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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Mid-Atlantic", sorted by average review score:

Jerry Dantzic's New York: The Fifties in Focus
Published in Hardcover by Edition Stemmle (May, 2002)
Authors: Jerry Dantzic, Grayson Dantzic, and Ben Lifson
Average review score:

Awesome Images!
I just saw this book today [June 21, 2002] and it really is amazing. Jerry Dantzic has an amazing archive and his images are absolutely beautiful. His photographs of NYC in the '50s belongs on many, many coffee tables.


The Jews of New Jersey: A Pictorial History
Published in Hardcover by Rutgers University Press (15 November, 2001)
Authors: Patricia M. Ard and Michael Aaron Rockland
Average review score:

A pictorial history
Without this great book, we would have no fantastic collection of the faces of jews that have impacted New Jersey's history. I was mesmorized-staring into faces long gone-storefronts of jewish businesses which are now completley different shops. I especially liked reading about the young Jews at the New Jersey Shore. This fantastic book makes people living in New Jersey realize that the jews they see walking around have deep histories; many rooted in the holocaust, all certiantly impacted by it. A brilliant and beautiful pictorial history of the Jews living in New Jersey and their geneality.


A Kid's Guide to New York City (Gulliver Travels)
Published in Paperback by Harcourt Young Classics (October, 1988)
Authors: Peter Lerangis, Richard Eric Brown, Thomas Gulliver, and Travels Gulliver
Average review score:

My Favorite New York Guide Book
This is my favorite New York Guidebook. I lived in New York City for 5 years, and although I was in my thirties, whenever my friends would come to visit me in New York, I would pull out my Kid's Guide to New York to remind me of the most fun things to do in the city. Too bad it is 12 years old. Much of the material is still valuable, and it wouldn't take much to update it for 2002. I'd like to give a copy to a 9 year old who will be visiting the city for the first time next month.


Lancaster County: The Best Fun, Food, Lodging, Shopping and Sights
Published in Paperback by Koen Books (October, 1997)
Author: Alonna F. Smith
Average review score:

Thorough and accurate
I was raised in Lancaster County, but I have not lived there regularly in over thirty years, but I do enjoy visiting family and old friends. I bought this book to keep current with a wider set of recommendations. I am very impressed with the large number of listings, the accuracy of those I know, and the number of hard to find establishments included, and, especially, the list of purveyors of homegrown, healthy foods in small towns and the countryside I want to try. This is the best book of its kind I have seen.


Let's Go 2003: New York City
Published in Paperback by Let's Go Travel Pubns (01 December, 2002)
Author: Inc. Let's Go
Average review score:

best nyc travel guide i have ever read
This book is amazing. It's written in a user-friendly style and combines information useful to both people moving to NYC and visiting it for the first time! The maps and subway directions are ENORMOUSLY improved and so much more accurate after the relaunch!! This will give lonely planet a run for its money.


Let's Take the Kids!: Great Places to Go With Children in New York's Hudson Valley...
Published in Paperback by St. Martin's Press (May, 1990)
Authors: Joanne Michaels and Mary-Margaret Barile
Average review score:

Excellent Guide
Being a parent that lives Adirondacks I am always looking for new things for me and my children to enjoy. I thought this was a great book for both kids and adults to look through and find activities. I found it had a variety of activities to do in a large 16 county area. I think this is the perfect guide for the parent who like to do weekend activities with the kids. For me its simply choose a place to go and find something interesting to do there. And trust me, there are plenty of choices! This is an escpecially helpful book for kids 2-12. I easily give this book the full 5 Amazon stars for excellent research, easy to use layout, variety of choices, wide selection of locations, and knowledge of what families want. So if your a parent looking for a guide for where to bring your kids, buy this book. In fact any parent living in upstate New York should get this book, you never know when you might need it.


The Lincoln Highway: Pennsylvania Traveler's Guide
Published in Paperback by Stackpole Books (October, 2002)
Author: Brian Butko
Average review score:

Wonderful guide to a great old road
The Lincoln Highway across Pennsylvania has something for almost every visitor. Brian Butko has seen, and describes, it all.

The Lincoln enters Pennsylvania from Trenton, NJ across a fragile 19th-century bridge, then approaches Philadelphia on historic Roosevelt Boulevard. From Philadelphia to Lancaster it follows the 18th-century Lancaster Pike, whose mileposts still sit almost unnoticed on the shoulder. Robert E. Lee's troops marched along the Lincoln en route to the Battle of Gettysburg.

From Chambersburg to Ligonier (with the glaring exception of Breezewood), the Lincoln is a driver's road: two lanes, winding up and down hills and through small towns in which time stopped a half-century ago. Many views from 75-year-old postcards still look the same today. Further west, the route traverses some of Pittsburgh's oldest suburbs, then promenades through downtown Pittsburgh en route to nicking the West Virginia panhandle at Chester.

This second, revised and updated edition of Brian Butko's guide masterfully recounts the history of the Lincoln Highway across Pennsylvania. Those driving the road will learn the history of every significant site they pass...as well as those, like Bill's Place and the Ship Hotel, which no longer remain.

I-80 and the Pennsylvania Turnpike are two of the dullest drives in the eastern United States. Take a little extra time and follow the Lincoln Highway instead -- and do it with this readable but comprehensive guide.


The Lincoln Trail in Pennsylvania: A History and Guide
Published in Hardcover by Pennsylvania State Univ Pr (Trd) (October, 2001)
Authors: Bradley R. Hoch and Gabor S. Boritt
Average review score:

Fascinating, highly detailed, great pictures!
A thoughtfully detailed and entertaining narrative with lots of captivating photos of the key people and places of Lincoln's visits to the Commonwealth. I also liked the appendix which provided guidance on how to follow and experience the Lincoln Trail. I'm not a Lincoln expert, so the accounts of his experiences here were new to me and fascinating to read... but that also means my rating is just a reflection of how much I liked this book, not a comparison to other books about Mr. Lincoln. It is unquestionably well-written.


Lonely Planet New York, New Jersey & Pennsylvania (New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, 2nd Ed)
Published in Paperback by Lonely Planet (December, 2000)
Authors: Tom Smallman, Michael Clark, and David Ellis
Average review score:

Another good Lonely Planet book!
Lonely Planet New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, is a great book to have if you intend to visit all three states. There information is second to none, except New York City (buy Lonely Planet's New York City Guide). The entire Pennsylvania chapter is excellent also, and the guides to specific places like Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and the Lake Erie region is first rate! The only problem is that they skipped Meadville, PA, which is a excellent place between Erie and Titusville, and is near places like Conneaut Lake and Pymantuning.


Loosening the Bonds: Mid-Atlantic Farm Women, 1750-1850
Published in Paperback by Yale Univ Pr (March, 1988)
Author: Joan M. Jensen
Average review score:

Pennsylvanian Rural Women
The book covers a variety of aspects of these Pennsylvanian women including: the impact of industrialization; the growth of teaching, ministry, and reform work among women; women's various roles; how society dealt with mentally ill, poor, and criminal women; and the role literature of the time played in defining gender. Jensen thoroughly covers each particular topic, providing plenty of detail for the reader and the researcher. I liked the book because of its focus on rural women, it illustrated the relationship between Philadelphia and the rural population, and it goes beyond just description to analyze the key aspects of these women's lives at the time.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: united_states Chesapeake_Bay
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