Tours and Travel Books


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Tours and Travel Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Tours and Travel
Arizona's Sanctuaries, Retreats, and Sacred Places
Published in Paperback by Westcliffe Publishers (2003-08)
Author: Kelly Ettenborough
List price: $22.95
New price: $7.81
Used price: $5.65

Average review score:

Sun Drenched Sanctuaries and Retreats
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-26
"When I started covering religion and spirituality nearly a decade ago, I found that the state's natural beauty fostered infinite religious expressions, from Sedona's Chapel of the Holy Cross - a church nestled between red sandstone monoliths- to the native American tribes reverence for Spirit in nature." ~ Kelly Ettenborough

Arizona's beauty is displayed in sacred places that evoke a sense of awe and worship, not to mention the need to go on a vacation just to see these locations. This is truly a multicultural book filled with sites from all religious traditions.

Havasu Falls might be Arizona's most scenic and most hidden spot. ~ pg. 177

The book is divided up into main areas:

Phoenix and Vicinity
Tucson and Southern Arizona
Prescott and West-Central Arizona
Grand Canyon and Northern Arizona
Sedona and Vicinity
East-Central Arizona

Who would have thought of a gold mine as a healing and spiritual retreat? There is great variety here. Your heart may begin to long to run away to one of these retreats or visit a monastery no matter what your religious beliefs. These locations speak of a peaceful place to worship your creator and to connect with your spiritual self.

Each section is about two pages long and has the location, description and directions as well as the author's observations which are always entertaining.

"The bright aqua door stands out on the quiet side street near fraternity and sorority houses at the busy University of Arizona. "Peace on Earth" and an image of a dove are etched into the glass arch over the door, a sign of the calm respite that awaits you inside."
~pg. 90

As someone who has visited the Painted Desert, I can say this book is only an introduction to an entire world of beautiful places that are definitely easier to visit when the weather is cooler! Driving across America after college was a fun education.

~The Rebecca Review

Share this book with others...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-14
This is a fascinating book that takes a close look at Arizona's heritage. I sent three copies of this book to out of state relatives. I am a native, my husband is from Oregon where ancestory is important and common knowledge. This book shows the way to look and appreciate our Arizona heritage. The photos are beatuiful and the directions are easy to follow.
Thank you.

Excellent guide to hidden get-away gems.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-22
I enjoy traveling, especially day-trips in the SouthWest. I was pleasantly suprised by this guide to sacred places across Arizona. The author has an easy style, and the guide is quite diverse in the types of destinations described. The directions are clear, and the book is well organized. The author is also the photographer, and she has done an excellent job with the illustrations in the book.

This book would make an excellent gift for friends who enjoy traveling.

Tours and Travel
Around and About Paris, Vol. 2: From the Guillotine to the Bastille Opera: The 8th-12th Arrondissements
Published in Paperback by Illiad Press (1999-09)
Author: Thirza Vallois
List price: $29.95
New price: $18.18
Used price: $19.59

Average review score:

Mrs Vallois is a queen - Feel as her invitee in Paris
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-16
Because Mrs Vallois has a love affair with Paris; because she devoted part of her life to this "cause", she is totally convincing. When you read her descriptions of hidden details on houses nobody noticed before, you understand that Mrs Vallois deserves the right to consider herself as co-owner of "the spirit of Paris". Because this "spirit" is something that was invented by the French to be shared with others, feel free to become a "courtisan". Mrs Vallois books are well documented (no need to say). It's like reading an architectural manual plus an history encyclopedia. All this while walking in charming places. I hope the next books will keep this knowledge embedded in a living style and that Thirza will add more illustrations. Buy this book. It will never look old-fashioned!

Quite simply the best
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-30
As someone who has haunted Paris for decades, I can say that there is no more wonderful companion than Thirza Vallois. Her three volumes of Around and About Paris, covering every arrondissement with both erudition and joy, are almost as deep and rich and rewarding as the city itself. They are to be carried about for consulting on foot, and read in your armchair for pleasure and information you will not find in the run-of-the-mill "guide." These books are for explorers and dreamers, scholars and lovers. If you want to know Paris, you can not do better.

About the Bastille ...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-04
Great book!
and now,
Gentle Readers:

You may have noticed that Amazon made some changes to its website. For more information, view that tube place at /watch?v=PvLilHUaDic.

