Showing posts with label california. Show all posts
Showing posts with label california. Show all posts

Secret Stairs: A Walking Guide to the Historic Staircases of Los Angeles Review

Secret Stairs: A Walking Guide to the Historic Staircases of Los Angeles
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What a nice book. I live in the Echo Park district of Los Angeles, and a friend suggested this book to me. I realized I had read a novel by the author a few years ago that I really enjoyed, "The Ivory Coast" a jazz/noir set in Vegas, so I picked up a copy. Now I'm planning to take the walks written about in the book. Wow. As a kid, one of my favorite "Three Stooges" was shot on a stair street. They had a job delivering ice, and Curly has a huge block of ice in tongs, and when he gets to the top, he's holding a little ice cube. What I love about L. A. is how much history and mystery exists here, particularly on the east side, and parts of Hollywood. Because it was run down over here for so long, large swaths of the east side weren't touched when all of the money moved in a little west, and few of those monstrous developments occurred; there are still little nuggets and gems you can find. My only quibble is that I would have loved pictures of the stair street, but on the other hand, the descriptions are great, and leaving the mystery makes me want to go there myself. Which I plan to.

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In a city known for its fast cars and freeways, this guide reveals a unique feature of the Los Angeles cityscape: more than 200 stairways across the hilly sections of the city, many of which are remnants from the days when most city residents depended on streetcars and buses for transportation. Containing more than 40 walks and detailed maps, this handbook highlights the charms and quirks of this quintessential feature of Los Angeles' development and chronicles the geographical, architectural, and historical features of each staircase and the neighborhoods in which the steps are located. Rated for duration and difficulty, the circular walks deliver tales of historic homes, their fascinating inhabitants, and troves of historic trivia-such as where William Faulkner lived while he wrote the screenplay for To Have and Have Not, where Graham Nash lived, and where actress Thelma Todd was murdered-while other walks highlight spectacular homes by some of southern California's most important architects, including Neutra and Schindler. From strolling through the classic La Loma neighborhood in Pasadena and walking the vintage Red Car Loop in Silver Lake to taking the Beachwood Canyon Hollywoodland hike and enjoying the magnificent ocean views from the Castellammare district in Pacific Palisades, these staircases present a new way for urban explorers to discover a little-known side of the City of Angels.

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San Diego's Gaslamp Quarter (CA) (Images of America) Review

San Diego's Gaslamp Quarter   (CA)  (Images of America)
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This book is a great pictoral history of San Diego's Gaslamp Quarter. It also serves as a great walking guide with pictures and history of the buildings still in the Gaslamp today.

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Founded in 1850, San Diego's Gaslamp Quarter, located in what was then called New Town, became the bustling anchor of commerce for the developing City of San Diego. In this new history of the area, nearly 200 striking images tell the story of the area's early boom and bust, the saloons and bordellos of infamous Stingaree Town, the urban decay of the mid-twentieth century, and the rebirth and restoration of the neighborhood over the last 30 years.

