Travel Books


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

Travel
The North End Italian Cookbook, 5th
Published in Paperback by Globe Pequot (2004-09-01)
Author: Marguerite DiMino Buonopane
List price: $16.95
New price: $8.88
Used price: $3.50

Average review score:

Great cookbook!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-18
This cookbook is wonderful, I went onto Amazon looking for an Italian cookbook and found this one. It has everything I was looking for, every Italian recipe that I needed and more. Photographs are great and put you right in the old Italian setting. Love this item.

A keeper
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-24
I have tried numerous recipes since buying this book and every one of them was well received. I am my worse critic but I too know a good dish when I taste one. Olga's fishcakes were delicious.

perfect, easy, real italian
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-21
perfect, easy, real Italian. Recipes are no fail. When I lived in the North end in the 90's (pre nouveau) everything tasted this good. But be careful, the Pignoli cookie recipe calls for 1 pound of pine nuts, (thats like $25!) You only really need 5 oz or so. Must be a misprint.

Authentic recipes
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-14
I love this cookbook. The recipes are excellent--the book is worth the value for the gnocchi recipe alone--just like mama's.

Italian American at Its Best
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-08
I know that Italian American cooking is out of style, but it still puts a smile on my families face. My brothers, our wives and children rave when I cook Ma's food. But I have a secret, I don't cook Ma's food. She was unfortunately, gone before I got her recipes. I cook Marguerite's food. I bought this book in the late 80's and it fell apart from love. This book will bring back memories or make them, five stars.

Travel
Oaken Rings
Published in Paperback by FirstPublish (2000-12)
Author: Ronald Fox
List price: $17.95
Used price: $14.99

Average review score:

A Grand Tale
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-13
This story really moves! I found myself drawn into the storyline and discovered I had worked through the book in such quick speed I was disappointed it was going to end. I think the story was too short, if such a thing is possible. The history was very well described and so were the environments and encounters. Mr. Fox successfully merged fantasy and fiction to create a story of great proportions, where characters both real and imagined from history interact. If you like history, you'll love this book. there's something for everyone: love story, history, knights and actions of valor, battles, everything!
This is the sort of story where you learn things without realizing you are learning stuff, and all the while being entertained. If this is his first work, it is a fine debut!

Write On, Mr. Fox, Right On!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-26
What a crazy cat this Ronald Fox is. His book just picked me up and carried me away. I'm still flying. I enjoyed reading historical fiction that was researched. This guy didn't make things up to cover gaps in fact, it seemed to provide a crucial bridge between factual elements in the story. This book educated me (quite a feat since I am Minoring in Medieval Lit. in University). Too bad it is not a book of scholarship elsewise I would use it as a reference, and that's no lie. If you like Medieval History, you'll dig this book. Shine on, Mr. Fox.
Write on, mr. Fox, Write on!

WHAT A WONDERFUL SURPRISE!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-26
I received this book as a gift from my boyfriend and I started reading it - Well, I haven't been able to put it down! I didn't know what to think with the title, and when Mike (my boyfriend) gave me the book and told me it was a romance set in the middle ages I figured, 'oh boy, another coming of age swashbuckler.'
It is amazing, and to think - written by a guy. It is so much more. Mr. Fox has this amazing ability to paint an image with words so real I felt I could look up from the book and see castle walls.
Thank you, Mr. Fox, for creating this wonderful tale and sharing it with the world.

An Incredible Adventure
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-08
It took me a couple of chapters to get into it, but I was hooked. I enjoyed the way the author incorporated a lot of local sights and scenes, and really enjoyed the storyline as a whole. Mr. Fox has an amazing ability to transform ideas into visual images. This is an excellent story and a wonderful book. This is historical fiction at it`s best.

Oaken Rings is a MUST READ!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-12
Ronald Fox's book "Oaken Rings" gives the reader a look at medival life from a modern view point.I was surprised at the amount of detail that the author was able to give and still create characters that you could empathize with in the story.After reading the story I had to share the book with other friends and family.All of them have been greatly impressed with the book.I can't wait to see where he takes his hero next.

Travel
Orbit
Published in Hardcover by National Geographic Society (1996)
Author: Michael Helfert, Justin Wilkinson Jay Apt
List price:
Used price: $13.12
Collectible price: $42.00

Average review score:

Very nice book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-15
Awesome pictures taken form high up in the sky. One can find unique views that are beyond imagination. Also included necessary information regarding NASA expeditions.