From June 11 - June 17, I, like many other reviewers on Amazon, did not post any reviews and did not make any purchases. This was the only means we have of showing Amazon how much we detest the new reviews format and the overloaded and confusing product pages.
Amazon revised the product pages (if one looked very, very closely) to allow public input re the redesign. Now I am told, although I do not yet see it, that the "improvements" are being scaled back to a more palatable, user/shopper friendly format.

Thanks and Stay Tuned!

/TundraVision

Tours and Travel
Ascent: The Mountains of the Tour De France
Published in Hardcover by Cycle Publishing (2006-09-01)
Author: Richard Yates
List price: $39.95
New price: $19.78
Used price: $21.59

Average review score:

ascent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-23
Highly informative book. Has the mountains and gradients km by km, and also feats of riders and races. Well written book for both the armchair rider and also for those with more lofty aims.

A strongly recommended addition to community library Sports & Athletics collections.
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-05
The 'Tour de France' is an historic annual bicycling contest across the French countryside and through French communities that began in 1903 and in recent years (thanks in large part to Lance Armstrong) has become of great interest in America. In "Ascent: The Mountains Of The Tour De France", British cycling author and 'Tour de France' expert Richard Yates has written a history of this remarkable bicycle race with all its drama and competitive excitement in the mountain country expanses of the race course. Profusely illustrated with 150 duotone photographs and other historical illustrations, this superbly written and knowledgeably presented 160-page history is a 'must read' for all dedicated bicyclists and Tour de France enthusiasts, as well as a strongly recommended addition to community library Sports & Athletics collections.

SVO5312
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-27
Very informative with excellent photos which gives brings life into the history of the famous ascends!

Tours and Travel
Avant-Guide New York City: Insiders' Guide for Urban Adventurers (Avant Guides)
Published in Paperback by Empire Press Media (2003-06)
Author: Dan Levine
List price: $19.95
New price: $2.44
Used price: $0.49

Average review score:

Complex experience
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-13
This travel guide made my visit to London a complex experience. It offers all the basic sites, but it also gives you a chance to linger into the less central areas without the feelings of uncertainty.

Useful and truthful
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-14
It is a cool guide. Complete, structured and precise. I went to a different club every night and never was I dissatisfied. The rest of the guide is as informative as the Nightlife section with a wide range from exclusive places to the alternative ones.

Well Done
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-13
I especially appreciate the section on Planning. It made my first trip to New York a pleasure. The guide is well organized and contains valuable information. Its layout is fun with many cool photos.

Tours and Travel
Beat Generation in New York: A Walking Tour of Jack Kerouac's City
Published in Paperback by City Lights Publishers (2001-01-01)
Author: Bill Morgan
List price: $12.95
New price: $7.40
Used price: $5.85
Collectible price: $20.00

Average review score:

great stuff for beat locals and tourists alike
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-28
of course anyone who lives in new york city can tell you where the white horse and cedar tavern are, but do they all know that where sam goody now stands on sixth avenue and ninth street is the very same place that the cafeteria kerouac wrote about extensively in visions of cody once stood?

this book is filled with a lot of well-known and plenty of not so well known places where various members of the beat generation ate, performed, lived, got drunk in, or otherwise played out their lives. the tours are broken down by area and there are clear directions to help you find where you're going (even if the place no longer exists). each tour also begins with a street map of the area covered and clearly numbered destinations, which was very helpful, although i did wish that the book had also come with an overview map of all manhattan and destinations so that i could more easily combine tours or skip around to places of interest if i didn't want to follow a complete tour.

each stopping place in the tour book includes a paragraph or two on why the place is important to beat history and who/what occured there. although the title of the book claims that new york was "jack kerouac's city," the tours really include many of the other important beat figures as well as a few others that were influenced by the beat movement, such as bob dylan.

this is a great way for beat aficionados visiting new york to get a taste of the city, and a fun way for locals to spend an afternoon or two discovering new spots and seeing familiar places in a new light.

Shoe leather resident tourism
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-23
Having moved to New York not long ago, I've been devouring the history and architecture of the city. This book blends the best of both, adding a third party to the mix -- literature. Dividing the city -- mostly Manhattan -- into eight two-hour walking tours, this guidebook offers literary references, beat-gen biographical information, and urban commentary in a useful, insightful style. The book is due an update -- the Gotham Book Mart has moved and several once-vacant lots are no longer undeveloped -- but this book has made for several wonderful walking weekends, and I know I'll retrace my steps in the future.