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Zodiac Review

Zodiac
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A lot of other reviews note the stretches, hunches and speculation that appear in this book as its primary weaknesses. None of them, however, note that most police work is based on hunches and stretches, and most crimes are solved through nearly blind speculation. In fact, crafting the opening salvo of solving a crime is all speculation, as the only people who were actually at the scene as the crime took place were the victims and their killer, not the police. Thus, the speculation is necessary to approach the task of solving any crime. As a result, the loose ends in this book are a very necessary and a common component to solving any crime.
The Zodiac killings are very close to me as I am a lifelong resident of the San Francisco Bay Area. David Berkowitz was in New York City, Jack the Ripper was a phantom of London and the Manson Family had operated primarily in Southern California. All were far, far away. The Zodiac was right in my backyard. To this day I still get chills when after passing over the Benicia Bridge, I see the green traffic sign hanging over the highway that reads, "Lake Herman Road, Next Right". Lake Herman Road of course, being where the Zodiac first struck by murdering teens Betty Lou Jensen and David Faraday, as they sat parked in a remote lover's lane.
The constant interest and apparent obsession with the Zodiac murders is concentrated around two facts of the case: firstly that the Zodiac was never caught. All this book and most others do is outline what the author believes to be the best, most likely suspect. The other reason why people are so drawn to this case is the odd and mysterious way the killer stalked his victims and taunted the police after the crimes. After a killing, the Zodiac would usually call in and report his own crime. More shocking than that, he usually did it within sight of the police stations he had been taunting. If that weren't enough, he wrote ciphers, or coded messages, and sent them into the local newspapers. Some of these ciphers were solved, yet many were not despite the best efforts of the law enforcement community throughout North America.
Graysmith takes us on a rollercoaster ride as the crimes are committed. The reader can visualize and feel the cold, dark night on Lake Herman Road. The same feeling is present when the man who stalked Darlene Ferrin for months prior shows up just a few miles down the same Lake Herman Road where the first double murder was committed, on a turn out for the golf course at Blue Rock Springs. It's here where he takes the life of Darlene and leaves Mike Mageau clinging to life. The reader is transported to the remote, grassy peninsula by Lake Berryessa where the Zodiac first donned his executioner's costume, and where he stalked his victims, leaving only one of them barely alive. Finally, we get inside Paul Stine's cab with the Zodiac as he commits his most infamous crime on the cold, damp streets of the Presidio Heights of San Francisco. Graysmith goes into great detail to make the crimes as real as possible to us, allowing the reader to view the crimes from nearly every angle. The Zodiac's infamous calls to the police and letters to the newspapers are sprinkled throughout, setting the stage for the nationwide manhunt.
After the rollercoaster ride that is the Zodiac's killing spree, we are immersed into the facts of the crimes, the strange coincidences and the lives of those chasing the Zodiac. We are even introduced to unsolved murders that are not credited to the Zodiac, but have the same traits as Zodiac crimes and are within what is considered to be the Zodiac's territory. Graysmith explains to us how he became involved and how a novice approach yielded the best Zodiac suspect and the one widely excepted as the most likely by the law enforcement officials closest to the case. In a pure literary sense, this book is as engaging and riveting as they come. I don't believe it to be a scary book; some people mentioned that they wouldn't read it late at night or while alone. In fact, those are the only times I did read it. The setting in which a book is enjoyed is an important element to how the book's presentation comes off to the reader. I remember reading it on a cold night, with the rain beating against my windows. It took me out and made me think of how quiet and cold Lake Herman Road must have been at that moment. A place where people say that a haunting, grey fog still sits over the road and the place of the murders...even after the rest of the fog as blown inland, or on a night where no fog is present anywhere else.
If you're into true crime or even some Northern California history, this book is a must read. Take it all with a grain of salt, don't allow the author's conclusions to automatically become yours. Instead, take the book in, try and put yourself into the scenes and try to solve the crimes yourself. The Zodiac murders have captivated the minds of novice detectives and common folk alike; so don't be surprised if you end up with the urge to read this book a second and third time. I know I did.

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Mission San Juan Capistrano: A Place of Peace Review

Mission San Juan Capistrano: A Place of Peace
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This book gives you a present day, and historical look at the Mission. It captures so much of the spirit. It is beautifully photographed, each picture being a treasure in itself. It is wonderfully illustrated - the artist certainly understands the Mission, and it is so well written. The author paints a picture of the old and new in an amazing way. The whole book is a work of art in itself.
If you have ever visited the Mission, or intend to visit it, or any other of the Missions this book is a must read. It will make your visit a truly personal experience.

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This Day in San Diego History Review

This Day in San Diego History
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For each day of the calendar year, This Day in San Diego History presents a one-page summary of amazing, milestone events connected to the thriving city of San Diego, California. From well-known major events to obscure yet culturally relevant discoveries and achievements, This Day in San Diego History gives a mosaic of important contributions. A most enjoyable compendium simply to browse through; its format reminds the reader that any day can be a great day. "May 29, 1935: On this day in San Diego History, the California Pacific International Exposition opened in Balboa park... This 1935 exposition was especially important because it was held in the middle of the great economic depression of the 1930s, and it offered hope to San Diegans and to the rest of America that the country would soon be able to overcome its problems."