Another Great Space Book From National Geographic
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-08
Astronaut Jay Apt, with the help of geographer Justin Wilkinson and climatologist Michael Helfert, has assembled a book full of pictures of Earth taken from orbit. These photographs were chosen from over a 145,000 that are available from the NASA photographic library and focus on many different aspects of our planet's geology and climate. The large coffee table style format and the high quality of the reproductions allows this book bring out the stunning features of our home and is welcome addition to anyone who is interested in space photography, especially since most of the book is photographs and very little text.

The book is divided into sections covering each continent, the Pacific Ocean and the aurora. To show the range of Earth's geology and climate, each section highlights the major geological features found in each region and if appropriate mankind's influence. To further emphasis to geological diversity of the planet, occasional surface photographs that correspond to an orbital photograph are also included. For example, in the section on Africa, there are photos of the Nile, Nile cities, the Sahara desert, various coastline features and cloud formations. The only portions of the Earth not covered are the North and South Poles, since the shuttle does not fly over these regions. There is also one extremely interesting two page map spread which shows the location of each one of the 268,000 photographs taken by the astronauts.

This book is one of my favorite space photography books and I look at it often and each time that I do I always notice something different. This is a great book and well worth the price.

High flyers!
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-09
Shuttle astronaut Jay Apt, together with scientists Michael Helfert and Justin Wilkinson, has put together a wonderful book of photographs under the auspices of National Geographic, Orbit. These are all photographs taken by astronauts from the space shuttle while in orbit (with a few exceptions, historically significant photographs from moon circlings and early trips into space). Photography, interestingly enough, is never really scheduled as a shuttle activity, but rather done 'in between' the other assignments. The photographs included in this book do not come from special 'space' cameras, but rather from regular hand-held, off-the-shelf cameras that astronauts took with them.

The shuttle offers a unique platform for photography, to say the least. It has 11 different windows, and as the shuttle orbits in what one might consider an upside-down position, the windows and cargo-bay with doors open are almost always facing the earth. Astronauts take lots of film with them, and record many phenomena. This book is divided geographically, by earth region: Africa, Europe and the Middle East, Asia, the Pacific, Middle and South America, and North America. There is also a special section on the Aurora, with dazzling photographs of things that look right out of Star Trek!

The images include daytime and nighttime views, calm views and stormy views. One can see hurricanes and cyclones from high above, stretching their entire lengths across great portions of the globe. One can see the difference lighting makes in an urban area at night, the way terrain and human-engineering connect, and how much of the world seems to remain unspoilt when viewed from a distance of even a few hundred miles away.

This is a remarkable book, full of glorious photographs of the 'home world', a great coffee-table book, a great gift, and a great guide of inspiration for younger readers who might be interested in science, geography, or even becoming an astronaut.

A must for every household
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-06
Truely a magnificent piece of work to wiew the wonder of God's creation leaves you in awe of the beauty of the Earth. I pick it up regularly, for maximum enjoyment choose times where you are not rushed so you can drink in the superb pictures. A book no household can afford to be without.

Home Never Looked So Good.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-01
The book is published by National Geographic, so it goes without saying that the quality of the photographs is superb. But to look at this collection of space-born images is to never see the earth in the same way again. All the contintents and oceans are covered and even the Aurora is documented. The astronauts who took these photographs are some of the luckiest men and women on (or off) the earth, and this book will show you why.

Despite all that man has done to harm the environment, many of the photographs give you an eerie sense of what it might've been like to look down on the earth thousands of years ago, seeing only a beautiful collection of shapes, colors and clouds. Some pictures of the African desert and its coastline will leave you breathless.

A wonderful collection that beats satellite imagery any day of the week.

Travel
The Pale Surface of Things
Published in Paperback by Hopeace Press (2007-06-01)
Author: Janey Bennett
List price: $21.95
New price: $8.59
Used price: $4.28
Collectible price: $21.95

Average review score:

The Pale Surface of Things
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-21
I've read this book and it is absolutely wonderful. Great story line, believable characters, a very enjoyable read. Once you start to read it, you will not want to put it down because you will want to know what is going to happen next to each of the characters.

