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Time Out Las Vegas (Time Out Guides)

Time Out

Time Out Las Vegas (Time Out Guides) Time Out Amazon Price: $13.73
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 8 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

THE most helpful travel guides around :-) 5 out of 5 stars.
8 of 8 people found this review helpful.

To me, Time Out guides are the best you can buy. They are better than Lonely Planet and Frommers and anything else on the market. They are very in-depth, colorful, heaps of photos, so informative and often go the extra mile by adding bonus pages on either the history of the city, or the culture or anything of even minimal interest.
This 2007 edition is choc-full of anything you wanted to know for your vacation to Vegas and day trips to other places like Arizona, California and Utah. It even has a mini segment about gambling and lessons on how to play some of the more popular games in the casino. There are listings in the back for hospitals, websites for where to find dentists, list of radio stations, post offices and almost anything you could want to find. It covers where to stay from budget to grand opulence, what to do with or without kids, maps of the Strip and surrounding areas and of course my absolute favourite topics - food and shopping.
By the time you read this guide, you will be a novice of Vegas whether you've already been before or going for the first time. I'm about to go to Vegas for my 12th time and I still find this book of use. I highly highly recommend it and recommed their other guides for other great cities around the world.

Editorial Review:

The nonstop neon playground that is Las Vegas is also America's fastest-growing and most-visited city, with twenty-nine million tourists annually. Extensively researched by a team of resident writers, the Las Vegas Guide provides both authoritative inside information on the hotels and tourist attractions and a unique insight into the city beyond the Strip. Included are in-depth casino reviews, tips on smart gambling, wedding chapels, family entertainment, and trips outside the city -- from Hoover Dam and Death Valley to the Grand Canyon.

Oklahoma Curiosities: Quirky Characters, Roadside Oddities & Other Offbeat Stuff (Curiosities Series)

PJ Lassek

Oklahoma Curiosities: Quirky Characters, Roadside Oddities & Other Offbeat Stuff (Curiosities Series) PJ Lassek Amazon Price: $10.17
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New Orleans 1867

Gary A. Van Zante

New Orleans 1867 Gary A. Van Zante Amazon Price: $52.50
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 4 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

rare recently-discovered post-Civil War photographs of New Orleans 5 out of 5 stars.
10 of 12 people found this review helpful.

Guy A. Van Zante is presently Curator of Architecture and Design at MIT. For eight years up until 2002, he was curator of Southeastern Architecture at Tulane University in New Orleans. He's working on two book projects of historic New Orleans architecture. Van Zante's background, including regional roots and high-level, visible academic positions, makes him the ideal author for this work. He describes his project, "This book is about a city ad its aspirations, and a photographer and his ambitions, and how they cam together to create a powerful image of city building to a world audience." The photographer Lilienthal was German born. Though prominent in his day, he is largely unknown today. When he died in 1894 with no successors, his most significant photographic work--namely the 150 or so New Orleans photographs recorded here--became lost to the public. They turned up--of all places--in 1906 among the family heirlooms of Napoleon III in Arenenberg, Switzerland, where the Emperor lived as a boy. The collection eventually came to be exhibited in New Orleans in 2000. It is virtually priceless since there are no known negatives and only one duplicate print.

Though the first book covering this major historical find, Van Zante's book is definitive in that cannot be surpassed in expertise nor in scope and thoroughness. Unfailingly through the book's architectonic structure and its labyrinth of pertinent and frequently colorful details, Van Zante remains an authoritative director. With curatorial respect for the importance and uniqueness of the material and confidence in its power to speak for itself (no doubt from his authoritativeness), Van Zante only minimally engages in other than assuring that the book's structure best serves the photographs and respective commentary and controlling the flow of myriad detail into the structure. Most of the detail provides background for individual photos culled from "stories of travelers, journalists, and diarists." Each one of Lilienthal's photographs is shown with adjacent relevant period writings. Well-chosen passages from these varied source documents are skillfully and knowledgeably woven together to note specifics of the respective photograph and give it context. So ones learns not only about particular locations at the time, but also much about New Orleans social history, especially commerce, civic groups, and public buildings.

