview Date: 2001-10-03
A comprehensive review of German Artillery in World War II.Review Date: 1997-02-10
tecnically perfectReview Date: 2000-01-08

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excellant sourceReview Date: 2006-05-10
Excellant book
Good source on a rarely covered subjectReview Date: 2005-07-05
Wolves unto sheepReview Date: 2005-03-03
Overall, this book is really a 4.5 star book, but since Amazon doesn't support half stars, I had to round down this time because there aren't that many descriptions of engagements, especially given the price of the material. However, the pictures are great, there's interesting material on the types of mines the German Navy used, and some good general material that can keep wargamers, modeler, or historians interested.
Absolutely beautiful. Astonishing.Review Date: 2004-06-03
The Schnell-Bootes, or in English: E-Boats, were the fastest ships on the sea, using special scientific advances. They were the scourge of British coastal convoys. This book is also recent so the author has included the Lyme Bay attack, which nearly averted D-Day, and thus could have change the war.
The text is short and to the point, all important aspects covered. The photos are just stunning!
Great Photo BookReview Date: 2003-10-16

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Colorful Guide to the Third Reich!Review Date: 2008-05-11
The photographs in GERMANY AT WAR run the gamut from 'glamour' shots of Hitler, Nazi officials, Generals, Admirals and various war heroes to frontline photos of Wehrmacht soldiers freezing on the Russian front; homefront scenes of ecstatic Germans celebrating Der Fuhrer's rise balanced by later shots of ravaged German cities; assorted German airplanes, tanks and ships; photos of Jews, Gypsies and other victims of the Third Reich; etc.
Some of the images have appeared previously but in black and white. Seeing those images in color does produce a more visceral response. Those previously black-and-white villains and assorted scenes take on life. Looking at the party rally photographs, for instance, you start to laugh at the ridiculous appearance of some of those Nazi henchmen in their comic-opera uniforms until you remember those 'super-men' helped kill illions of people.
Given its broad coverage of Third Reich personalities and events, GERMANY AT WAR is a wonderful time-capsule and a must-have selection. It really brings the Third Reich to life. Recommended.
Fotos a cores e raras.Review Date: 2008-03-07
Em um conflito onde a maioria das fotos são em preto e branco, uma copilação de exposições a cores dá uma sensação diferente, trazendo uma realidade que intrínsecamente se encontrava distante devido ao distanciamente provocado pela falta de cor. Com esse livro a questão se coloca diferente. Lá estão vários personagens importantes da Alemanha na época vestindo os uniformes em uma naturalidade nunca antes vista. Tal naturalidade, provocada pela cor, é um dos pontos máximos desta obra de Forty.
O texto é bem simples e pequeno, apenas apresentando ao leitor uma introdução e contextualização do período de forma que este se localize tanto geograficamente quanto temporalmente. Há também, para cada foto, um pequeno texto acompanhando.
Porém o autor, que já foi diretor e curador do famoso Museu de Tanques de Bovington em Dorset na Inglaterra, inexplicavelmente apresenta alguns erros no texto que acompanha as fotos que, para um olho treinado como o dele não deveria acontecer. Como por exemplo na página 154 na foto do Stuka. Obviamente que os mecânicos não estão em cima da asa do avião aproveitando o sol do Mediterrâneo e sim fazendo um contrapeso de modo que o avião seja puxado para fora do buraco onde está atolado. Tal foto é repetida no livro Luftwaffe Colours - Stuka Volume One de Peter Simth publicado pela Classic na página 49. Segundo Smith, o Stuka não está no Mediterrâneo e sim na França durante a primeira ofensiva alemã na Batalha da Inglaterra.
E na foto da página 170, está claro que Hitler examina junto ao Dr. Porsche um tanque alemão, no caso o protótipo do SdKfz 184 Ferdinand (ou Elefant) e não no PzKpfw VI Tiger Ausf. E.
Afora estes pequenos contratempos, o livro é muito bom e recomendado tanto para modelistas quanto para historiadores e aficcionados.
An Eye OpenerReview Date: 2007-04-05
The Color of War: Nazi GermanyReview Date: 2004-10-09
ExcellentReview Date: 2008-01-27