Well worth the read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-30
The Pale Surface of Things was a good read. Other reviewers tell the plot, I simply wanted to point out a couple of things to the reader- first, the author clearly understands the cultures she is writing about, and has done an excellent job of bringing this to the reader. Second, a number of the characters are skillfully brought full circle through personal crisis, paralleling events in the story.

You can't fake knowing the scent of the air, the sound of the forest, the taste of the foods, or the presence of culture, and this all came through quite well in the book.

I recommend it. I read it in Malta, relaxing by the Mediteranean, and it seemed a natural fit, nothing stilted or fake about this book.

Regarding the characters, one of the main characters not from Crete is shot by another, a local. the remark is made "Why would he shoot him? He's not even Greek!" and this is about as sharp a reflection of the culture as you can get, a true understanding of island thinking.

Take the time to read this.

Suspense and humor on Crete
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-07
This book grew on me, and I continue to have a sense of well-being after finishing it. I'm not sure how to characterize this book except to say that each time it seems to be fairly predictable it steps aside from the path, just enough to satisfy without being hokey.

It's set on Crete in current times and follows several characters who, of course, eventually intertwine and affect each other. Oh, by the way, drop your expectation of archaeology, it's tangential. The pace is good and the tale isn't maudlin or sappy. Mostly it's about values, the choices we make, and the consequences (no it doesn't preach at all) set in a pretty good story. Probably a good book group book.

Book Review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-03
The Pale Surface of Things reads like a tapestry of textures weaving emotional, spiritual, cultural, and familial threads into an engrossing glimpse of life in a traditional Cretan village. Bennett's tale encompasses the dichotomies of life: human frailty and resilience, belonging and alienation, forgiveness and redemption, shame and courage. A fast paced novel that will transport you into the lives of unforgettable characters and a cherished ancient landscape.

Nicholas Zaferatos, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Urban Planning.
Huxley College of the Environment, Western Washington University.

Crete surprises
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-25
What a fun read! Having visited Crete twice, it was fun to imagine the this story unfolding as it did. The author created terrific characters with interesting backgrounds and many subplots with lots of twists and turns.

Travel
Riding with the Blue Moth
Published in Paperback by Sports Publishing (2006-10-15)
Author: Bill Hancock
List price: $16.95
New price: $8.98
Used price: $5.92

Average review score:

Inspirational Book!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-15
This is one of the most inspirational books I have ever read--in part b/c it was not written to be that. Bill Hancock's message is so simple...appreciate life. Appreciate the good times because they are good. Appreciate the bad times, because they alone can help you realize the good, and both are part of who you are. He should be commended for his tenacity to stay the course, both his journey in life and cross country biking!! I wish I could thank him in person for sharing his story.

Getting through tragedy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-07
I originally bought this book for friends who lost their 16 year old son in an accident. This last year I bought it for myself and read it. If you have recently suffered the loss of a loved one it is very difficult to get through the first chapter where the author details the loss of his son and the immediate reactions of the family and friends. After the first chapter the book moves into the difficult ups and downs of getting on with every day life with while being gripped by overwhelming grief. There are so many places in this book where the author is able to put incredible perspective on what most people would consider ordinary events. Whether you've suffered the loss of a loved one or not, you will read this book and look at people and things differently than you did before. I hope that I am a better friend to people who suffered a loss because of the understanding this book gives the reader. I found myself disappointed as I was nearing the end, because the book was so well written that I wanted to keep on going with Bill Hancock beyond his cross country bike ride. I "googled" the author and contacted him by e-mail to tell him why I had bought 2 copies of the book and how much it meant to me after reading it. He responded the next day with a very thoughtful e-mail. I highly recommend reading Riding With the Blue Moth by Bill Hancock.

It's not about the bike; well, really it is!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-17
Ooops; that is the title of another book out there; but it's still true and I think this is a fairly good book to accompany the book by Lance Armstrong which details Lance's fight with cancer. Both of these fellows having to deal with tragic situations.

The author goes through my home town; so I was fairly bent on not giving him 5 stars just because he did that in his journey from the Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic; but I am a cyclist; and I came to think after reading it, this is rather darn good; although, just like some characters that Bill describes, I've gone through some hardship, to the point that it was not easy to concentrate and read this; but I did.

March Madness; the NCAA tournament also, is underway as I write this for the year 2007; you know, it is in a tiny bit of a way a basketball book, seeing how Hancock is involved and connected with the NCAA; and it's things like that, that make this a good book to read. Now, I say this, because I believe the basketball fan could well find this entertaining too; but of course, not a basketball book like say, for example; the book "Pistol" that is currently in the stores.