Van Zante begins a Postscript dated August 2007 to the prepared Preface, "New Orleans has been shaped by disaster perhaps more than any other major American city." Disasters followed by extensive reconstruction of areas of the city include not only the destruction from the Civil War prompting Lilienthal's historic photographs, but also floods, hurricanes, fires, and epidemics. The latest flood caused by the hurricane Katrina was a disaster of epic proportion rivaling and perhaps surpassing the damage from the Civil War. Van Zante compares the questions and challenges of reconstruction, revitalization, and continuity facing New Orleans today with those facing the city in the wake of the Civil War; thus deepening attachment to the photographs by suggesting that after Katrina they are not only unique, irreplaceable historical artifacts, but also sources of guidance and encouragement on how New Orleans has overcome previous disasters. Van Zante uses part of the August 2007 postscript also to note which parts of the city seen in the photographs were affected by Katrina and which parts were not touched.

Editorial Review:

This book brings together all the surviving photographs – 126 of the original 150 – from the remarkable series La Nouvelle Orléans et ses environs, taken in 1867 by the New Orleans photographer Theodore Lilienthal (1829–1894). Comprising the first official photographic survey of any American city, the images – featuring every aspect of the city, from mansions and churches to factories and asylums – were exhibited at the Paris World Exposition of 1867 before being presented to Napoléon III, emperor of France (reigned 1852–70). Gary A. Van Zante discusses Lilienthal’s techniques and places each work in the context of a city embarking on reconstruction. Extensive biographical and bibliographical information is also provided. This detailed and evocative pictorial and historical survey of Civil War-era New Orleans will appeal to anyone interested in American history, the history of photography or the development of the modern city.

Camper's Guide to Texas Parks, Lakes, and Forests, 5th Edition: Where to Go and How to Get There (Camper's Guide to Texas: Parks, Lakes, & Forests; Where to Go & How)

Mickey Little

Camper's Guide to Texas Parks, Lakes, and Forests, 5th Edition: Where to Go and How to Get There (Camper's Guide to Texas: Parks, Lakes, & Forests; Where to Go & How) Mickey Little Amazon Price: $17.95
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 5 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

the book to have for camping in texas 5 out of 5 stars.
9 of 9 people found this review helpful.

I operate a year round therapeutic camp for teen boys. The camp goes on many trips, from day trips to extended trips. This book by Mickey Little is an invaluable resource in planning the trips for my staff and 30 boys. Lots of maps, descriptions on campsites and group sites, and of course, activities for the kids once we get there. I would'nt plan a trip without Mickey.

Texas is Big, buy a good camping book. 5 out of 5 stars.
6 of 6 people found this review helpful.

I live in Texas, and I have so for all of my life, but it is sure is surprising to find out how big Texas exactly is. In this book you get, in detail, a listing of state and national parks and forest for the 4 regions of Texas. Being that Texas is so big, each region tends to have all different types of camp sights compared to some of the other regions. The nice thing about this book is it gives you information about OTHER parts of Texas, perhaps that you haven't visited yet. I love to camp but tend to stick to those areas near me, or that I visited as a child. This book should give you enough information to maybe visiting some new sights.

Editorial Review:

Wheter campers prefer challenging trailsor shady spotsbeside cool streams,this camper's atlas helps you discover just the right place to enjoy the great outdoors.

ZAGAT Texas Restaurants 2008 (Zagatsurvey Texas Restaurants) (Zagatsurvey Texas Restaurants)

ZAGAT Texas Restaurants 2008 (Zagatsurvey Texas Restaurants) (Zagatsurvey Texas Restaurants) Amazon Price: $10.17
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Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 1.0 of 5

Shockingly Incomplete 1 out of 5 stars.
2 of 3 people found this review helpful.

The Zagat's 2008 "Texas Restaurants" guide should be renamed the Austin/Dallas/Houston/San Antonio guide. The medium sized metropolitan areas (El Paso, Abilene, Waco, Amarillo, Killeen, etc) are completely excluded, as are destination towns like Salado or Fredericksburg. What is puzzling is that the information is on their webpage. Why not include a "best of the rest" section? Given the Zagat methodology, the exclusion must be intentional - they simply don't see fit to expand the survey beyond the I-35 corridor.

