DC Washington Books


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DC Washington Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

 DC Washington
Downtown Washington, DC: City Slicker
Published in Map by American Map Corporation (2005-07-15)
Author: American Map Corporation
List price: $6.95
New price: $1.99
Used price: $1.99

Average review score:

Metro lines and stations not clearly marked.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-18
The bright side is the durable material this map is made from, which guarantees no wrinkles and easy folding.
However, when it comes to the information presented, then I was disapointed. After my visit to DC it was obvious to me that the Metro stations and Metro lines are not clearly shown. Also,the map does not show the route and stops of threCirculator bus, which is a rather new and usefull mean of transporation for visitors.
Finaly, I ended up using the free tourist map that I took from the hotel lobby.

 DC Washington
Let's Go Map Guide Seattle (2nd Ed.) (Let's Go Map Guides: Seattle)
Published in Map by Let's Go Publications (2001-03-21)
Author: Janet Evanovich
List price: $8.95
Used price: $4.48

Average review score:

Let's get lost
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-04
I recently moved to Seattle from a larger city where the street layout followed an erratic and spiraling design. Upon arriving in Seattle, I was nonplussed by the sheer geometry of it's urban organization.
I became quickly disorientated by so much regularity that I decided to buy myself a small guide...thinking that maybe I'd get some good restaurant tips in the bargain.
Think again.
Sure, the cover is a laminated map. However, it's a focalized map of downtown Seattle, so it's handy...when you're in downtown Seattle.
As to the info inside, it hasn't served me once...
Overall: not much useful info, not many useful street plans.
My advice: Save your money on this one, buy a big 8x11 book of street plans, get the commercial info you need online and try out the restos in the Seattle Zagat.

 DC Washington
Michael Brein's Guide to Washington, DC by the Metro (Michael Brein's Guides to Sightseeing By Public Transportation) (Michael Brein's Guides to Sightseeing By Public Transportation)
Published in Map by Michael Brein, Inc. (2000-07-01)
Authors: Michael Brein and Penne Franklin
List price: $10.00
New price: $4.22
Used price: $4.22

Average review score:

Not much here.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-04
More information is available on the internet than in this little map. Get the Frommer's Washington book instead.

 DC Washington
Michelin Green Guide Washington, D. C. (Michelin Green Guide: Washington Dc)
Published in Paperback by Michelin Travel Publications (2007-11-15)
Author:
List price: $19.95
New price: $10.95
Used price: $12.89

Average review score:

disappointing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-07
Guide is very inferior to the DK guide I bought at the same time.Old fashioned very limited content and few photos. DK guides far superior

 DC Washington
StationMasters Guide to Station Neighborhoods served by the Washington, D.C. Metrorail system
Published in Paperback by Bowring Cartographic (2003)
Author:
List price:
New price: $1.00

Average review score:

Who needs 3 maps of Central Washington DC???
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-04
I was very disappointed to find that there were 3 maps included in this package and all 3 had the exact same map of Central Washington, DC on one side. The other side had either a poorly detailed map of Montgomery County, MD; Prince George's County, MD; or Northern VA along with a small map of all the Metro station neighborhoods in the respective area.

 DC Washington
Washington, DC: A Historic Walking Tour (Images of America)
Published in Paperback by Arcadia Publishing (1999-07-12)
Author: Thomas J. Carrier
List price: $18.99
New price: $4.95
Used price: $4.95

Average review score:

Tourist guide to historical Washington
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-26
The Images of America series features a wide range of topics by numerous authors. Some are quite good, others more mediocre, and a few are downright bad. This book falls at the lower end of the mediocre category.

The book covers only the area from Capitol Hill to Foggy Bottom, stopping short even of Georgetown. Generally, those are the areas out-of-towners stick to on their vacations, so this book will be relevant to them. Thomas Carrier, the author, virtually ignores the rest of the city and metropolitan area.

Dates are provided only for some of the photographs and illustrations, lessening their value. Quixotically, many of the captions go on at length about some building, then say that the illustration depicts the site before all that happened - leaving out anything about what you're actually looking at. The illustrations are keyed to maps at the beginning of each chapter - that's fine, but no street address is provided in most of the captions, which would have been useful. There also are a great many statues illustrated - again, fine for tourists, but not having much to do with the life of the city.