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This Day in San Diego History covers key people, places, and events that helped make San Diego the unique, colorful, and eclectic city and county that it is. The author has chosen an event of note for each date on the calendar: on this day a particular person of note did something memorable, on this one, an important event happened or a place became noteworthy. Some events will be well-known to residents, but many are obscure but important tidbits from our region s past. San Diego s story emerges like a mosaic composed of these kaleidoscopic pieces, with the reader choosing which days to read, and thereby choosing their own path to learning about our county s history. Scholars and amateur historians may concentrate on specific historical subjects, via the comprehensive index. This invaluable reference will be an important addition to the library of every student of regional and California history.

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Moon San Diego: Including Tijuana, Rosarito, and Ensenada (Moon Handbooks) Review

Moon San Diego: Including Tijuana, Rosarito, and Ensenada (Moon Handbooks)
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this is a great guide book with lots of good maps, suggestions for dining and accomodations, and transportation. It is highly recommended.

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Seasoned writer and outdoors enthusiast Ericka Chickowski offers an insider's view of San Diego, from surfing at San Onofre State Beach to exploring the expansive San Diego Zoo. Ericka includes great trip ideas such as On a Mission, a tour of the city's historical sights, and Surf and Turf, which covers recreational opportunities in and out of the water. Packed with information on dining, transportation, and accommodations, Moon San Diego has lots of options for a range of travel budgets. Every Moon guidebook includes recommendations for must-see sights and many regional, area, and city-centered maps. With advice on where to grab a cocktail in the Gaslamp Quarter and hike in Cuyamaca Rancho State Park, Moon San Diego gives travelers the tools they need to create a more personal and memorable experience. With expert writers, first-rate strategic advice, and an essential dose of humor, Moon Handbooks are the cure for the common trip.

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Mr. Monk Goes to the Firehouse Review

Mr. Monk Goes to the Firehouse
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I love the Adrian Monk TV show series with Tony Shaloub. I also love ready mystery stories. I was thrilled to see that a book series was beginning that involved this combination. I was very, very eager to enjoy it. I have to be honest and say that I was really disappointed when I was done. I handed the book to my boyfriend without giving him any indication of what I felt. When he was also very disappointed, I know it wasn't just a quirk. It just isn't a great translation of the stellar TV show.
The story is written from the point of view of Monk's assistant, Natalie. Monk's home is being fumigated, so Monk is living with Natalie for the time being. Natalie's daughter is sad because of the murder of a dalmatian at the nearby firehouse. Monk is enlisted to figure this out. Soon there are a few other murders, and Monk of course ties them all together and solves the case.
I normally am thrilled by a "female voice" in a book, and as I've said, I really enjoy the Monk character. On page 2 there was a typo, which of course Monk would have hated. I let it pass. After all, we're only 2 pages into the book. On page 3 is a HUGE issue - Stottlemeyer says his wife would leave him if Monk stayed with them. News flash - Stottlemeyer's wife HAS left him. This book was released in January 2006, and I read it in the first days of March 2006. It was a really "icky" feeling to have that sort of joke made. Surely the author was told what the upcoming series was going to hold.
On through the story we move. I've always admired Natalie in the TV show as being a reasonably honest, caring single mother with good morals. In this book she is completely inane. She is VERY obsessed with breast size and comments on them repeatedly. Either she is upset that another woman has big breasts or is criticizing herself for not having giant ones. By the second or third reference I was rolling my eyes. Enough already!! Next, pair this up with her shallow view of men. She says that the main reason she was with her husband was that he was good looking. She's obsessed with the "hunky" fireman and then is worried that he might have a high pitched voice or something else to "ruin" him. She's interviewing an overweight male person and when he talks about taking a bath she says that she felt like she would have to *vomit* because of the mental image. This goes way beyond "changing Natalie". Natalie has turned into the most shallow, body-obsessed brainless twit that I have encountered as a heroine in a story in many years. It really, really upset me.
It goes further. After having a self-righteous attitude against many people she runs into, they head out onto an island of the wealthy. Natalie is quick to mention that she does "not have anything against the rich." Oh, ok, it's fine to bash heavy people and people with not-great breasts, but we wouldn't want to upset any readers that have money. Of course, because those with money might buy the book. Heck, they might also buy the many products that are name-dropped here too.
There are other, smaller issues. Monk is drinking milk, when it's made clear in the series that he would never do that. Natalie makes some comments that Monk must solve EVERY single crime he's presented with or not be kept on by the police. That is a rather inane thought for anyone even slightly related to the police to have. Pretty much every clue is telegraphed, so that I always had a sense of what was a waste of time and what was going to happen before it did.
There's a gleam of hope here - she apparently owned an AMC Pacer as her first car. That was my first car too. I felt a momentary kinship with her because of that - but it didn't take long before her rambling self-absorbed commentary completely drove me away again.
I'm not saying I dislike Monk, the setting or the story at all. I really did enjoy the story and general plotting. However, the damage done to the main character (i.e. Natalie) was incredible. It was very disturbing to me. If there's any sort of lobbying I can do for the second book to get Natalie to be more true to the series, I will do it. I would love reading Monk series for years - but having a Natalie like this will be true torture. Having typos and egregious Monk-errors is just silly in a book about someone who is obsessive compulsive and who clearly would have picked these out in one reading.