But I'll keep this short and to the point; I like Dean Karnazes book, The UltraMarathon Man; but I read that and think, I wish Dean gave out more info on his running, diet, etc.

Bill Hancock for some reason, gives a lot of detail, the basic facts of his road trip on a daily basis; I mean saying part of his diet was on any given day, "17 Fritos or 12 Cheezits, 2 gallons of water and a gallon of gatorade" is detail I've never seen anyone relate about before; some of the chapters even has a bit of a question and answer session via email where Bill is asked questions and he gives back answers about his trip. So, it definitely has a real diary quality about it and it is the attention to detail that makes me give it the high ranking; cycling detail but of course the book is much more.

A solid enough book, I like his descriptions of many geographic locales; such as Yarnell hill; I had to look up that mountain on the internet I was so curious; or the Wichita Mountains of Oklahoma.

Glad to see the positive reviews for this book; but most of them are rather short to gather people's impressions. I decided to make mine a bit longer. A fine contribution to cycling literature.

ALONG FOR THE RIDE
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
I felt like I was along for the ride with Bill Hancock in "Riding With the Blue Moth", experiencing the emotional highs and lows, chuckling at the amusing experiences he had along the way, and shedding more than a few tears. Nothing strikes fear into the heart of a parent more than the prospect of losing a child. The Hancocks experienced every parent's nightmare and the healing of the cross-country bicycle ride was great both for the reader and, I suspect, for the author as well. I highly recommend this book to anyone, but especially to anyone who has lost an offspring or is close to someone who has.

Moved Emotionally Like No Other Book!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-16
I've been reading this book at night for a week now. I shed tears nearly every night, and find myself at the bedside of one or both of my kids thanking God for the privilege I have of being their Dad. This book has almost become a devotional for me. The depth of the writing is stunning.... My prayers are with you Bill and Nicki. Thank you for letting us glimpse enough of your pain so that we can better treasure all that it means to Live.

Travel
Rome: An Oxford Archaeological Guide (Oxford Archaeological Guides)
Published in Paperback by Oxford University Press, USA (1998-06-25)
Author: Amanda Claridge
List price: $29.95
New price: $16.50
Used price: $13.48

Average review score:

If you're wondering what all of those ruins are in Rome, this is fantastic!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-24
I took this book, along with a plethora of touristy guidebooks, and this one got read the most! We spent hours and hours in the Forum and the Palatine, and really delighted in uncovering the mysteries of so many building foundations. I left Rome wishing I had an archaeologist as a personal tour guide, but this book was an excellent substitution! It can be read at home, but I found infinitely more meaning when I sat at the site and read about where I was. Take this to Rome if you are interested in the ancients!

None better.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-09
I had the fortune or misfortune of buying this book prior to my first visit to Rome. It is such a well-organized, well-written, and concise guide to ancient Rome that you could make the mistake that I made upon completing it and my first visits there. You might search a long, long time and spend a lot of money trying to find something better. Based upon my experience, a university-level seminar or a three semester hour course is the only thing that could surpass this guide.

Don't be put off by simplified plans shown in the pages. You need clear, simple ideas of what the stuff once was to understand what you're looking at. When you're in the ruins, you will be surrounded by other tourists, any changing weather conditions, and you will be viewing the architectural remains of a previous civilization from many different standpoints. You can't do that successfully without a clear, simple concept already in your mind.

Fodor's Holy Rome, 1st Edition: A Millennium Guide to Christian Sights (Fodor's Holy Rome)

The perfect companion when touring Rome
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-05
You can't really understand Rome without this companion. It looks deeply into the very heart of the city, into its foundations and the stories they tell. This is practical archaelology at its best, presenting us with the lessons that history can teach us.

Invaluable
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-15
I used this book for my second trip to Rome and it was absolutely invaluable. I wish that I had it for my first trip. I am a person who only cares about the Ancient Roman artifacts and this book literally has ever one listed by region that you have access to. If you decide to use this book bring along a highlighter and check off the sections that you complete, by the end of the day you will be amazed at how much you have seen. I cannot recommend this book enough.

Excellent Guide to Ancient Rome
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-10
I just returned from Rome, using this book as my primary guide. We were able to identify almost every random bit of ancient archaelogy sticking out of the ground as we walked about the city, and if you've been to Rome, you'll understand how impressive that is.