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Amazing - great to see it back in printReview Date: 2005-08-21
An Almost Perfect BookReview Date: 2006-06-09
An erudite and self-conscious story of 1920's VeniceReview Date: 2001-01-11
I thoroughly enjoyed this style, and his ability to keep one attached and interested in the motley characters who are tied together by time, place, English language and money, but who then find themselves blown apart by the rise of the Fascisti and the revolutionary forces afloat in Europe.
A stunning BookReview Date: 2003-03-17
It gets better! Taking up the narrative twenty years later in the shambles of post-war Amsterdam, the story, like life, gets deeper. I guessed at less than half of the intrigues and interconnections that are revealed in the denouement.
I was up half the night trying to finish this book, and the other half trying to comprehend what I had read. It is a compelling commetary on the interplay of good and evil, the limits of government, and the tension between truth and diplomacy. I was left turning over in my mind the well-worn words of Edmund Burke "In order for evil to flourish, all that is required is for good men to do nothing". But which of us is good, and which "nothing" should we not do?
I cannot praise this one too much.Review Date: 2004-09-30
I first read Gestures over a decade ago and the memory of that experience is still vivid in my mind. What H.S. Bhabra managed to do was draw me in in such an artful way that I wasn't even aware of what was happening. And not until I found myself surrounded by the atmosphere of the characters and places was it that I knew that I was lost in the tale that H.S. Bhabra was telling. A tale told with the virtuosity of an extremely gifted writer.
Like the other reviewer I too stayed up till deep in the night, experiencing a wide range of emotions and feelings that to this day impresses me deeply. Rarely has an author's words managed to evoke half that many emotions and feelings from me as H.S. Bhabra has.
I could, of course, talk about what befalls the characters. Tell about their fate, the places they visit, the relations they have, but I won't. I won't because I'd hate to ruin the surprise. All I will say is that to not read this novel will make you poorer by having missed out on what undoubtedly would have been one of the best reading experiences of your entire life. A big statement, yet I'm certain of its truth.
One last remark. For years I've searched for other books by H.S. Bhabra, to my surprise Amazon did not even have Gestures for sale (this made me anxiously guard my copy of Gestures as I feared losing it and never again being able to read it), and today was the first time when searching for books by Bhabra yielded results. To my surprise I found Gestures. :) It makes me very happy to see this story in print again (it was first published in Great Britain in 1986). Some stories are simply too great to ever be out of print.

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Getorix review by Maggie BishopReview Date: 2008-01-05
This is the type of book you recommend to friends.
An interesting story about pre-Caesarian Rome.Review Date: 2006-08-18
Getorix: The Eagle and The BullReview Date: 2006-09-19
A Perfect Novel. I could not put it down!Review Date: 2006-09-13
A thoroughly captivating and intimate story of a young man's struggle with identity and prideReview Date: 2006-08-13

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IMPORTANT WARNING for EXCELLENT series!Review Date: 2008-07-06
Once I stopped buying the same books but different versions, I absolutely loved this trilogy. It is well worth the money and the wait. This is SO MUCH MORE than just another time-travel story. I would even suggest it for people who don't usually go for time travel themes -- the history, power struggles and choices between good vs. bad and right vs. wrong are truly deep and relevant yet not overdone; Just for the simple plot alone, this one's a keeper -- and yes, I've read the Harry Potter series, and Linda Buckley-Archer's Gideon series is well worth the comparison. You won't regret it. For both children and adults alike.
FantasticReview Date: 2008-04-29
The Time ThiefReview Date: 2008-03-28
Excellent! Even better than the first!Review Date: 2008-02-24
Wonderful sequel!Review Date: 2008-01-28