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Great Escapes: Northern California (Great Escapes) Review

Great Escapes: Northern California (Great Escapes)
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I always thought you should have a really heavy guidebook when traveling, even close to home. But I don't think that any more after reading this one. This book is a great deal, an excellent guide for both locals and visitors to the Bay Area. From Big Sur to Mendocino to Lake Tahoe, it gathers a wide range of both well-known and more obscure Northern California destinations in a concise, informative, and personable volume. Its less than 200 pages are packed with dozens of ideas for one- to three-day getaways with ample specifics to keep you busy.
The book pulls it off through a combination of tight, interesting writing and limited but thoughtful and discerning listings for things like food and lodging. Other examples of this approach: This isn't the guide for a full-bore winery tour, but it will get you to some smaller off-the-beaten-track vintners. And while Great Escapes includes San Francisco, Berkeley, and Oakland, it skips the typical tourist attractions, instead opting to describe some neighborhoods and spots that locals will recognize approvingly.
Use this book on its own for some outstanding and even unexpected experiences, or as a starting point for your Northern California travels. As someone who has lived in San Francisco for several years, the book makes me realize how many places I didn't even know I wanted to visit.


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Free Land, Free Love: Tales of a Wilderness Commune Review

Free Land, Free Love: Tales of a Wilderness Commune
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Communal living has been a social experiment rooted firmly in the American landscape since the New England Transcendentalists and the Brook Farm community. Margaret Fuller, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Henry David Thoreau are names familiar to every high schooler, but few have read more than the usual Walden Pond excerpts and perhaps a poem or two, and most of the other Transcendentalists writings were concerned with their social philosophy.
The power of Free Land, Free Love is in the polyphony of very personal voices, weaving a portrait of experiences in communal living at Black Bear Ranch. We are treated to first-hand accounts of mostly middle-class Americans diving headlong into this unknown adventure, and surviving. It was the sixties, after all. Personal politics, sexual ethics, psychology, morality -- the Black Bear experience brought these ingredients into a cauldron seasoned with incipient radicalism, multiculturalism and a romantic idealism so far removed from the present it is an artifact. Try to imagine even discussing free love today in the era of AIDS. Yet once upon a time, free love seemed not only possible, but, well, socially advanced.
If their views on life seem to have little to do with life as most know it today, it is instructive to listen to these voices and hear the way that they (and perhaps we also) used to think. Though idealistic, these communards were also practical, down-to-earth, and undaunted by the many challenges they faced from Mother Nature, from society and from each other. Like the Diggers, their urban antecedents, the Black Bear tribe were scroungers, hustlers and Robin Hoods at heart. Ironically, their own naivete often proved to be a saving grace.
This book is filled with marvelous anecdotes. Burned an American flag at James Coburn's house. The Great Tomato Plant Bust. A standoff at gunpoint with a Black Power brother from Oakland. Fishing with the Karok Indians. Love triangles, quadrangles and other polygons. Discovering and using herbal remedies before there were health food stores. Encounters with wild animals like mountain cats, bears and snakes.
The reader is invited into the Black Bear reality one voice at a time. You can read it straight through and get the feeling of a connected narrative. Or you can drop into the book here and there, and graze. Free Land, Free Love is testament to a kind of human courage that is in short supply today. This is a wonderful book that documents an amazing era in which everything seemed possible and nothing was too great to fear.