Space is a serious consideration. While smaller cities get their own guidebooks, four of the largest cities in the entire country are crammed into one volume. The culinary scene in Dallas has exploded over the past five years. How is it possible that Connecticut, St. Louis, and the New Jersey Shore have their own guidebooks, but Dallas has to share billing? The same could be said of the three other cities. The Texas Hill Country alone could be a guide much like some of the other regional ones Zagats publishes.

The result is that that guide tends to list newer openings rather than established local favorites. The list for Austin was shockingly incomplete. Likewise Houston and Dallas felt very light. There were well known places that didn't make the book, rendering it useless for someone who is looking for an authentic experience rather than the trendy latest openings.

Another serious flaw is that regional chains only get one review for all four cities. If you are looking for a review of the location in Austin, you might be redirected to the review of the Dallas location. This might work for small chains all operating in the same city, but to propose that there is no discernable difference in price, décor, quality and service between restaurants that are hundreds of miles apart is ridiculous.

I could only recommend this to someone on an extended business trip or vacation along the I-35 corridor who has never been here before. If you really want to get a flavor for Texas, look online at some of the great city scene websites or thumb through back issues of Texas Monthly.

Just like the old salsa commercial, don't be caught dead trying to explore the culinary landscape with a guide book published by folks from New York City.

Editorial Review:

Reflecting the opinions of thousands of local diners, this guide covers over 1200 restaurants in five major Texas cities Austin Dallas Ft. Worth Houston and San Antonio. This handy guide contains Zagat Surveys trusted ratings and reviews for area restaurants based on the opinions of diners like you. Use the indexes arranged by cuisine neighborhood and special features like In Places Winning Wine Lists, or Romantic Places to find the perfect restaurant for any occasion. Also includes stick on bookmarks.

Insiders' Guide to Santa Fe, 4th (Insiders' Guide Series)

Nicky Leach, Richard Mahler

Insiders' Guide to Santa Fe, 4th (Insiders' Guide Series) Nicky Leach, Richard Mahler Amazon Price: $14.21
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Great Book On Northern New Mexico 5 out of 5 stars.
5 of 16 people found this review helpful.

THE INSIDERS' GUIDE TO SANTA FE is a great book about Northern New Mexico. It describes different towns where you can relocate, explains the rules of the road and other essentials, points out where the best shopping and dining are, and tells you where places of worship may be found. Radio stations change formats like the weather, so information in this area that was correct when this book was written might now have to be taken like the humor in such movies/TV shows as FRIENDS, 13 GOING ON 30, DRIVE ME CRAZY, HARVARD MAN, WHAT I LIKE ABOUT YOU, HOW I MET YOUR MOTHER, THE SWEETEST THING, SIMPLY IRRESISTIBLE, AMERICAN WEDDING, THE SISTERHOOD OF THE TRAVELLING PANTS, MY BEST FRIEND'S WEDDING, and GARFIELD: A TALE OF TWO KITTIES, but this is a minor quibble, as the general quality of the book is superb.

Editorial Review:

This comprehensive guide for both residents and visitors covers every aspect of life in Santa Fe. In this high-desert city, the history of Pueblo culture, top-notch skiing and mountain biking, and attractions such as the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum wait to be discovered

Flat Rock Journal: A Day in the Ozark Mountains

Ken Carey

Flat Rock Journal: A Day in the Ozark Mountains Ken Carey List Price: $18.00
By: Harpercollins
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 7 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

Seek nature and spiritual wonder elsewhere 1 out of 5 stars.
9 of 17 people found this review helpful.

After reading two pages of glowing reviews (and even a comment about Carey being a successor to Thoreau), I was expecting a well-written, thoughtful book centered on nature, the forest, and the life within. Instead, Flat Rock Journal struck me as more of a tribute to one man's ego.

