Attractions Books
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Not as bad as the other dude says...Review Date: 2001-12-26
highly recommended hotel is a nightmare!Review Date: 2001-08-09
The windows overlook a tram, which sounds like an earthquake or a plane landing on the roof. No insulation, the windows must be a hundred years old. The bathroom fixtures were broken.
When I was checking out, their modem did not work. They held my credit cards hostage for 30 minutes while a taxi meter was running. The red headed women manager never apologized due to their incompetence. The stay at the hotel was terrible.
Had all the info. I neededReview Date: 2002-10-31


Weak...Review Date: 2007-07-28
I found the characters to be mostly unlikeable, especially the hero. He wasn't a jerk or a bad guy but he was weak, ineffectual and unjustifiably cocky. He did so many blatantly stupid things in his own arrogance that endangered everyone around him that I found myself wondering how the heroine fell in love with him. Lauren, the heroine, was a bit better but still nothing special but more mature than the hero. As far as characters go, the cousin, Sebastian was more interesting and mature than either one of the main characters.
The sex was hot but the relationship between the characters felt false and I couldn't detect any real emotion. Unfortunately, although it could have been good, the plot wasn't well-developed and it lacked interesting action. The book just felt awkward, immature, and superficial from beginning to end.
More like 4 1/2 stars...Review Date: 2007-07-04
CALL ME WICKED is an interesting foray into a world where witches are still hunted. Jamie Sobrato perfectly blends together the sensual and the paranormal to create one steamy but exciting story. I wasn't sure how Jamie Sobrato would handle the issue of mortals being addicted to witches, but she made the concept work for Lauren and Carson.
CALL ME WICKED is definitely a surprise hit for me! I have to admit that I almost passed this one by, simply because the Blaze line is not generally to my taste. What a delight, then, to discover such an entertaining and well done paranormal in this Harlequin line. Yes, the sex is scorching hot, particularly in some of the dreaming sequences between Lauren and Carson. However, Jamie Sobrato doesn't rely solely on those scenes for plot and instead has crafted an unusual approach in which a revolution or uprising is brewing within the ranks of the witches. Hopefully, Lauren's cousin, Sebastian, will get his own chance at happiness. After all, I want to know more about his living tattoos....
COURTESY OF CK2S KWIPS AND KRITIQUES

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For tight budget travellersReview Date: 2002-12-13
However, the book is very helpful if you're traveling with a tight budget. Price admissions in one chapter is very handy as you don't need to travel between chapter back and forth.
The rankings for each attraction according to different ages helped me out in choosing which parks to visit with my 5 year old child.
There is even a chart to help you plan your days and how much you'll spend in them.
StupidReview Date: 2005-02-15


Misplaced locations and incomplete informationReview Date: 2008-07-18
The only book you need for VeniceReview Date: 2007-08-12
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Same ole Same oleReview Date: 2002-09-28
A Must Have For Professional Service ProvidersReview Date: 2000-11-18
Excellent service, though important, is no longer the primary component of attraction for the average client, neither is name recognition of your firm or company. Brand Name recognition is not the same as Brand Attraction. Attraction in today's market is all about YOU. It is no longer enough to promote your product or your company, but it is VITAL that you learn how to promote YOU. Differentiation is the foundation of choice. It is the only attraction strategy that is effective in today's market, the strategy that can create a preference for YOU. If you don't learn it, you will lose...and there are no second chances, not in today's overly crowded market.
Marketing requires innovation, not imitation. It requires creativity, not duplication. This book is loaded with practical ideas that can help you dominate your local market; ideas that can make YOU the brand of choice in your market; ideas that can make you the professional that the competitors are chasing. You will find reading it to be exciting and pragmatic as it inspires you to think creatively, past the typical boundaries of your "Me-Too" competitors. Once you pick it up, you won't put it down.