Better than wandering
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-06
It would be next to impossible to find these places on your own. Even more impossible to learn as much about each of the sites as is presented in this guide. Each tour follows a logical route and there are plenty of stops that you probably never would have thought of--eg. Serpico's apartment, the former site of Thomas Wolfe's East 8th St. apartment. Using this guide is a great way to see the Village, East and West. And the insight will keep you reading even as you're moving to the next stop. Take your time. Spread the tours over a couple of afternoons. And linger for a while in Washington Square.

A great companion to this book is "The Beat Generation in New York." I wouldn't recommend carrying this heavy book around with you, but after you've finished the tours, open the book to look at the pictures taken at many of the places you've just visited.

Tours and Travel
Best of California's Missions, Mansions, and Museums: A Behind-the-Scenes Guide to the Golden State's Historic and Cultural Treasures
Published in Paperback by Wilderness Press (2006-09)
Authors: Ken McKowen and Dahlynn McKowen
List price: $21.95
New price: $6.94
Used price: $5.95

Average review score:

Excellent state-wide overview
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-25
Overall, this is an excellent guide book. Attempting to cover the entire state of California in a single volume, the authors freely admit that their "list" is incomplete and that they had to whittle the book down to include a limited selection of historical sites from among the hundreds found throughout the state. Fortunately, the coverage of the places that made the cut is excellent, providing plenty of background information about not only the mission, mansion, or museum itself, but also its place in California history. Websites are listed when available, allowing the visitor to check out updated information prior to a visit. My only recommendation would be that the authors consider publishing a second volume that would add in the many deserving sites that couldn't be included in this book.

The 'don't miss this' tips are particularly well done.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-14
If you're a California resident or library seeking a fine blend of California trivia facts and history and a travelogue to the state's best museums, then you can't go wrong with Best of California's Missions, Mansions and Museums. It functions like a travel guide by offering hours, costs, contact information and trip and tour itineraries for visitors - and it functions like a history book in providing a healthy dose of background history about each establishment. The 'don't miss this' tips are particularly well done.

Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch

Four months on the road, 10,000 miles, to find California's best
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-02
Thanks to the Internet, it's easy these days to compile and publish lists of things, such as bed and breakfast getaways or suspension bridges or pet friendly parks, but rarer for authors actually to visit the venues they write about. That's what impressed me about "Best of California's Missions, Mansions and Museums" ($21.95 in paperback from Wilderness Press) by Ken and Dahlynn McKowen out of Sacramento.

The couple, along with Dahlynn's two children, 9-year-old Shawn and his sister, 14 year-old-Lahre, hit the road for four months, visited some 200 sites and racked up 10,000 miles on the odometer. The result, after some editing, are chatty descriptions of 135 family-friendly California missions, mansions and museums. This is a good guide to consult if one is planning a summer vacation in the Golden State.

The listings, write the authors, "provide a broad geographic and subject-matter selection of California's missions, mansions and museums, primarily as they relate to California's history and culture." Picking the "best" was difficult, subjective of course, and a lot of places were not included (such as most science and technology museums) that didn't meet the criteria of illuminating state history.

In the area of missions, "our final choice came down to 13 missions that we felt included not only wonderful museums, but retained much of their original or at least their early 20th century restored historic fabric. ... We chose our favorite mansions in much the same way as the missions, but we added accessibility -- how frequently they are open to the public for tours."

For museums, the authors concentrated on smaller collections. "We didn't choose them because of their size or the value or rarity of their collections, although we certainly considered those things. ... We considered their uniqueness, not only in the types of collections and the variety of artifacts, but also in how they relate to California's overall history or to their local community's history."

The book is divided geographically, from the North Coast, through the Great Valley and on to the South Coast and desert. Each section has a numbered locator map, trivia questions and introduction. Each two- or three-page entry features a "what's here" list, a "don't miss this" note, a description of the venue, usually a small black and white photograph and a box providing operating hours, cost, location and the Web site. The book also features an index and a list destinations by category.

The chapter devoted to the Great Valley includes entries for the Turtle Bay Exploration Park (including the Sundial Bridge) in Redding, and Chico's own Bidwell Mansion State Historic Park.

The authors note that the second floor of the mansion "features several of the home's 12 bedrooms. That was not a good location for bedrooms in a town where summer temperatures reach 100 degrees, and upstairs rooms become even hotter. Possibly, the plantation windows served as summer escapes to cooler sleeping arrangements on the outside balcony. The indoor toilets that Bidwell included were thought strange by his neighbors and visitors. Many believed that having to perform such bodily tasks inside a house, rather than in an outhouse, was unsanitary."