The book got off on a bad foot for me when Chicago-born Carey buys a clunker car to begin his quest for nature and life in the forest. It struck me that, 100 years ago, this would not have been an option at all and that it seems a strange way to get around when there are alternatives, such as cycling and walking, that bring one closer to the earth. Next, he runs into the woman who will become his wife on the Berkeley campus with whom he makes love on some bleachers. He sees this as a spiritual moment and her as a strong woman with no fears, while in reality it comes across as young people doing what comes naturally to young people. One wonders why these children of nature did not find some grass under a tree.

Carey and his wife move to an old farmhouse in the Ozarks, where they have few conveniences (although, of course, they can't seem to get by without a truck and eventually a gas-powered refrigerator). Carey's day in the forest gives the reader little real feel for life, but does provide insights into his perspectives, which are at best centered around himself rather than the world around him. He says that a day in the forest helps him to rid himself of assumptions, the baggage of the world, what have you. He then describes clouds, storms, lizards, rock formations, birds, trees -- everything in sight -- in purely anthropmorphic terms as though he can't grasp that this is part of those unnecessary, irrelevant assumptions. He talks about the copperheads that live around the long-abandoned house he buys as "intruders" without seeming to understand that it is his family that is intruding on them. He kills them, albeit regretfully, as a danger to his young children, not seeming to understand that this is how humans have always justified killing so-called "pest animals." When he can no longer take killing them, he pollutes the atmosphere and uses nonrenewable resources by driving them elsewhere so they are not underfoot. He is surprised when they return; he doesn't even seem to know the basic biology of territoriality that man and his fellow animals all have at heart. When he pets them in his lap and they relax, he thinks this is a sign of friendliness (whereas someone a little more in tune with the mind of reptiles -- and I put myself in this category -- understands how much reptiles like a comfortably warm spot, like a lap). This kind of anthropormophising is a grave injustice to nature, and anthropomorphising is a large part of what we do that disrespects nature and leads to environmental trouble and imbalance.

Carey also has a fair amount of contempt for urbanites who don't understand the country and nature, and who exploit "cheap country resources" to lead lives that of excessive consumption. He has a blind side to his own consumption and to his own lack of understanding. He does not absorb nature or sit back and appreciate it; he consistently forces his own predispositions onto it.

He believes environmentalists are wrong to assume that man and nature cannot coexist and that man has the unique capacity to improve the earth, although he doesn't really explain how. (I would have liked at least one example of a building, structure, or anything that is manmade that "improves" nature, but one is not forthcoming.) He and his wife produce a large family, which, while well within their rights, is unnecessary in this country of low child mortality and long life spans, and surely even Carey can acknowledge that it is a combination of excessive consumption and overpopulation that will be the downfall of nature. He can happily live on many acres in a forest, but doesn't seem to think that, if all 280 million Americans tried to follow the same lifestyle, basic as it is, there would be no wild left -- all would be farms, gardens, and watering systems simply to accommodate the volume of people.

He seems to think that depression is something that one shrugs off with the proper attitude and that too much of depression is blamed on "childhood" or "somebody else." This reveals only his profound ignorance of clinical depression as well as issues of child physical, emotional, and sexual abuse.

His pseudospiritual ramblings are more annoying than enlightening. They are not the type of beliefs that can be universally felt, but are based on his own approach to his own readings, thoughts, and feelings. They are frequently contradictory to both common sense and a sense of wonder.

I was looking forward to a book that would make me feel like I was part of the forest, part of the Ozarks, part of the world. I have read the works of many environmental and nature writers who put their egos in the back seat and channel the beauty of the woods around them with minimal interjections of self, and those are the works that transport me, move me, and help me renew my own touch with my world and with all that inhabits it. This is not it.

Despite the glowing blurbs, which make me wonder if reviewers put any thought into their reviews, this book is not worth the time when there are so many more thoughtful, eloquent writers out there. It is apparently out of print. I can understand why.

Editorial Review:

The author of Return of the Bird Tribes shares a day-long spiritual journey through the natural world of the Missouri Ozarks, where he and his wife have lived for twenty years. 20,000 first printing. Tour.