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Mr. Monk and The Blue Flu Review

Mr. Monk and The Blue Flu
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--Ever since Monk discovered a while back that the kindly old woman I used as a babysitter murdered her husband and buried him in her backyard, day care has been a problem for me.
Call me hooked! I love a laugh out loud mystery but they're not all that easy to find. I hit upon a real winner with Mr. Monk and the Blue Flu, by Lee Goldberg. Before I begin, I should confess, I've never seen the Monk show so I can judge this book purely on its own merits. I was entranced by the wonderful relationship between the nutty Monk and his faithful sidekick right from page one. It opens with a crime scene unfortunately located in a dog park and Monk's horror at having to approach the canine mine field is hilarious. The humor runs strong throughout the story but not at the expense of the mystery thread. I thought the astrological chart connection was ingenious (I resist the urge to spoil anything here) and the ragtag collection of oddball cops that Monk must bring in when he is promoted to chief during a police strike add a great dimension also.
Monk's genius is a double edged animal as he is in perpetual state of anxiety. He sees what's wrong in the world and his burden is to set it right. With an almost Sherlockian ability to make connections from the seemingly random, his struggle is both heartwarming and hilarious. Picture a tactical assault team ready to storm a building. One of the cops asks a Kevlar vested Monk if he is carrying a weapon.
--Monk reached into his pocket and pulled out half a dozen packets of disinfectant wipes. "They kill germs on contact," Monk said.
Wyatt grimaced in disgust. "Remain behind me and take cover when the shooting starts."
Monk nodded. "And when should I begin cowering?"
Now this is a hero I want to read about. I'm looking forward to enjoying all of Lee Goldberg's Monk series. Who knows? I may have to break down and watch the show. Nah. Books are always better anyway.


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The Haight-Ashbury: A History Review

The Haight-Ashbury: A History
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> "The Bay area Vortex," is what some insiders called the Haight-Ashbury district during the hippy revolution. The area was a whirlpool that attracted psychedelic drugs and druggies, hippies, politicos, and soon-to-be famous bands, among other American oddities.
Bob Dylan, The Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane and the Hell's Angels could be found at dance-hall scenes lit by psychedelic light shows. It was a two-year span, from 1964 to 1966, of acid, Timothy Leary and the Vietnam War. Song lyrics held secret and not so secret messages of drugs and protest. "It was the best of times; it was the worst of times," as Dickens would say.
The Haight-Ashbury: A History starts out a little slow, especially if you are not familiar with that time and place in history. Perry was an insider of the happenings during the, "summer of love," as Bob Weir of the Grateful Dead calls the two-year span, and Perry knows vernacular of the time and place which is much like a foreign language to those of us who are uninformed. He knows the names, businesses, bands, people and the happenings. If all this is news to you, it's a little hard to trudge through this information and make sense of it.
But, if you remember the period, or are curious about the drug culture of the 60s, or if the history of rock bands intrigues you, this is definitely a book for you. There is a 71-page section where Perry writes a journal of the events that happened April through October of 1967. Local police were getting tough on drugs; residents of the Haight were tiring of tour busses full of people invading their space. The darker side of the Haight was emerging. I found this one section to be an interesting essay on society in general.
Toward the book's end, Perry ties the Haight-Ashbury events with what was happening and what had happened around the world and understanding of the "Bay area Vortex," becomes clearer. I went back and reread the opening chapters that seemed confusing at first, but now they made sense. Despite the, " . . .bitterest disappointments and most violent disruption, . . ." noted, Perry ends the book with an uplifting message and uses the history of Haight-Ashbury as an example of a Phoenix that arises from the ashes. An intriguing concept.
Sixteen pages of black and white photographs will bring memories of the events and people to the minds of those who saw this time. For those who are just learning about the era the photographs make the message clearer. You can see a young Jefferson Airplane and Grateful Dead. Timothy Leary shows a faint smile for the photographer and George Harrison is surrounded by admirers on Hippie Hill, August 7, 1967. Samples of the clothes, the art and the hair abound.
Educated at Princeton University and the University of California, Berkeley, Perry followed the psychedelic subculture from 1965 until 1968, when he applied for a job at the Rolling Stone Magazine. Later, he became interested in the history of Middle Eastern food and is now an internationally known authority on this subject.