Content is supreme, reading level is difficultReview Date: 2007-03-28
The major distraction of this book is the complex language was written in. Constant complex-compound sentences with a post college level vocabulary makes Patzer's book a slow read. If this would have been easier to read, I would have given this book a solid five.
Content in this book is solid, ever wondered what impact attractiveness has in intimate relationships, work relationships, and relationships with strangers? What characteristics of physical attractiveness does each gender find the most important? It may surprise you that each gender cares for different qualities than we tend to normaly think of. This book would an excellent resource for anyone wanting to quantify how attractiveness plays a part in daily lives.
Blah, blah and more blahReview Date: 2006-11-13

Not Free SF ReaderReview Date: 2008-02-13
The first part contains stories taken from Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, and the latter some older stories from well-known authors, one having nothing to do with the supernatural at all, really.
In fact, even though this mentions horror at the start, the only story that really goes anywhere significant in that direction beyond supernatural mystery is the Collins tale.
The Clairvoyant Countess is a book extract, and doesn't particularly work on its own as a story presented as an extract, reading exactly like a slice of a book, and a very mild old-fashione mystery with a bit of voodoo, at that.
Fatal Attractions 2 : The Healer [Dr. Robert Frederickson (Mongo)] - George C. Chesbro
Fatal Attractions 2 : Rowena's Brooch - Donald Olson
Fatal Attractions 2 : Fat Jow and the Manifestations - Robert Alan Blair
Fatal Attractions 2 : The Clairvoyant Countess [short story] - Dorothy Gilman
Fatal Attractions 2 : The Dream-Woman - Wilkie Collins
Fatal Attractions 2 : The Stolen Rubens - Jacques Futrelle
Fatal Attractions 2 : The Story of the Bagman's Uncle - Charles Dickens
"Those are the kinds of flashes you get when you're a dwarf criminologist-college professor private detective."
3.5 out of 5
Pot psychic subterfuge.
3 out of 5
Afraid of the dark.
3 out of 5
Voodoo prediction.
2.5 out of 5
Listen to your mum, don't marry alcoholic night stabbers.
3.5 out of 5
Sneaky painting nicking tricks are not sneaky enough to get past The Thinking Detective.
3.5 out of 5
Swordplay and ghost carriages.
3.5 out of 5

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Not the best book on Orlando, but worth the read...Review Date: 2000-04-07
But, if you are looking for the quirky and less well populated, the odd and the sublime, and sites which will give you a taste of the "old" Florida, this book can be worth the read.
It provides good information on many of the area attractions which are not so "Disney"-fied, but be prepared -- due to the age of this edition you may need to make some phone calls to verify these places are still in operation.

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Good overallReview Date: 1999-04-26

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Not Bad--But Needs UpdatedReview Date: 2006-08-18
The 2004 version of The Everything Family Guide was one of five guides that we bought, but after the initial perusal, I didn't even look at it. Instead, I find myself drawn to the Birnbaum guide with its colorful, glossy pages and The Unofficial Guide to Disney World 2006 which is a critical, analytical treatment of just about everything.
Don't get me wrong: author Jason Rich is pretty thorough. It's just that nothing gets any critical remarks (although there's a star system rating likely appropriateness of attractions to age groups), and it's hard to tell what's really "not to be missed" (even though he makes recommendations).
Not only that, even though it's a 2004 edition, it already needs updating. Expedition Everest, the Lights, Motors, Actions! Stunt Show, and other newer attractions are mentioned as "upcoming", but hadn't yet debuted before publication. I get the feeling that the Stitch's Great Escape (which replaced the Alien one) hadn't debuted yet, either, yet he ranked this ride "not to be missed". (Everyone I talked to--and every review of this attraction I've read on the internet--describe this as an AWFUL attraction. No one likes it!)
Also, he mentions attractions that are no longer there--like Tarzan Rocks. There is no mention of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (MGM), Mickey's PhilHarmagic (the best 3D show in all the parks), Test Track (Epcot- The Land) or Crush's Turtle Talk (Epcot-The Seas)--further showing that this book should be updated YEARLY in order to be relevant for visitors.
So if you'd like an overview of Walt Disney World in a gentle, upbeat tone--including restaurant and hotel overviews--this is not a bad guide. Yet, I only consulted it once, preferring the other guides over this one.
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When I went to Munich, I travelled with this book and Lonely Planet Munich...Lonely Planet doesn't provide you with a 'must see places' list, but it is more detailed. Together they complemented each other perfectly. I recommend spending the extra money for the second book; in contrast with the amount you are spending on everything else during your whole trip...it's well worth it.
As for the other reviewer's bad experience...Germany's service people(hotel staff, waiters etc) are typecast as being slow and having attitudes...waiters especially. And that info is actually in this book.
Hope this helps. Have fun in Munchen.