A major shortcoming that I noticed is that the book treats the ancient-era churches very lightly: while the myths of gods such as Pollux and Castor are frequently referenced in relation to the ancient sites, the C1 AD story of Saint Clement is inexplicably left out of the section on the church of San Clemente constructed by Constantine. Also, as the author states in the beginning, the intent of this guide is to detail ancient Rome only. If you are interested in medieval, Renaissance, or ecclessiastic history, you will certainly need a supplemental guide.

Now, for the advantages... The guide systematically presents every ancient structure in Rome (we were never disappointed), providing a very good map at the beginning of each chapter for a major area (e.g. the Palatine, Field of Mars) to help you identify what you are looking at. The site is laid out in a sort of walking tour format and if you begin at the point suggested, you can follow the chapter page by page as it logically guides you through the region. We did find that writing in page references for each location on the map at the beginning made the book much easier to use. For more complicated buildings, additional diagrams are provided in the appropriate subsection where it is further detailed. The Baths of Caracalla are a superb example of this.

While Claridge delves a bit too thoroughly into the exact type of marble used in the facing and floors of each building, you find yourself recognizing the materials and envisioning the baths, basillicas, and forums as they might have looked clad in Phyrgian red and Numidian yellow marbles. With frequent referencing, we soon became familiar with Caracella, Domitian, and Nerva as we viewed the great construction projects they enacted. The author presents quite clearly the historical origin and significance of each site as well as its original appearance (if known) and the many refurbishments it went through with the frequent fires of Rome.

For our trip, we opted out of taking any tours, and we didn't feel we missed anything. We were often surrounded by tours and gained more information from our book than the guide was sharing with his group. You never know how reliable a guide really is, and with this book, you can be assured of Amanda Claridge's credentials. The trip became a bit of a mystery adventure for us as we excitedly reconstructed the ruins around us into the elegant structures they once were.

Even if you do decide to go with a more mainstream guide book for your trip to Rome, you will find this one to be an invaluable supplement for all those tidbits that the major guides just don't have time to cover.

Travel
San Francisco Then & Now (Then & Now)
Published in Hardcover by Thunder Bay Press (2002-05-06)
Author: Bill Yenne
List price: $18.95
New price: $4.16
Used price: $1.88

Average review score:

For anyone who has ever left their heart in San Francisco
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-13
This is for anyone who has ever fallen in love with this wonderful city, that is any who has ever, however briefly, been there.

The format is, as it is for all the "Then and Now" series to show vintage photographs paired with modern shots of the same view. The captions describe the scenes, giving short historical backgrounds. Anyone who has ever spent any time in the city will recognize some of the modern views and will probably find themselves interested in the vintage shots giving the history of the scene. Those who are planning a return visit just might want to slip this slim book into their luggage to take sightseeing. It also just might make a welcome reference for anyone reading about the old days in the City or watching an old film set there.

Beautiful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-27
Lovely to look at and reasonably informative. Will be most enjoyed by fans of San Francisco. I can't see midwesterners enjoying this book. But if you live in or have visited the city by the bay this may be the book for you.

I received the book as a gift vut I would gladly paid for it.

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-25
This book is wonderful. A must have whether you live in the Bay Area or have visited here. Worth every penny.

Excellent Series of Books
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-25
These are a great series of books, I own each of my Favorite cities in the US. Seattle, Portland, and San Francisco. It is really cool to see old pictures of the cities compared to current pictures.

Welcome to America's Most Conservative City!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-07
I'm not using "conservative" in the current political sense, obviously. Everybody knows that John McCain has less than a snowball's chance in Gomorrah of winning in SF. I using the term conservative in its root meaning, something like "saving what was valued in the past." Preservation and conservation have the same Latin root. San Francisco has conserved more of its past than any western American city, and I could make a case, I think, for its preservation of more old-fashioned city life even than Boston or Savannah.

Except for the tiny downtown financial district, San Francisco "looks" old. The vast majority of houses, churches, and schools were built in late Victorian styles and have been lovingly restored in the same styles. Even the relatively "new" streets of the Sunset are old-fashioned now, predominantly in modest Art Deco style of the 30s and 40s. And it should be no surprise that ATT baseball park is a booking success, since it's strikingly old-style brick in construction, with a street car stop at the front gate.