Zagat 2009 New Orleans (Zagatsurvey: New Orleans Restaurants)

Zagat Survey

Zagat 2009 New Orleans (Zagatsurvey: New Orleans Restaurants) Zagat Survey Amazon Price: $10.36
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Don't Mess with Texas: The Story Behind the Legend

Tim McClure, Roy Spence

Don't Mess with Texas: The Story Behind the Legend Tim McClure, Roy Spence Amazon Price: $18.21
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 5 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Everything is Bigger in Texas 5 out of 5 stars.
4 of 4 people found this review helpful.

As an advertising executive, the "Don't Mess With Texas" campaign is, for me, the stuff legends are made of. It was the biggest, longest-running, and most successful public service advertisement in advertising history. It's really quite astounding that a local, pro-environment campaign picked up SO much momentum and even became an important part of American pop-culture. Tim McClure and Roy Spence do an outstanding job of telling their reader everything he/she wants to know about the campaign...and then some! Everything is there--from the first seeds of the idea to the last fully developed commercial (with, of course, lots of celebrity appearances, close-calls, budgeting issues, and interesting stories in between). This is a great book. If you're interested in advertising or Texas at all, it will entertain you.

Editorial Review:

In December 1985, a bumper sticker bearing the words 'Don't Mess With Texas' began appearing on pickup trucks across the Lone Star State. There was no explanation, no sponsor, just those four words and a small red, white, and blue Texas flag. Fast-forward 20 years to 2006. Today, the longest-running public service campaign in Texas is also the most successful anti-litter campaign in history. Until now, only a handful of people knew the true stories behind the legend: the stories of the famous commercials and the stories about dozens of the biggest and brightest Texas stars who donated their time and considerable talents to help Texas reduce litter on its highways by an astonishing 72 percent.

The Deserts of the Southwest: A Sierra Club Naturalist's Guide (Sierra Club Naturalist's Guides)

Lane Larson, Peggy Larson

The Deserts of the Southwest: A Sierra Club Naturalist's Guide (Sierra Club Naturalist's Guides) Lane Larson, Peggy Larson Amazon Price: $15.16
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

The Southwest Deserts Come Alive 5 out of 5 stars.
21 of 21 people found this review helpful.

We camped for a week in the Davis Mountains in west Texas in a section of the Chihuahuan desert last summer. This was not our first desert experience - we have hiked and camped across much of the Southwest over the last twenty years or so. This was an unplanned trip as we were headed toward southern Colorado, but we became fascinated by the Chihuahuan desert and somehow we never drove any further.

We were similarly quite lucky to find a copy of the first edition of Peggy Larson's Sierra Guidebook in a bookstore in Alpine, Texas. She presents the deserts of the American southwest (and northern Mexico) in a literate and educated fashion. She manages to discuss individual plants and animals in some detail while painting a large scale, beautiful portrait of the four major deserts of North America. Detailed ink drawings - landscape, geology, plants, and animals - are scattered throughout the narrative and add considerable value. She knows her subject and shares her knowledge in an intriguing fashion. She effectively uses scientific names of desert plants and animals interchangeably with common (but less unique) names without intimidating the reader. This is not a novel and it is quite possible to skip to selected chapters of personal interest, but I highly recommend exploring all chapters, all topics. Peggy Larson's style is really quite good.

If you are already familiar with the American deserts, you will find "The Deserts of the Southwest" a rewarding visit with an old friend. If you are somewhat new to the deserts and possibly have only sampled the deserts from a highway perspective, I suspect that after reading Peggy Larson's book you will likely change your travel plans to include a personal visit to an American desert.

Editorial Review:

Newly revised and updated, this comprehensive field guide describes the four deserts of the American Southwest—the Great Basin, Mojave, Chihuahuan, and Sonoran—which together stretch into nine southwestern states and Mexico. The topography, geology, and climatic conditions of these arid lands set the stage for one of the most fascinating of ecological studies: the survival and adaptation of animal and plant life in the severe, often extreme desert climate and terrain.
Abundantly illustrated with line drawings, maps, charts, and diagrams, The Deserts of the Southwest offers both the outdoor adventurer and the armchair naturalist a clear and detailed portrait of this complex, beautiful, fragile wilderness.

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