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One of the best guides, just don't set expectaions TOO high
ECONOGUIDE 2001 LAS VEGAS

Ron Lake knows his stuff!
Must reading for investors and allocators

An Intresting book but doesn't focus on anything.
Excellent Educationl Text

Gosling's A Few Dying Words & HowlersIn this book, Gosling covers the dynamics of a long ago relationship between a group of boys. What happened to them on that long ago day & what happens during this frentic Halloween is something only Sheriff Matt Gabriel can discover. The usual cast of characters shows up here.
A highly enjoyable book and highly recommended.
Fantastic

Peggy vs. the Stalker
Very good book!The way the book reads, you think you have everything all figured out, and as it turns out, what I thought was completely wrong. New discoveries, and page-turners, were found in the last chapters.
Every scene explained its self and was easy to follow. The book is also set in the present time, so the language and characters were easy to understand.
Overall, I think this book has a great plot, a strong story line, well-developed characters, the text was very fluent and the dialogue was easy to comprehend.


An excellent guide book-good photos & maps, but....
Excellent reference for "Wright-Sighters"

Can't wait to start on my own "New Orleans" garden
Going beyond the touristed New Orleans

A Useful Regional GeologyAll in all, though, this is a welcome addition to the non-specialist geological literature and a bargain at the price.
A wonderful treatment of a highly interesting region.

Two sides to every storyPerhaps Mr Farmer angered more than he pleased but that usually shows that he is not completely one one side or the other.
A worthwhile read.
one of the best nature essay offerings this yearStill, one's arguments can only benefit from an effective challenge, and Farmer provides this in spades. An impassioned environmentalist, Farmer nonetheless points out that artificial environments are pretty much what we live in, and that if we look only to "untrammeled wilderness" as the source of our connection with nature, we're likely to run out of that wilderness in short order.
This book is an effective history of Glen Canyon, but it's also a critical analysis of wilderness tourism in the whole of Southern Utah, and a cogent deconstruction of our attitudes toward built versus natural landscapes. And unlike many such tomes (Stephen Pyne's valuable if turgid How the Canyon Became Grand comes to mind) Farmer writes his critique in a personable, approachable voice. It's rare to see a capable writer approach such a multifaceted subject without fear of using the first person singular pronoun. Eminently readable.


An artist's murderStudio Arts Building is unlocked. When she investigates, she discovers a dead body and then is knocked over by a man she assumes is the escaping murderer. The victim is professor Russell Bell, of the Art Department. Peggy is able to identify the man who escaped after the police capture him, but a friend of hers tries to convince her that the man is innocent. If this is true, there are many suspects. Bell was a real womanizer and many women and their husbands had reason to kill him. Also there was considerable professional jealousy within the art department. Peggy conducts several interviews, and then it becomes clear to her that she is the next intended victim. "Grave Choices" is a good addition to this well-written series and should be pleasing to mystery fans.
Exuberant and Intelligent.Enjoyable, totally absorbing. Pure, straightforward mystery sure to appeal to those who prefer a puzzle to mindless violence.
So why do I give this book only 4 out of 5 stars? Because there are pieces of it that mislead the buyer. The book is NOT "filled with hundreds of dollars of money-saving coupons" as the photo says. There are a FEW coupons in the back of the book, but they make absolutely no sense for this guide. For instance, there are coupons for Universal Studios and for Knotts Berry Farm, both of which are located in Los Angeles. Now why the heck anyone would put L.A. coupons in a Las Vegas/Reno/Tahoe guide, I have yet to figure out. The single ACTUAL Las Vegas coupon in this book is for a Mini Grand Prix fun center that is located nowhere near either the Strip or the Downtown area...most visitors will not even see the place, and I've not seen this Grand Prix advertised anywhere else but this book. And there are NO Reno, Laughlin, or Tahoe coupons in the book.
And even if you DID manage to use the all of six or seven coupons included in the book, you wouldn't even save $200.
What else misleads the reader? Well, be careful...there is a great (and perhaps valid) point the author makes about always asking hotels for their BEST rate. He then tells how he called a hotel and got a quote of $149 for the room. After an initial "Ouch" response, the agent lowered the price to $109 due to a promotion. He then asked for the BEST rate...$79. But then he's a member of AAA...ok now he only has to pay $72. Great story...the catch? It didn't happen at a Vegas hotel...the hotel in question was in Chicago. Now, I'd think that if you're going to buy a Vegas guide, you want VEGAS stories, not Chicago ones. But so much of the book is about Vegas, that you tend to ignore little details like that if you don't read the stories carefully. And that is not the only story in the book where you will find little fallacies like that.
So be SURE when you read the tips and tricks, that you take them with a grain of salt. But if you're already IN vegas or know where you will stay and just want to choose activities or eateries, you probably won't find any guide much better.