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2005 marks the 40th anniversary of San Franciscos Haight-Ashbury district. The psychedelic community was probably the most widely written-about phenomenon of the 1960s apart from the Vietnam War. As unexpected as it was inevitable, the whole eventfrom public manifestation to gaudy collapsehappened in less than two years. In this acclaimed, definitive work, Charles Perry examines the history, the drama, and the energy of counter-cultures defining moment. First published by Rolling Stone Press in 1984 and now re-releasedwith a new introduction by the Grateful Deads Bob Weirto time with Haight-Ashburys 40th anniversary, this highly acclaimed work is a must-have for anyone interested in the original sex, drugs, and rock n roll lifestyle.

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Lonely Planet California Trips (Regional Travel Guide) Review

Lonely Planet California Trips (Regional Travel Guide)
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I'm a native Californian, and have lived in the state for, er, several decades. I was hoping this book would offer people wanting to visit California some ideas for good itineraries, even if they would need a more detailed guidebook on the area chosen to plan a trip.
Unfortunately, no. Perhaps the first clue should have been on the cover, where it says "68 themed itineraries". Too many of the trips are thematic rather than realistic trips. The worst are in the first section, called "Iconic Trips". Here there are such absurdities as "trips" that list beaches or surf spots along long stretches of the coast. A literary trip has four locations in the LA area, a long drive up the coast, then eleven more around the bay area. A culinary tour has two stops in the LA area, a long drive through the central valley, then ten stops in the bay area. Perhaps the worst is "A Burrito Odyssey", which hits five burrito joints in San Francisco, five in Los Angeles, and three in San Diego, with many hours on the I5 in between. Surely no one would ever make such a trip?
Where time is the theme, there are "48 hours" trips for San Francisco, Los Angeles, and San Diego. As I know the latter two much better, I'll assess those trips as pinball passes through the cities, hitting some obvious tourist spots, and a lot of places that leave me thinking "huh?".
Some themes are cutesy, such as "Yosemite Aquatic". It's aquatic because some of the features are waterfalls and lakes, you see. (If you are planning a trip to Yosemite--and if you've never been there, you should be--buy a real guide to the area. It's one of the most spectacular on earth, and the trip deserves some good planning.) Their trip to Santa Barbara wine country references the movie "Sideways" of course. I visit the area often, and would offer very different recommendations than this guidebook.
Each "trip" description averages five pages or so, including a one or two page summary of things to do, places to eat, and places to stay. The information is minimal, and not what you would expect from a good guidebook. Because I didn't find information that was just wrong I'll give this book two stars rather than one, but it may be the least useful guidebook to California I've seen.

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68 of the Region's Best Trips!Whether you're a local looking for a long weekend escape, a visitor looking to explore or you simply need some ideas when family and friends come to visit, Lonely Planet's Trips series offers the best itineraries - and makes it easy to plan the perfect trip time and again.Theme icons make finding the perfect trip simple - no matter what your interestEasy-to-use maps for every trip, plus driving times and directionsExplore the region with trips ranging from two to seven days, and day trips from San Francisco, Los Angeles and San DiegoLocal experts and celebrities share their favorite trip ideas, including a winemaker's wine tour, a Surfer magazine editor's surf tour and a food-lovers' tour from Alice WatersIconic Trips chapter covers must-do trips across the region, from Up the Pacific Coast Highway to a A Burrito OdysseyTune In on the road with our regional music playlistsFamily-friendly and pet-friendly listings throughoutGreen Index lists the region's most environmentally friendly optionsTravel America with Lonely PlanetSince 1984 Lonely Planet USA has published over 100 guides to America, working with over 200 American travel writers. For this Trips series our authors drove more than 100,000 miles, visited 230 diners, stopped at 810 roadside attractions and rediscovered the country they love. Visit Lonely Planet online at www.lonelyplanet.com

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Lighthouses of the Bay Area (Images of America: California) Review

Lighthouses of the Bay Area (Images of America: California)
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This little book is FILLED with fabulous photos and a world of information about California lighthouses. Anyone with even a tiny bit of interest in lighthouses and the history of the incredible California & Pacific west coastline should have this book in their private library.

