More Pages: Dillon Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21


Recommend with Reservations
Try lunch instead of dinnerWhen I got to Paris, I made my way to some of my favorite restaurants and obviously started using the menus. This time, it was much easier to understand the selections. I remembered the definitions of a lot of the menu items from the previous two trips (using the book) and so understanding the menus and ordering the food was relatively painless this time. Yes, I actually improved my French vocabulary by using the book during my last two visits! The book is not exhaustive; however, I would say that at least 75% to 80% of the words on most restaurant menus are listed and defined.
I was so happy about my success with the menus that I decided to give some of the restaurant tips in the front of the book a try (pages 19-51). Now you have to understand that I never visit restaurants listed in guidebooks - EVER! I think that we tried three of the restaurants that were listed in the book and we really liked them. There weren't a lot of tourists in these restaurants and the food was pretty good.
I would like to make a comment about the best restaurants in Paris (page 29). Yes, it is very difficult to get a dinner reservation at these places -- I usually call about one month in advance. However, I almost always can get a lunch reservation at one of these restaurants without much difficulty. If you are dying to have dinner at a specific restaurant and you can't get a reservation, then try to have lunch there instead. I planned our last trip at the last minute and so I was not able to call restaurants ahead of time from the USA. When I arrived in Paris, I tried to call for dinner reservations and got the usual "complets" (full) on the other end of the line. Then I called and got a lunch reservation at L'Ambroisie with no problem! We waltzed in at about 1:00 pm, sat at a great table in a beautiful room and had a wonderful three-hour French lunch. The restaurant said that the lunch and dinner menus were the same (on that day) and so I did not feel that we had a lesser dining experience. This was confirmed when we were presented with the $300 check for lunch for two at the current exchange rate of 7FF/$1!
I highly recommend the book. It will save you a lot of time and trouble while using French menus. Also, you can try the restaurant recommendations and still feel as if you had an authentic French dining experience! I would also recommend their guidebook for Spanish-speaking countries.
Now I know what I'm ordering!

yay
Childhood Memories...
A Fun Mystery For Kids

African Culture from A to Z with exquisite artwork
A gorgeous tribute to African culture for children
Twenty-six tribes of Africa and some of their customs.

Illuminating, positive, useful thoughts on romance and loveAs Dillon explains through examples and illustrations from literature, media, philosophy and commentary, our post-modernist culture teaches us to doubt that people can ever really know and understand each other, teaches us to distrust what lovers can sense about each other. All that we know of someone, we are told, is what we project. And so whatever influence we try to have with someone is a form of oppression. So we learn to maintain a distance. Ultimately we reduce our partners to objects of our desire. This leaves nowhere for love to go but into idealization and fantasy. We imagine through our lovers some sort of perfect scenario. And when we love like this, the result begins euphorically but nearly always ends badly, painfully, tragically. This is the phenomenon of romantic love. As Dillon explains further, the erotic kind of romantic love has no exclusive claim to upending us. Soul-shattering episodes have exploded into great novels and wrenched the direction of history no more often in episodes of erotic love than in love of wisdom, love of humanity, and love of god. If seeking something ideal is a natural if not unfulfilling sort of human activity, we should recognize it everywhere in life. Indeed it is ubiquitous - we spot our romanticized notions wherever we look, from primping in front of the mirror to clinging to dualistic ontology for 2400 years. Most of the time we don't even notice ourselves in some sort of idealized love, don't feel the pain, don't even lose a step. But when romantic love hits hard we can find ourselves fighting for our very lives though neither sharp claws nor open chasms loom. We kill ourselves over it. Lovers murder lovers, even family. We cannot reason it away. We can't drink it away. We cannot escape it through any drug. What distinguishes deadly romantic love from all the other misguided quests for unreachable perfection? What would result if somehow I could allow my lover to emerge, unfold and announce herself within my life? M.C. Dillon offers surprising answers to these important questions.
good book
Phenomenal

So much better than others
This book was just great.
Makes dining in 19 Spanish speaking destinations easy.

Useful and Easy to Use!
Great bargain.
speck-tacular! (by PatF)

A haunting portrait of friends lost and friendship found
The lure of the Labrador wild
Tired..Weak..Hungry..They fought until the end.Ive been ther

French Menu Translator
Eating & Drinking in Paris now available!
English speakers in France, REJOICE!I'm at the advanced level in French, however the menus at the restaurants in France still always confounded me until I bought this book. I would say that 80% to 90% of the food items on any menu are listed in the book. Other French guide books or dictionaries do not have anywhere near the number of entries that this book contains. I've used the book at a number of restaurants in France with great success. Also, the book is so small that you can easily fit it into a small bag (or purse), so it is very easy to carry it and use it in any restaurant. You don't have to be afraid to order the Andouillette any more!


GOOD STORIES BY PARENTS
Highly recommended for parents of autistic children.
living with autism, the parent's stories

Big Hearted
even a guy can like this
Every Woman's Read
The book is worth taking with you. Paris is thick with places to eat, making it easier to just duck in anywhere with this wonderful little guide to manners and translation. Don't rely too much on the recommendations as the only places to eat at. It would have been nice if they had included a few paragraphs about the different types of wine.