San Francisco is a bastion of old-fashioned independent mom 'n pop businesses. There are thriving corner groceries and open-air once-a-week markets: independent restaurants ranging from very cheap to ultra expensive, but hardly any chain restaurants in the neighborhoods. The big chain grocery stores like Albertson's struggle to stay open in competition with locally owned stores like Andronico's, which has six stores around the whole Bay Area. There are more independent fitness centers and gyms in the neighborhoods; 24-hour fat farms are not the norm in SF. There are no malls that would be recognizable to most Americans in downtown or neighborhood San Francisco. The only malls - and very small they are by US norms - are on the suburban fringes.

Even Boston is cut up by freeways today, though the traffic is no better managed than when I lived there in the early '60s. Seattle is sliced in half by its ineeffective central freeway. San Francisco is the place that blocked freeway construction in the late '60s. Several freeways have been demolished in SF in the last ten years! Streets in SF are narrow and parking is tough, but a measure to build more parking lots was recently defeated at the polls, and any attempt to chop wider streets through SF would meet with armed resistance.

Baseball is the number one sport in SF. The fans of the football team pour in from the 'burbs to the hideous modernistic but crumbling stadium just at the edge of the city. The basketball team plays in Oakland. Any town where baseball rules has got to be considered conservative!

People in SF are conservative dressers, especially by California standards. I know women who live in LA, who carry clothes they consider drab to SF when they visit, so that they will not stick out like the inflamed rear view of a peacock's tail. One never sees "his and hers" outfits on the streets, especially not pastels. Men wear less bling per capita in SF than in Omaha. A neck chain and an open shirt would get you sneered out of polite society in SF.

Sweet old-fashioned window boxes are everywhere in SF. Street tree plantings are lovingly maintained. Open space is all-important to San Franciscans, and it's by stubborn resistance to development than SF has preserved more open space (finangling the take-over of decommissioned army, coast guard, and navy bases) than any comparably populated region of the USA. Nature is inherently conservative.

The half-mile strip of upper Haight Street, which gets the attention of the "screaming heads" on TV and radio, is not populated by San Franciscans. It's the runaway and stumble-away refuge of the discontented - the "poor abused confused missused" - of all the dysfunctional "conservative" families and communities from Modesto to Miami. They come to SF to enjoy the true conservative values of privacy, tolerance, and neighborhood friendliness.

Travel
Sunsets (Glenbrooke, Book 4)
Published in Hardcover by Multnomah Books (1997-01-01)
Author: Robin Jones Gunn
List price: $9.99
New price: $7.87
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $18.50

Average review score:

Fantastic book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-01
Want a book that holds your interest? I recommend this entire series. I discovered Gunn on accident; really it was a blessing! I liked this entire series. Good wholesome values and interesting plots that intertwine with the other books.

Great book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-11
This is a great book, and I defenitly recommend it, along with all of her other books. Karen Kingsbury is another great choice, her books make you feel very close to God.

An interesting read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-21
I think I liked this book more because of the secondary characters than the main ones. It was fun to catch up with all your old friends from previous books. Also, this is the book we meet Shelly from Clouds and Jake from Waterfalls. The two main characters, Brad and Alissa, were interesting but I cared about them less than some of the other people this series has introduced us to in the past. The story of Rosie and her groom was a good addition. In some ways, I cared more about Rosie's story than Alissa's. It's a good book, but not up to this author's usual standards, in my opinion.

The Glenbrooke Series
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-06
These books are great! These books keep you wanting to read them all over again. But, to really understand these books you really need to read the Christy Miller Series, then the Sierra Jensen Series, then read the Christy and Todd Collage Series,and THEN finally read the Glenbrooke Series. If you only read the Christy Miller Series, you won't know as much info on Christy, that relates to these other series. These books are great! You'll keep wanting to read them over and over again. ROBIN JONES GUNN YOU are the BEST writer in the WORLD! I LOVE YOUR BOOKS!-Kyley(Kimberly's daughter)

An Awesome Book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-26
I really enjoyed this book. I love the way that all the characters in the books connect. not only do they just connect in the Glenbrooke Series, but some of the characters in this series connect with characters in the Christy Miller Series. This book is about Alissa. In the Christy Miller Series, Christy was the one who prayed with Alissa when she became a Christian. She also knew Todd, Doug and Tracey. Throughout this book Christy's name is mentioned. Brad, the guy in the story, is the brother of Lauren Phillips in book 3. This was a really good book. Another thing i like about these books is that they are Christian. This book was really good.