And there is some Great Valley trivia. "Where can you find the very first Pony Car (Mustang) manufactured by Ford?" It's at the Towe Auto Museum in Sacramento. The car is a white convertible, the first to roll off the assembly line back on April 9, 1964.

See you on the road!

Copyright 2007 Chico Enterprise-Record. Used by permission.

Tours and Travel
The Best Places You've Never Seen: Pennsylvania's Small Museums, A Traveler's Guide
Published in Paperback by Pennsylvania State University Press (2003-04-09)
Author: Therese Boyd
List price: $22.95
New price: $16.83
Used price: $4.26

Average review score:

Refreshing Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-02
What a great book! It's both fun and educational. Being from Pennsylvania, I especially had a great time reading it. It's inspired me to get in the car and visit some off the beaten path places. Great design! It's more than a travel guide, it's great photos and fun stories. I highly recommend it. Well worth the $.

A fun read!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-08
Even if you never visit any of these museums, this is a fun look at some exceptional places in PA. The author truly captures the enthusiasm of those who want to share their passions for the off-beat or unique with others. The photographs capture the spirit of the museums as well, and really add to the reader's enjoyment.

EXCELLENT ROAD TRIP COMPANION!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-22
As a proud Pennsylvanian, I love this book! How did *I* not know about a Shoe Museum? (my first stop!) Also, I never knew we had a Jimmy Stewart Museum! This book is an excellent road trip companion! Educational, funny and user friendly! Gas up, pick up your traveling companion, crank up the tunes, highlight your stops, and hit the road! Learn more about Pennsylvania's whimsical past, present and future!

Tours and Travel
Blockology: An Offbeat Walking Guide to Lower Manhattan
Published in Paperback by Turning Corners Press (2005-03)
Author: Robert Jay Kaufman
List price: $19.95
New price: $13.16
Used price: $4.34

Average review score:

Explore Manhattan and have fun!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-28
I saw a review of this book in the New York Times. Knowing we were soon to relocate to the city, i thought it would help us get to know the different neighborhoods. What a great book. It is so easy to follow and the maps are great. We intend to explore lower Manhattan and use this book as a guide. I had planned to give this book as a gift to my husband but it never arrived on time. I was disappointed in the mailing process, but none the less, we are thrilled with the book.

a guide to lower Manhattan
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-25
If you'r'e wondering how to plan a brief excursion around lower Manhattan this is a delightful guide. I found it eased my burden as a visitor on a tight schedule. I chose my streets among the clever full-page illustrations because I enjoy looking up at the great old buildings. You miss a lot when you don't slow down at gaze on these wonderful facades. There was advice about choice places to shop and eat which are known only to the locals and little tidbits about past history.

Analysis
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-23
WALKING with Robert Jay Kaufman after lunch is not good for the digestion. He is tall and has long legs that speed up when something engages his interest. He constantly jaywalks. He never takes more than a few steps before stopping to consider some element in the cityscape. And inclement weather, like the mini-monsoon that drenched the city a couple of weeks ago, is a minor inconvenience.

On Franklin Street in TriBeCa, between Greenwich and Hudson, for example, in the midst of that downpour, he ordered a halt. "Look at the Renaissance details - the arches and the verticals," he said of several buildings on the north side of the street. "You can see the egos of people who put up the buildings, all of which were built probably within 20 years of each other. Each one tried to do something different, to get noticed."

Crossing the street, Mr. Kaufman pulled out a credit card, squinted along its edge to check the alignment of the window casements and decorative details of a tiny two-story brick house, recently restored, and pointed out where the builder had intentionally varied the scheme. It is that attention to symmetry and proportion, he suggested, that makes the little structure feel so right to a passer-by.

Manhattan has 1,544 blocks below 14th Street, or so Mr. Kaufman says. That number, like many things about the city's oldest precincts, is debatable; it depends, among other things, on how one defines "block." The City Planning Department, for example, estimates that Manhattan has 3,450 blocks, 1,100 of which are below 14th Street.

Still, Mr. Kaufman has earned the right to his opinion.

Mr. Kaufman's day job, so to speak, is heading the illustration and animation department at the Art Institute of Boston at Lesley University. But in the spring, summer and fall of 2003, this 54-year-old urban adventurer spent 52 days wandering back and forth over every one of those blocks. His circuitous ramble covered roughly 300 miles, during which he ran through three pairs of walking shoes and developed, he said, "legs of steel and feet of clay."