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The 1848 discovery of gold in the hills of California brought prospectors and adventurers west; many came across the country on the treacherous western trails, while others came by sea. The rugged coast of California and the dangers of the San Francisco Bay waters claimed many ships and their passengers. The loss of these ships and the ever-increasing number of vessels converging in the San Francisco Bay made it evident that navigational aids were desperately needed. To enhance maritime safety in the region, the San Francisco Bay's first light, located on Alcatraz Island, began construction in 1852. Light stations soon followed at Fort Point, Point Bonita, and the Farallon Islands. An additional 15 lights later served the bay, and two lightships were stationed outside the Golden Gate.

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Artificial Imagination (Special Edition): A Humorous Photostory Of A Journey Through Washington, California And Tennessee Review

Artificial Imagination (Special Edition): A Humorous Photostory Of A Journey Through Washington, California And Tennessee
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great book! love it!

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This expanded Second Edition of the book was published on May 27, 2011 and has 12 new chapters.

This humorous photo-book follows one man's journey through United States as he ventures from Silicon Valley to Seattle, San Francisco to San Diego in a quest for his dream job and his search for a place he could call home.

The book starts in 1987, at University of California campus in Davis, where it all began, where Artificial Imagination was conceived.We then fast forward by 15 years to 2002. Our main character, a Executive in the Software industry and working in Silicon Valley. Soon, he is heading to Seattle to work for Amazon.com at a lower level management position.

We read one lively story after another about the life in the Northwest and learn about his lovely wife and two daughters.

Our adventurer then heads to Nashville to work for a software company, and finally returns to California, when he gets caught in the infamous wild fires of 2007. Kudos to the author to be able to find humor in the middle of the Inferno!

A Review by John Lehman,the author of Everything is changingA Review by John Lehman,the author of Everything is changing

I was half way through this book when I realized it is almost poetry in the form of prose. I am not just referring to the short paragraphs, but the imaginative leaps, stunning imagery and most importantly, words which hook us in, make us think this is our story . . . . We see them on the page but live them in the theater of our imagination.

This book reminds us that we share the mysteries of the human mind and soul, no matter what our occupation, no matter where we were born. "Why I am here may appear to be a simple question, but . . . is there a deeper purpose of being where we are?" We know that the question applies not only to the location where we spend our lives, but also to overall existence, and our place in the time continuum.

Just as the author who traveled from New Delhi to Silicon Valley felt he has traveled forty years into the future, so do I, sitting in the agricultural landscape of Wisconsin felt that I have had a glimpse into the vitality of the Hi-Tech worlds of California and Seattle.

I feel I am in the hands of a good guide. Here is what it means to do research in Computers: "Rip apart an electronic system and you see nothing moving, nothing vibrating, it's almost a make-believe world, a child's fantasy, a writer's imagination."

and what it means to yearn for acceptance:"I looked at Seattle's glistening skyline on one side and its beautiful waterfront on the other and asked it the same questions I had asked San Francisco 16 years ago: will it accept me? Or will its people treat me as someone different, not one of the? And will I accept it, call it my home? Right then, she appeared from no where, as if the city had sent her to answer my questions . . ."

I loved the section addressing Seattle's slacker sun, that comes late to work, like at 9 AM and goes back home at 4, the observation that for males, until the age eight, we want every young woman to be our mother, then for the next thirty years our friend and when we have daughters, we feel like bringing every young woman a glass of warm milk and cookies.

His first day in Nashville, the author looks out of his window and sees snow. The conclusion he draws about the snow flakes very fittingly describes his life and the message we can take with us from this hip, funny, poignant, beautiful book: "the snowflakes descend slowly, floating in the air, allowing the current to carry them with it, letting it change their paths. They have chosen not to confront their destiny, choosing instead to enjoy every second of their short lives, their journey to the ground."

Welcome home, Kalpanik!