Travel
Suomen kaupungit =: Finlands stader = Finnish cities and towns
Published in Unknown Binding by Suomen Kaupunkiliitto (1976)
Author:
List price:
Collectible price: $89.90

Average review score:

Jyväskylän
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-01
Jyväskylän yliopiston kirjasto palvelee päivittäin yli 4000 ja vuotuisesti yli miljoonaa asiakasta. Kokoelmissa on n. 1,5 milj. teosta ja saapuvia lehtiä n. 9000 kappaletta. Asiakkaiden käytössä ovat koti- ja ulkomaiset tietokannat sekä yli 3000 elektronista lehteä. JYK on vapaakappalekirjasto, Euroopan Unionin EDC-tallekirjasto ja toimii myös kasvatustieteiden, psykologian ja liikuntatieteiden keskuskirjastona.

Kirjaston tehtävänä on kehittyä monipuoliseksi oppimisympäristöksi ja integroida perinteiset sekä elektroniset tiedonlähteet nykyaikaiseksi tietoympäristöksi

Jyväskylän
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-01
Jyväskylän yliopiston kirjasto palvelee päivittäin yli 4000 ja vuotuisesti yli miljoonaa asiakasta. Kokoelmissa on n. 1,5 milj. teosta ja saapuvia lehtiä n. 9000 kappaletta. Asiakkaiden käytössä ovat koti- ja ulkomaiset tietokannat sekä yli 3000 elektronista lehteä. JYK on vapaakappalekirjasto, Euroopan Unionin EDC-tallekirjasto ja toimii myös kasvatustieteiden, psykologian ja liikuntatieteiden keskuskirjastona.

Kirjaston tehtävänä on kehittyä monipuoliseksi oppimisympäristöksi ja integroida perinteiset sekä elektroniset tiedonlähteet nykyaikaiseksi tietoympäristöksi

Jyväskylän
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-01
Jyväskylän yliopiston kirjasto palvelee päivittäin yli 4000 ja vuotuisesti yli miljoonaa asiakasta. Kokoelmissa on n. 1,5 milj. teosta ja saapuvia lehtiä n. 9000 kappaletta. Asiakkaiden käytössä ovat koti- ja ulkomaiset tietokannat sekä yli 3000 elektronista lehteä. JYK on vapaakappalekirjasto, Euroopan Unionin EDC-tallekirjasto ja toimii myös kasvatustieteiden, psykologian ja liikuntatieteiden keskuskirjastona.

Kirjaston tehtävänä on kehittyä monipuoliseksi oppimisympäristöksi ja integroida perinteiset sekä elektroniset tiedonlähteet nykyaikaiseksi tietoympäristöksi

Jyväskylän
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-01
Jyväskylän yliopiston kirjasto palvelee päivittäin yli 4000 ja vuotuisesti yli miljoonaa asiakasta. Kokoelmissa on n. 1,5 milj. teosta ja saapuvia lehtiä n. 9000 kappaletta. Asiakkaiden käytössä ovat koti- ja ulkomaiset tietokannat sekä yli 3000 elektronista lehteä. JYK on vapaakappalekirjasto, Euroopan Unionin EDC-tallekirjasto ja toimii myös kasvatustieteiden, psykologian ja liikuntatieteiden keskuskirjastona.

Kirjaston tehtävänä on kehittyä monipuoliseksi oppimisympäristöksi ja integroida perinteiset sekä elektroniset tiedonlähteet nykyaikaiseksi tietoympäristöksi

Jyväskylän
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-01
Jyväskylän yliopiston kirjasto palvelee päivittäin yli 4000 ja vuotuisesti yli miljoonaa asiakasta. Kokoelmissa on n. 1,5 milj. teosta ja saapuvia lehtiä n. 9000 kappaletta. Asiakkaiden käytössä ovat koti- ja ulkomaiset tietokannat sekä yli 3000 elektronista lehteä. JYK on vapaakappalekirjasto, Euroopan Unionin EDC-tallekirjasto ja toimii myös kasvatustieteiden, psykologian ja liikuntatieteiden keskuskirjastona.

