Check It Out
Whether you’re a frequent flyer or an armchair traveler, library
resources can help you get from here to there with ease.
New on the shelves are many new print guides for 2002. If you’re
looking to book a romantic getaway to the “City of Light” without tapping
into your inheritance, check out the eighth edition of Frommer’s “Paris
From $80 a Day.” With listings of hidden gems for less than $50 a night,
affordable bistros and city sights, this is a great guide for first class
travel on a budget.
Also new from Frommer’s are guides to Spain, California, Rome and Las
Vegas, as well as 2002 city handbooks covering attractions,
accommodations and restaurants in New York City, San Diego and Berlin.
Many other tips are available in just-off-the-press publications from
Fodor’s and Let’s Go.
There’s also Hungry Minds, Inc.’s “Unofficial Guide” series. You can
learn how to make bids at Christie’s auction house and find the best
views of the Changing of the Guard with help from “The Unofficial Guide
to London.” Plan an escape to one of America’s most scenic regions with
“The Unofficial Guide to Bed & Breakfasts and Country Inns in the
Rockies.”
If you prefer to see the world from the ultimate comfort zone, such
videos as “World’s Most Exotic Places” and “Hidden Treasures of Europe”
offer virtual journeys through Greece, Italy, France, Germany and
Switzerland. Many in the “Going Places” series concentrate on specific
countries, while “SuperCities” tapes capture the appeal of enchanting
enclaves in Amsterdam, Bangkok, Rio de Janeiro and Rome.
With some imagination, you can travel to the Himalayas, the Indian
subcontinent and the deserts of Mongolia via dazzling photos in “Wild
Asia: Spirit of a Continent.” Published to accompany a series on the
Discovery Channel, Mark Brazil’s introduction to the flora and fauna of
the Far East is a visual tour de force.
Equally stunning is “Inuksuit: Silent Messengers of the Arctic,”
offering a virtual voyage to a spiritual landscape few have visited. With
more than 50 color photographs of mysterious stone figures, Norman
Hallendy reveals the vast beauty of a frozen world.
For armchair touring closer to home, Noah Adams invites readers on a
trip through some of the most rugged territory in the eastern U.S. in
“Far Appalachia.” Traveling by canoe, bicycle and raft, the affable radio
host shares adventures with hillbillies, bluegrass musicians and
white-water daredevils in this account of his yearlong ramble.
Hungry for familiar territory after all this roaming? Find visual
homage to a destination resort in your own backyard in “Newport Beach: A
Photographic Portrait.” Featuring views of local sights captured by
amateur to professional photographers, Melanie Aves’ coffee table tome
may make you happy to stay at home, sweet home.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams. All titles may be
reserved from home or office computers by accessing the catalog at
https://www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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