Thursday, September 20, 2012

Again, as with the Traditional Shops and Restaurants book above, I learned about a ton of great plac




I am often asked to share the resources I use to plan trips, so when a friend recently asked me what I perused for London, I thought I would also share the list here, especially since I want to enthuse about a terrific series of fold-out map/guides I discovered a few months ago from Herb Lester Associates in the UK:
In addition to these two pictured just above, there are maps on Writing hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas London, An Uncle's Guide to London, Clandestine London, London; You Are Here, and others hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas on New York, Los Angeles, hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas Chicago, Austin, Madrid, Paris, Rome, Berlin, Amsterdam, and Glasgow. Each is reasonably priced (4 pounds) hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas and each is filled with a number of less obvious things to see and do. I now have almost all of these and I love them and I think you will, too.
In a similar vein, Indagare has recently introduced its own Mapped Out series -- the editions on London and Paris are for families while Rome, Venice, and Vienna, are just for adults. These are all in keeping with the high standards members and fans of Indagare have come to expect, and they combine some of the obvious sites with distinctive, lesser-known suggestions. You can purchase the whole series for $55 or each is available individually for $12.95.
Moving along,I hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas should mention that for this particular trip, I only consulted one traditional guidebook (Fodor's London) as I've been to London twice before and I didn't feel I was in great need of that kind of a resource; rather, I wanted more specific, focused books, like these:
Both of these are, to my mind, 100% indispensable. London A to Z (remember, the z is pronounced hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas 'zed') is somewhat the equivalent of the Plan de Paris (if you're unfamiliar with le Plan , read 'According to Plan: Maps of Paris' by Catharine Reynolds in my Paris book, in which she states that "In Paris, map toting is no newcomer's proclamation of ignorance. The most knowledgeable taxi drivers hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas cannot know each of the city's 6,417 streets offhand; instead they pack copies of Paris par Arrondissement in their glove compartments.")
This is the book that's a compilation of walks offered hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas by the excellent urban walking tour company (the world's oldest), London Walks . More about the book and the company hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas to follow in an upcoming post!
The Traditional Shops and Restaurants of London is an interesting and wonderful little guide that steered me to some shops and places to eat I would otherwise have missed. Author Eugenia Bell also revealed lots of new details about places I already knew about. hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas Really wonderful.
Again, as with the Traditional Shops and Restaurants book above, I learned about a ton of great places to eat and shop as well as places hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas to stay. This is really packed with suggestions, not only by author Saska Graville but by a handful of notable hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas Londoners.
The Luxe guides have attitude, hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas and you have to sign on to this attitude in order to get the most out of these fold-out, hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas pocket-sized, light-as-a-feather guides. The tone is not only opinionated but witty and occasionally brutal hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas (and sometimes annoying, like when TTFN stands for 'Ta-ta for Now'). But the retail suggestions and places to eat and drink are spot-on, the itineraries provide structure and are worthwhile, and the short-listed art and cultural recommendations are valid. Full Stop.
The Louis Vuitton European Cities boxed set of books , published annually hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas every Fall, routinely includes London in its assortment, and the 2012 edition was, as always, enlightening, succinct, and wonderful. I'm not including an image here, sorry, because those I found featured the entire boxed set and not one of the individual book I used. But I have found this set to be invaluable year after year. The individual volumes are not sold separately, however -- you have to buy the whole set -- and there seems to be a rather small-ish print run so if you're interested in buying one you have to act quickly.
...and this is a typical type of research list for me, no matter where I'm going. If you've read my books you know that I am a huge proponent of James Pope-Hennessy's book Aspects of Provence , in which he writes, "if one is to get best value out of places visited, some skeletal hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas knowledge of their history if necessary...Sight-seeing is by no means the only object of a journey, but it is as unintelligent as it is lazy not to equip ourselves to understand the sights we see." More London hotels on the riverwalk in san antonio texas (and Cotswolds) notes to follow!

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