One example of the book's lack of focus: On page 105 is a fine photograph of the Watergate band barge, a fixture of Washington life for several decades until the advent of loud jet planes forced its removal in the early 1960s; the nearby Watergate complex of the 1960s got its name from this location. The foreground of the picture shows dozens of canoes filled with people crowding close to the barge early on a summer evening. Steps for people to listen to the free concerts are still by the river today - for no apparent reason until one understands the original purpose. Yet Carrier's caption is concerned completely with Memorial Bridge, seen only dimly in the background. His only comment on the barge is it's a "floating band stand."

The absence of Carrier's understanding of social events and context and his focus on simplistic touristy features underscore the tone of the entire book.

 DC Washington
Relocating to Washington DC and Surrounding Areas: Everything You Need to Know Before You Move and After You Get There!
Published in Paperback by Prima Lifestyles (2000-08-03)
Author: Ed Mcfadden
List price: $18.95
New price: $8.00
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Read everything below!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-03
The reviews below are right. This is not a useful book.

Credibility lost
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-18
I am a recent college graduate who is moving to the DC area in a couple of months. As I am unfamiliar with the city, I purchased McFadden's book in hopes of getting better acquainted not only with the city itself, but also with the housing options that exist there. I found McFadden's approximations for apartment rent to be inconsistent with the information supplied to me by realtors and apartment managers. Further, four of the internet sites he lists as good resources do not even exist or have nothing to do with DC housing arrangements. His inconsistency and inaccurate information with regard to some facts makes it hard to trust any advice or suggestions he gives.

Read everything below!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-03
The reviews below are right. This is not a useful book.

Errors mar usefulness.
Helpful Votes: 49 out of 51 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-10
I had found the San Francisco edition of the "Relocating to..." series extremely useful last year, so I thought this book would be similarly helpful for my move to Washington, DC and reacquainting me with the area after several years elsewhere. Unfortunately, the book is marred by factual errors and typos, misplaced (or absent maps)and questionable organization.

On the plus side, the book provides brief descriptions of various neighborhoods in the DC metro area and related statistics. There's also useful information about the pros and cons of renting or buying in some of the areas introduced earlier as well as information on various recreational and volunteer opportunities. In addition, the book contains useful sections on managing a move, dealing wih movers and other aspects of relocation, although much of this sort of information is freely available on various moving-related websites.

However, the book suffers from numerous mistakes. The author appears to have put effort into creating the book, so whether the mistakes are his or the result of the way the book was handled in the publishing process, I don't know. Off the top of my head, here are just a few examples of the kinds of errors I discoved:

-The book states crime in Georgetown runs 5x the national average, making it--based on comparison with other statistics in the book--more dangerous than Capitol Hill and most other areas described. This mistake made me question all the information provided about the neighborhoods' crime rates.

-The book states Washington, DC consists of only 26 square miles. (It's around 69 square miles.)

-The book says that most landlords require a security deposit of one month's rent in addition to first and last month's rent and then segues into a discussion of living with roommates. The apartment searching I've done over the past several weeks suggests that while some require a month's rent as security deposit, a significant number of landlords --including the large leasing companies--only require deposits of $250-$750, I've seen nothing about having to pay the last month's rent. Do a search on one the rental websites and you can confirm this yourself.

-For decades, the airport across the Potomac from Washington was called National Airport. A few years ago, it was renamed Reagan as Ronald Reagan National Airport, not Ronald Reagan International Airport as named in the book. It is not an international airport because the runways are too short for large jets.

-The book mentions the importance of Route 50 in its discussion of Arlington. However, there is no map of Arlington portraying Route 50 in a map of Arlington. In fact, the map in the Arlington sections highlights Alexandria, not Arlington, and there is no map in the Alexandria section.

-In the various listings of neighborhood stores and restaurants, the quadrant designations (such as NW, NE, SE and SW) are sometimes omitted. Given that identically named, but quite different, streets exist in DC, following standard practice and providing the full street name would lessen the potential confusion of newcomers to DC.

-Why, after discussing the neighborhoods in relation to their Metro access, is the discussion of the various Metro lines saved until far later in the book?

-Also, why not combine the section on the pros and cons of a neighborhood, etc. with the neighborhood descriptions presented earlier (as done in the San Francisco book? It would save a lot of flipping back and forth.

In addition, although this is the result of a hot real estate market and not the fault of the writer or publisher, the rental rates and housing prices described in the book are substantially lower than the actual current going rates. You may want to search the real estate ads on WashingtonPost.com and the rental websites to get a better sense of market conditions.