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A Must Read for the German-American Cold War ExperiencesReview Date: 2002-10-14
I recommend it for both the serious scholar as well as the casual reader of social and demographic history.
Modernization = Americanization?Review Date: 2002-10-09
The content of the book has, for the most part, been adequately addressed in the "official" Amazon review as well as in the previous customer review. There is one aspect, however, that deserves further mention, and which I found particularly insightful: Höhn's discussion of whether the changes that came to the rural areas she discusses would be best described as modernization or as Americanization. This sort of issue is something which would interest anyone who is concerned with the cultural issues of globalization and the dominance of American cultural products in today's markets. Because she focuses on an area in which there was a very strong American presence in the immediate post-war years, it is not surprising that her evidence shows a significant American component to the modernization process. It would be interesting to compare her conclusions in this regard to those of someone studying an area where American influence was less direct and personal. This comparison would better demonstrate whether the American influence was a necessary, or merely a contemporary, component of German societal modernization. Such a comparison, however, would not fit very well into a book titled "GIs and Fräuleins." Höhn is to be commended for putting the abundant evidence which she presents into such a larger context of modernization debates, and not faulted for not being more encyclopedic.
Women's sexual freedom and nationalismReview Date: 2005-07-12
German elites wanted a good relationship with the United States, so plans were dropped to label every German woman who slept with an American a "prostitute." Besides, too many respectable German families acquired American sons-in-law. Germans couldn't help but notice that "Negro" soldiers were despised by their fellow Americans, so women who slept with "black" Americans were the only ones labeled prostitutes.
Interesting fact: One German judge released a mulatto Fräulein who was accused of prostitution for sleeping with a "black" American soldier. He reasoned that, since she wasn't good enough to marry a white man, she was only engaged in some innocent "husband hunting."Passing for Who You Really Are
a wonderful book!Review Date: 2002-09-10
Amis and VeronikasReview Date: 2002-09-09
Maria Hoehn
ISBN 0-8078-5375-5
This book explores the culture clash that occurred during the Cold War in the 1950's when American GIs were first stationed in large numbers in the towns of Baumholder and Kaiserslautern in the rural Rhineland-Palatinate state of Germany, between the Rhine and Mosel rivers. Having served in Germany a decade later, I was surprised at the extent to which there had been such problems. In Mannheim, most of the issues that Maria Hoehn describes were not readily apparent. But Mannheim was urban versus the relatively provincial character of Baumholder and Kaiserlautern of the previous decade.
Some of Hoehn's themes in this book include the impact the American soldier's money and lifestyle on rural German society, the German conservatives' attempt to punish German women who associated with GIs, especially black GIs, and the irony of the Germans' rejection of discrimination against Jews in the new Federal democracy vis-à-vis their acceptance of it against black American soldiers. Certainly, Hoehn points out, white attitudes toward fellow black soldiers played a role in the German view.
Hoehn's documentation from publications of the time convincingly demonstrates that there were significant racial problems and that many Germans vehemently opposed intimate associations between German women and American blacks, so much so that the conservative CDU political party and various religious organizations tried to have these women legally classified as prostitutes.
Hoehn writes that many Germans including those who had lost ancestral lands to American military installations began to cash in on the boom by renting rooms to Americans. Barns and attics were transformed into apartments. German families moved into their own kitchens to be able rent out the rest of the house to the Americans who were willing to pay four or five times the going rate. Hoehn quips that in the small towns where everyone usually kept animals that some Germans had to choose between having a pig or an American, an "Ami" in the German parlance of the time.
Due to high unemployment throughout Germany at this time, many young women came to the area hoping for a job as a maid for an American family, a waitress, or a dancer at an establishment that catered to American soldiers. Many, who had lost homes and parents during the war, hoped to escape from a life of poverty. Some were refugees from the former territories or East Germany. These women did not find favor in the traditional view of the residents of the area for their fraternization with American soldiers, especially black American soldiers. Such women were dubbed "Veronikas". A number of them were arrested and subjected to humiliating trials in local courts by extremist judges. Efforts for national legislation classifying these women as prostitutes by the coalition of CDU, Protestant, and Catholic leaders ultimately failed.
This book is an excellent, well-documented piece of research. Although Hoehn's writing is somewhat academic and redundant in places, this is a commendable book of considerable merit. Those interested in postwar German history and even some former GIs may get new insight from it.
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Glide to GloryReview Date: 2003-01-26
Chairman 325GIR 2003Review Date: 2003-03-05
submitted by the people who lived them.Jerry has
put them together with pictures that can bring them
to life for all who read the book..
Glide to Glory by Jerry RichlakReview Date: 2003-04-07
Glide to GloryReview Date: 2003-02-06
Glider Infantry HerosReview Date: 2003-03-03
Related Subjects: Germany Malta Netherlands Portugal Switzerland United Kingdom Serbia and Montenegro
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2 things to note: this book does NOT provide any listings for places to stay, so you will need another resource (I found several excellent country inns on the Web.) Also, while detailed maps of each tour are included, you will also need a good roadmap or atlas of Italy, esp. if you will be visiting more than one part of the country.