The tale of this trek along what he describes as "my Appalachian Trail with restaurants" is told in words and pictures in "Blockology: An Offbeat Walking Guide to Lower Manhattan," a new book that Mr. Kaufman wrote, illustrated and published through the aptly named Turning Corners Press, of which he is both proprietor and sole employee.

The book's theme is experiencing the essential downtown New York through the close, leisurely observation of the architecture and ambience of its blocks. It is a mission he regards as both humble and noble. City dwellers tend to take the block for granted, despite the fact that it is the fundamental element of urban space. Or as Mr. Kaufman puts it: "The block integrates society. It's the true marketplace."

"Blockology," though, is less a work of scholarship than of love. It is a work Mr. Kaufman felt compelled to create, and it exists as a testament to the hold that the city can exercise over the imagination, especially the imagination of an artist.

It is also a valentine to the city that gave Mr. Kaufman a name and whose publishing industry gave him a profession as an illustrator. Not surprisingly, given his romantic attachment to the place, it was also here that Mr. Kaufman met his future wife - a graphic designer named Susan Scott - at the Port Authority Bus Terminal, of all places.

No one knows what Mr. Kaufman's forebears were called before they immigrated to New York from Russia in the 19th century. Like many greenhorns, they swapped their old-country name for one that sounded more American. What is known is that the family thrived in the city and developed a fierce loyalty to it.

When he was a boy, in the 1960's, "there were tremendous fiscal and crime problems," Mr. Kaufman recalled the other day in a pouring rain, "and everybody seemed to be leaving for the suburbs." Even his own family had migrated to Chatham Township, N.J.

Tours and Travel
The Blue Ridge Parkway-Asheville to Cherokee (Audio Driving Tour)
Published in Audio Cassette by Travel Narrator (1998-10)
Author: Travel Narrator
List price: $14.95

Average review score:

Very informnative and fantastic value.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-28
This audio tour of the Blue Ridge Mountains was much more than I expected. It was chock full of interesting facts and historical notes of the area and the people who first settled there. It was very well done, easy to follow and even humorous at times. I'd highly recommend it to anyone who wants to make a trip through this part of the country even more enjoyable. It turns a nice drive into a memorable learning experience. It's inexpensive and for the money represents very good value.

What a tremendous concept in travel entertainment.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-23
Travel Narrator's Blue Ridge Parkway audio tour brings out the best of this section of the Blue Ridge mountains. Travelers play the tape while driving the Blue Ridge Parkway between Asheville and Cherokee, North Carolina. This is not simply a look to your right, look to your left, tour. It teaches you about the history and landscape of the North Carolina mountains as you drive through them and it highlights key overlooks and hikes for you to take along the way. It's the next best thing to having a personal tour guide with you . . . and sometimes better. The tape is well worth it.

Very well researched, historically accurate
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-07
Travel Narrator's audio tour of the Blue Ridge Parkway is a MUST for anyone travelling the southernmost section of the Parkway for the first time. Those who know this section well will find the audio tour a delightful, useful companion.I have traveled the Parkway for over 30 years and have done extensive research for a Parkway course I teach, so I can assure that the historical information in the audio tour is extremely accurate. The Parkway is more than a scenic road; it is an interpreter of the region through which it passes. Trevel Narrator enables the listener to enrich his/her understanding of the Blue Ridge region. I hope this is only the first in a series of audio tours that will cover the entire Parkway.

Tours and Travel
Book Lovers' London
Published in Paperback by Metro Publications (2002-05-01)
Author: Lesley Reader
List price: $18.00
New price: $2.91
Used price: $2.36

Average review score:

Hours, tube directions, and specialties are covered
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-21
Book hounds planning a visit to London shouldn't leave home without this title in hand: it is a virtual treasure trove listing new and used bookstores, libraries and specialty collections, and auctions, charity shops and more. Hours, tube directions, and specialties are covered in enough detail so any traveler can plan in advance. Indispensable.

What a Source Book!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-30
I wanted a reference that would help me find the best second hand book shops in London so that I can plan my shopping and browsing whilst I am in that city in February. This book has it all - clear descriptions, addresses and tempting opportunities beyond my initial plans. If you going to London or live in London, and love books then Book Lovers London is perfect for you.

Book Lovers' London
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-10
I bought this before a trip to London. It was quite helpful. I came back with an obscene haul of used books from stores I would not have found otherwise. For those interested in books who are going to London this will be a valueable asset to you.


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