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And I thought all Pacific NW skiing was bad!
Great BookCriscuolo obviously did his research, because the information is dead-on. While the book is meticulously detailed, it is easy to navigate and well-written.
Anyone who's serious about NW skiing & boarding needs to have this book.
You need this book!

Outstanding historical novel early WWII in the South Pacific
Excellent book! Fantastic visuals and scenery. Well done!
This is a mind trip for true avaiators!!!

An outstanding California wine country guide.
A terrific guidebook
"Sonoma Valley..." an essential read for the Sonoma bound.

Children's Into to Michner's "South Pacific"
Proud to own this!
Rodgers and Hammerstein's finest work.

McWilliams is the best....The colonizers, the boosters, the flamboyant pillars of society who bamboozled, bulldozed, and boutiqued their way into California: they and other characters appear on the McWilliams stage in a fascinating--and at times disturbing--progression in which the land itself, that most neglected of characters, puts in appearances too. For we Southern Californians live in a land of constant paradoxes; to quote the author ("The Land of Upside Down"):
"To their amazement"--he means tourists--"they discovered that umbrellas were useless against the drenching rains of Southern California but that they made good shade in the summer; that many of the beautifully colored flowers had no scent; that fruit ripened earlier in the northern than in the southern part of the state; that it was hot in the morning and cool at noon...here, in this paradoxical land, rats lived in the trees and squirrels had their homes in the ground." No wonder we're all a bit topsy-turvy out here.
My one objection: I disagree with the author's description of the early Missions as "concentration camps." That through disease and, later, a mis-education that left the Native converts vulnerable to ranchero exploitation and settler genocide is beyond question; but however misguided their efforts, those early padres had no conscious agenda of wiping out a people. Nevertheless, McWilliams's detailed accounts of Mission life provide a much-needed antidote to the idealization and denial and Eurocentric bias that saturate most Mission histories.
If you want to know Southern California better, then of course you must stand on her soil and listen to her voices; but you could do much worse for an intro-at-a-distance than this fine book, which fellow natives will find confirming and eye-opening.
One for the heart
A Critical Contribution to Social and Economic History!

The Ultimate EscapeHe also describes the details of his hardships and joys, equipment failures and successes. He makes you feel as if you are with him on the trip, and often you may wish you were there. Some very well composed pictures are included. The trip took exactly 6 months. In the end he says "Then I walked down through the trees toward the road that would take me back to San Francisco and everything the city now offered."
I recommend the book to anyone. It is a good story, great adventure, and written by an unusual person. (He would like being called "unusual", I think.)
Nonstop reading.
Those thousand miles become the reader's

A compelling read.
Great photos and essays
Another Winner

A GREAT TRAVEL GUIDE
A great book for everyone interested in traveling The Trail.
A fantastic guide

Good Read
Left me looking for a sequelshows fierce determination and courage, a grandmother travelling alone, with little resources but a lot of guts. She is truely an inspiration!
Excellent armchair travelog!As we admire her courage to travel alone to far-off places in the South Pacific, we also share vicariously in her wonderful experiences.
She is an inspiration to all women, but particularly to those with limited incomes, determination, and self-confidence. I hope she will write another book!


Reply to a Six-Pack
Hillariously funny - from someone who lived it.
One of the funniest books I've ever read.
There are even more if you want to do some traveling but not make the hike all the way to Sun Valley or get on a plane to make it to Utah, Colorado, or California.
Thanks Mr. Criscuolo This is a resource that I needed to make my winters fun in Seattle!