All in all, if you don't know anything about DC, this book might be worth skimming for some of its information about the neighborhoods. If the author and publisher were to issue a revised, corrected edition, it would boost the usefulness of the book and help justify the purchase price.

Too General
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-08
Although this guide may help the first time mover, it is too overly general to be of any specific help to someone wanting to know about relocating in particular to the Washington D.C. area, such as utilities, taxes, car registration. Its index is insufficient to help pinpoint any necessary item of information. The neighborhood descriptions are brief at best. There are much better guides for your money.

 DC Washington
The Palisades of Washington, D.C. (DC) (Images of America)
Published in Paperback by Arcadia Publishing (2005-10-05)
Author: Alice Fales Stewart
List price: $19.99
New price: $12.32
Used price: $35.89

Average review score:

Disapointing Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-06
I have to agree. Arcadia needs to create standards for their authors, and contract with historians and writers, not the amateur wannabees. The consistancy of the series is the problem...some great, some like this poorly executed.

A disappointing look at the Palisades
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-21
I bought this book because I used to live in the Palisades and have fond memories of my time ther. I found the content of the book to be very uneven. Some pictures in the book depict places that are really in Georgetown, not the Palisades. There are significant omissions in the content, with no pictures of such significant neighborhood institutions as Mount Vernon College and Sibley Hospital. It's as if the author published her own personal photo album rather than trying to put together a more objective look at a neighborhood.

 DC Washington
Vault Guide to the Top Washington, DC Law Firms (Vault Guide to the Top Washington, D.C. Law Firms)
Published in Paperback by Vault, Inc. (2004-07-25)
Author: Brook Moshan
List price: $29.95
New price: $9.45
Used price: $0.82

Average review score:

Complete waste of money
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-03
The information in this book is all out of date, and the information given is based on firm-wide reviews (not DC-specific), so it doesn't necessarily reflect DC office expectations.

After I purchased this book, I learned that my law school career office provides free online access to Vault's updated reviews. I'd suggest checking out options like that rather than paying for this.

Don't buy this on top of the vault 100 top law firms
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-16
I bought this at the same time as the Vault Guide to the Top 100 Law Firms, but shouldn't have bought both. This seems to just take all the firms from the Top 100 book that have DC offices and re-list them. No new information. In fact, most of the text is straight from the Top 100 book, but that book is almost wholly New York-centered. So you read quotes in the DC book about bad partner-associate relations, but you don't know if that was a NY or DC person saying it. This book is really not very helpful.

 DC Washington
Mr. Cheap's Washington D.C: Bargains, Factory Outlets, Deep Discount Stores, Cheap Places to Stay, Cheap Eats, and Cheap, Fun Things to Do (Mr. Cheap's)
Published in Paperback by Adams Media Corporation (2002-09)
Authors: Corey Sandler, Michael Lawrence, and Mark Mr. Cheap's Washington Waldstein
List price: $9.95
New price: $0.75
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Not up to expectations.
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-09
I thought the author would actually REVIEW the outlet malls, not just tell us where they are (you can get that for free on the Internet!) He warns that not all "outlets" really offer great bargains -- but you have to check 'em all out yourself to find out which ones do.

And guess what -- he says you can get great prices at Sams, KB Toys, and Tuesday Morning. Well, "duh".

Where are the useful sources??
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-25
"Mr. Cheap" doesn't seem to know anything about most of the wonderful bargain sources that exist in the DC/NoVA area. In this area, we have LOTS of places where people can get end-of-season clothes, returned and unused items of all types, leftovers from building jobs, furnishings from places that have closed (not the scam ones listed in this book, some of which I checked out only to find ancient junk and NOT the superbuys he claimed), cooking supplies, hardware, jewelry supplies, hard-to-find clothing sizes, and many more. Also, his restaurant listings are a joke. Readers would be better off with the archived reviews from the Washington Post. And the paeans to Tuesday Morning and similar chain stores?? What a joke! Who needs what are basically Sunday paper ads? Books like this should have NEW information about one-of-a-kind places, not chains. Whoever put this second edition together copied the good info from the first book but forgot to research almost anything new. Maybe a third edition, with input from REAL investigation will be upcoming. I'll be waiting.


Books-Under-Review-->Society-->Law-->Services-->Lawyers and Law Firms-->Taxation Law-->North America-->United States-->Washington, DC-->27
Related Subjects:
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