John Lehman, author of Everything is Changing


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Exploring the Back Roads: 28 Day Trips in the Greater Bay Area Review

Exploring the Back Roads: 28 Day Trips in the Greater Bay Area
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Exploring the Back Roads: 28 Day Trips in the Greater Bay Area appears in its third updated edition to provide California Bay Area residents with discriminating guides selected for their scenic, pastoral and historic qualities. From old levee roads in the Delta area to the ruins of Jack London's Wolf House, chapters survey roads less traveled, and does an outstanding job with its clear, easy line maps and step-by-step surveys of routes, alternatives, and local history. Mention of facilities or lack thereof also lend to making a back roads exploration day trip an informed, easy one.
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch

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The revised edition of the famous guide to the scenic lanes and byways of the countryside around San Francisco. These drives have been selected for their scenic, pastoral, or historic qualities. Each trip comes with a map and one or more photos, Pack a picnic basket, take along your camera, and escape from the freeways. Follow levee roads in the fascinating Delta region. Take the Old San Juan Grade Road, built in 1915. Visit the ruins of Jack London's Wolf House. Enjoy isolation and wonderful scenery from Marin to the Geysers, and from the Wine Country to the Santa Cruz Mountains.

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Artificial Imagination: A Humorous Photo Story Of A Journey Through California, Seattle And Nashville Review

Artificial Imagination: A Humorous Photo Story Of A Journey Through California, Seattle And Nashville
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Great book, love it! It's hilarious! I could not stop giggling, I cracked up page after page. Really Nice!
And so many nice photographs. I was traveling with the author, feeling his ambitions, his surprise, excitement and pain. And what a brave soul! He (yes, despite its claims to have been written by an AI program, this book is written by a loving, feeling, breathing human for sure!)--He is able to maintain his sense of humor even as he moves from one place to another, faces one set back after another! He always comes back!
Wow! What a story!!
Oh, And the love story in the end is touching.

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This is the extended second edition of the full color interior version of the book.

This captivating, new book mixes technologyand art together into a fascinating and philosophical combination.

The book follows one high-tech immigrant's journey through United States as he graduates from University of California and ventures from Silicon Valley to Seattle, Nashville and back to California in a quest for his dream job and his search for a place which accepts him, a place he could call home.

The story is purportedly narrated by anartificial intelligence program with theability to simulate human creativity, sense of humor and spirit of adventure.

Technology is all brain, no heart, all cold logic, and no warm soul, or is it?This gemof a book reminds us that technology could not exist were it not for boundless creativity, and it does this in such a way as to also remind us that without that very same creativity, there would be no art, no literature.


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The Gate: The True Story of the Design and Construction of the Golden Gate Bridge Review

The Gate: The True Story of the Design and Construction of the Golden Gate Bridge
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The book is one of the few books that I've ever read twice. And I find that I've continued to tell other people about this book from time to time. I would characterize the book as a thriller or, at least a drama, for and about engineers. The book is highly location-conscious. After reading the book, you'll be able to relate how the Golden Gate Bridge is related to engineering companies in New York City, to fund-raising efforts in the northern counties in California, to engineering professors in the mid-west, to a theater designer of the 1939 World's Fair on Treasure Island, to professors at U.C.Berkeley, and to a certain humble bascule bridge that continues its unsung day-to-day chores in an obscure part of San Francisco. To repeat, I really liked the author's interconnections, that he related in the book. The book deserves to be back in print, and it deserves to be in every gift shop in the City. The book is highly fact-based (it is not laced with fanciful commentary), and yet the book is difficult to put down. Perhaps the most striking and sad part of Van Der Zee's book, is that the engineer responsible for most of the innovations of the bridge was left off of the plaque (for political reasons), which is mounted on the Golden Gate Bridge.

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The Gate is an absorbing panoramic account of the building of one of the world's most beautiful and famous landmarks. In a narrative richly laden with detail and the flavor of the period, John van der Zee reveals for the first time the complete history of the longest single-span suspension bridge of its time—including the identity of the man who actually designed it, which has been obscured since its completion in 1937.
With novelistic flair, van der Zee recounts an exciting drama of human greed, ambition, frailty, courage, and intellectual achievement."It is among the top books on California I have ever read."—Kevin Starr, State Librarian of California and author of Americans and the California Dream"A case study of personal and technological adventure bordering on hubris...The engineers in this bok come alive as people, with all the faults and foibles associated iwth the human species. A fascinating work that shows that the best of cutting-edge engineering is much, much more than science and technology."—Henri Petroski, Nature

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