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An unusual guide to an unusual destination!
All travel guides should be written like this.This is one excellent travel guide! More than hotels, motels, watering holes and restaurants, "Hunts' Guide to Michigan's Upper Peninsula" goes where other guides don't: into the hidden crevices of a community to ferret out little-known facts.The Hunts help you find local color as well as food and lodging. This book is for the traveler who is tired of the usual- or for anyone who goes to the U.P. for day trips and getaway weekends.. This is not a standard guidebook. It's quirky and interesting - and reads like a good magazine feature story. How about we send the Hunts to San Francisco or New Orleans or Savannah - to get the real scoop on those wonderful destinations?
Excellent Resource!

Excellent travel book, excellent valueAs for any area, it's good to supplement with other specialized topic and / or area guides, but for a general guide to a large state, this one does a great job.
Logically arranged, well-written, and very readable, you can almost read it straight through; it's one of the better travel guides available.
Wyoming Handbook - Moon Travel Handbooks
Yes, the best guide there is to WyomingWyoming has fewer people than any other state (yes, fewer than Rhode Island and Alaska). But it's places of interest are many and varied, though scattered far and wide. You need a good guide and a GOOD READ to cover the miles and the days. I admire author Don Pitcher's efforts here.
If you choose one guidebook, make it Moon's Wyoming Handbook. If you'd like to get a second general guide to the region for comparison and cross-reference (including more descriptive listings of selected accommodations), I'd add Frommer's guide to Wyoming, which includes Montana as well.


The Best "Arkansas Outdoor" Book
Excellent Guide for Canoeing and HikingI was also fascinated upon further reading by the anecdotal information in the book which made for an interesting and "not-so-dry" read. The story of the "Legend of Boggy Creek" was particularly enjoyable and should provide a good discussion point for any family camping trip.
Thanks again for the excellent book and perhaps I'll see Mr. Hendricks on the Buffalo River this April.
A Guide to Adventure and Happy Trails

A Must
A specialty title recommended for those who love cottages
Captures Emotions in photgraphs and wordsWhen you add Kathy-jo's unique ability to convey loving sentiments in short essays, this becomes an heirloom book. I will never again hear the screen door slam, or sit in on a rainy day or do any of the other normal activities in a cottage without remembering Kathy-jo's essay about that activity and how she captured emotions that I have had but never before seen expressed so beautifully. Thank you Ed and Kathy-jo for seeing into our hearts.


Great ideas for things to do outdoors in Cleveland
60 Hikes Within 60 Miles of Cleveland
Down the path...

lonely planet chicago
The book is better than the climate!
Great guide to the Windy City!

Amazing TENNESSEEIt's the kind of book you can carry with you and read anytime.
Good Book for finding out little-known material
Tennessee is an Amazing State!

A Great Guide and a Good Read
Beautifully Covered
Best In Ohio

Best Smokies Handbook
Accurate, brief, and precise
The only hiking guidebookAs for the other reviews, Molloy spends a little time on suggesting you take rain gear, plenty of water/ water treatment tablets/filters. You don't need too much gear to just go hiking, but you should be prepared for nearly anything. I would say this book is geared to someone that has been hiking, backpacking before, but there is no reason a beginner couldn't benefit from using Molloy's guidebook. You can always ask a park ranger where to find various wildlife, but spend any amount of time on the trail, especially quietly, you're bound to run into some of the diverse wildlife found in the Great Smoky Mountains.


Nostalgia without ironyThis book is also a celebration of Southern culture, especially that part of Southern culture that developed in order to separate visiting Yankees from their money. For, as Hollis notes, it was the arrival in the South of northern vacationers seeking warmer weather that prompted the birth and growth of the attractions listed here. It also promoted a number of important, and lasting, businesses. Among the companies born in the South to capitalize on the tourist trade, KFC (of course), Popeye's Chicken, Long John Silver, Red Lobster, Burger King, Hardee's, and Holiday Inn are just some of the more recognizable names.
From water parks to Wild West shows, Cypress Gardens to Stone Mountain, Dogpatch USA and the Grand Ole Opry to Stuckey's and countless attractions now nearly forgotten, this book is a great nostalgia ride through a largely vanished time. If you were fortunate enough to have seen that time, this book may bring back some happy memories. And if this is your first time through you may find yourself wondering what you're missing as you cruise in air-conditioned comfort on the soulless interstate.
Fun Read filled with Memories
Dixie Before Disney