Kirjaston tehtävänä on kehittyä monipuoliseksi oppimisympäristöksi ja integroida perinteiset sekä elektroniset tiedonlähteet nykyaikaiseksi tietoympäristöksi

Travel
Tom Douglas' Seattle Kitchen
Published in Hardcover by William Morrow Cookbooks (2000-12-05)
Author: Tom Douglas
List price: $30.00
New price: $16.79
Used price: $6.38
Collectible price: $30.00

Average review score:

riveting cookbook reading
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-27
i read this cover to cover in one sitting- great anecdotes, tips, philosophies, photos, wine info, and recipes.
tom's book is as good as his restaurants. i LOVE this book.

Best Cookbook ever
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-08
Now I may be biased because I live in Seattle but there is not a recipe in this book which is not simply perfect. I have tried about 10 recipes including the crab cakes, blueberry coffee cake, Short Ribs with Rosemary white beans and the Lobster and Shiitake Potstickers and not had a bad one yet.

All the recipies are pretty easy to make, use simple fresh ingredients and usually recommend a wine to pair with it. These are not always the types of recipes that you want to whip up in 10 mins when you get home from work but for a weekend dinner where you have 1/2 hr or more to cook, you will be well rewarded. There is definitely a seafood bias for this which is fine with me. In the middle of the book are about 10 pages of pictures of many of the dishes.

I have lots of cookbooks with several good recipes but never one with so many winners and absolutely no losers. I have been to 2 of Tom's restaurants in Seattle but this makes me want to cook at home.

Get the Book
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-27
It has taken me awhile to write a review for this book due to the fact that I have been testing as many recipes as possible and while in Seattle compared the restaurant version with the home version. The verdict is: Get the book.

The recipes are very easily done in a standard home kitchen and they are the recipes of the restaurants in question. If there is a flavor difference it is easily explained by the author such as, the restaurant version of the salmon rub uses smoked paprike (very hard to get) while the home uses the sweet variety.

The book reflects a deep love of Seattle and is informative in a chatty way. I think though, for the Asian food information sections you may want a little more depth with Bruce Cost's book on Asian ingredients. For the experienced cook this is a great book to have on the shelf showing a fusion of traditional and international influences in the menu.

For those looking for soemthing in between a beginner's and a hardcore pro level this book is excellent. People at my various parties and catering gigs have loved the food prepared from this book and it has achieved the status of favorite on the shelf. It is approachable in tone, style and technique. It is also helpful that he provides a supplier section for those hard to get items like kazu.

The fish section maybe a no go for some people due to freshness issues but the section on grilling/barbecuing is nice and the dry brine method for roast chicken was very reliable. All the side dishes were easily done as well with a standard grocery store available.

Recommended highly and I look forward to his next work.

Grung gormet
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-31
This was a gift to my husband, but has only been opened twice. The recipes look somewhat interesting, but the ingredients are not generally available to most areas. It would be helpful in a coastal area where FRESH seafood was more readily available AND was more cost-effective to use. We are intrigued by some entrees, but again, most are not user-friendly (or kid- friendly) which is important in our busy home! I good gift for the hobby gourmet, not useful in everyday life...at least not in our busy (and filled with picky kids) home!

Outstanding Food, Great Cookbook!
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-21
I have owned my copy of Seattle Kitchen for over a year now, as do two of the other families on our block. We regularly get together for dinner parties and inevitably, one of Tom Douglas' dishes shows up on the menu. Although many if not most of the recipes are time-consuming (much chopping, sauteeing, carmelizing, etc. is involved) they are all worth it in the end as long as you are a patient person who enjoys cooking. This is not a good beginner's cookbook! The sweet butternut soup with thyme creme fraiche is beyond compare and I make it all fall and winter long. The lobster and shrimp potstickers with sake sauce take a long time to make but are simply divine (I have learned to make huge batches and freeze them for later when I need an appetizer.) Pair them with the sweet-and-sour red cabbage for an impressive presentation. I just made Etta's cornbread pudding last night for the first time after visiting Seattle and eating it at the restaurant a few weeks ago, and I have to say mine was just as good if not better since it was fresh out of the oven. It was inhaled at the dinner party and it prompted me to get online now to order Tom's other cookbook. I find that sometimes the ingredients are difficult to hunt down here in Montana, but I usually find most of what I need, or at least an acceptable substitute. I just wish there were more photographs of the beautiful food. I look forward to trying many more of Tom's recipes.


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