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The Rough Guide to the USA (Rough Guide Travel Guides)
 
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The Rough Guide to the USA (Rough Guide Travel Guides) (Paperback)

by Samantha Cook (Author), Tim Perry (Author), Greg Ward (Editor)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 1184 pages
  • Publisher: Rough Guides Ltd; 5th Revised edition edition (30 Mar 2000)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1858285275
  • ISBN-13: 978-1858285276
  • Product Dimensions: 19.7 x 12.7 x 3.9 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 644,977 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

Product Description

Product Description

This comprehensive handbook to America gives practical tips and state-by-state commentary, covering New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and other cities. The country's landscapes are described, including the volcanoes of Hawaii, the Florida Keys and the lost cities of the southwestern deserts.


Excerpted from USA: the Rough Guide by Samantha Cook, Tim Perry, Greg Ward. Copyright © 2000. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved

INTRODUCTION

For five centuries, travelers have brought their hopes and dreams to America. For the earliest pioneers, it was a virgin wilderness ready to be shaped into a "New World," a potential paradise wasted on its native peoples. Millions of immigrants followed, to share in the building of the new nation and to better their lives, far from the hidebound societies of Europe and Asia. Eventually, slaves, who had been shipped over from Africa and the Caribbean, joined them as free citizens. As the United States expanded to fill the continent, something genuinely new was created: a vast country that took pride in defining itself in the eyes of the world.

Every traveler in the United States has some idea of what to expect. American culture has become so thoroughly shared throughout the globe that one of the principal joys of getting to know the country is not so much the difference of the place as the repeated delicious shock of the familiar. Yellow taxis on busy city streets; roadside mailboxes straight out of Peanuts cartoons; wooden porches overlooking the cottonfields; tumbleweed skittering across the desert; endless highways dotted with pick-up trucks and chrome-plated diners; the first sight of the Grand Canyon, or the Manhattan skyline.

In this book, we've picked out the highlights for travelers across the entire USA, from Maine to Hawaii, and Alaska to Florida. We've divided the country region by region and state by state, and covered every area of every state. As well as the big cities and national parks, we've explored the highways and byways, singling out detours worth making, and places to avoid. On every area written about, we've done more than simply provide up-to-date practicalities for visitors: we've delved into the history and provided background on the people who have made America what it is. Our hope is to inform and entertain travelers, and to point in unexpected directions as well as to the obvious landmarks, no matter whether you've lived here all your life or are seeing it all for the first time.

Traveling in the United States is extremely easy; in a country where everyone seems to be forever on the move, there's rarely any problem finding a room for the night, and you can almost invariably depend on being able to eat well and inexpensively. The development of transportation has played a major role in the growth of the nation; the railroad opened the way for transcontinental migrations, while most of the great cities have been shaped by the automobile. Your experience of the country will be very much flavored by how you choose to get around. By far the best way to explore the country is to drive your own vehicle: it takes a long time before the sheer pleasure of cruising down the interstate, with the radio blaring rock or country music and the signs to Chicago or Nashville flashing past, begins to pall. Car rental is an absolute bargain, every main road is lined with budget motels charging around $30 per night for a good room, and the price of gasoline remains relatively low.

We have also detailed public transportation options throughout; with the aid of the excellent-value nationwide rail, bus and air passes, you can get to wherever you choose, foreign visitors in particular. However, if you do travel this way, there's a real temptation to see America as a succession of big cities. True enough, New York and Los Angeles have an exhilarating dynamism and excitement, and among their worthy rivals are New Orleans, the flamboyant home of jazz, Chicago, at the cutting edge of modern architecture, and San Francisco, on its beautiful Pacific bay. Few other cities - with the possible, and idiosyncratic, exception of neon-laden Las Vegas - can quite match this level of interest, however, and following a heavily urban itinerary will cut you off from the astonishing landscapes that make the USA truly distinctive. Especially in the vast open spaces of the West, the scenery is often breathtaking. The glacial splendor of Yosemite, the thermal wonderland of Yellowstone, the awesome red-rock canyons of Arizona and Utah, and the spectacular Rocky Mountains are among many of the treasures preserved and protected in the splendid national park system. Once you reach such wilderness, the potential for hiking and camping is magnificent - but it's usually essential to have a car to get near these spots.

Above all, travelers can enjoy the sheer thrill of experiencing American popular culture in the places where it began. Place names from rock 'n' roll songs spring into life; panoramas straight out of Hollywood movies spread across the horizon; road trips taken by your favorite literary characters can be re-created. For music fans, the chance to hear country music in Nashville or rhythm and blues in New Orleans, or to visit Elvis's shrine in Memphis, verges on a religious experience; readers brought up on the books of Mark Twain can ride a paddle-wheeler on the Mississippi; moviegoers can live out their Western fantasies in the Utah desert.

The United States is all too often dismissed, even by its own inhabitants, as a land almost devoid of history. Though mainstream America tends to trace its roots back to the Pilgrims and Puritans of New England, the rest of the continent has a longer history, stretching back way beyond the French culture of Louisiana and the Spanish presence in California to the majestic cliff palaces built by the Anasazi in the Southwest a thousand years ago. There are also any number of fascinating strands to America's post-revolutionary history: relics of the Gold Rush in California, of the Civil Rights years in the South, or of the Civil War anywhere east of the Mississippi.

Though we've had to structure this book regionally, the most invigorating expeditions are those that take in more than one area. You do not, however, have to cross the entire continent from shore to shore in order to appreciate its amazing diversity, or to be impressed by the way in which such an extraordinary range of topography and people has been melded into one nation. It would take a long time to see the whole place, and the more time you spend on the road simply getting from place to place - no matter how enjoyable in itself that can be - the less time you'll have to savor the small-town pleasures and backroads oddities that may well provide your strongest memories. It doesn't take long to realize that there is no such thing as a typical American person, any more than there is a typical American landscape, but there can be few places where strangers can feel so confident of a warm reception.


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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Rough Guide USA- Very Useful, 4 Aug 2005
By A Customer
I Found the book very easy to use, broken up into logical chapters with lots of very useful insider knowledge.
Planning my trip around America has been made a lot easy with the help of this book. I would definately recommend it.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A magnificent achievement!, 21 Jan 2002
A one-volume guide to all 50 states is a huge undertaking, but this book achieves it. It is expertly detailed, humourously written and an absolute pleasure to use. If it has any weakness at all, it is perhaps the dull, small-scale maps, for example of Texas, and the lack of detail on rail travel across the country. But make no mistake, this one is the very best available. Rivals will be hard-pushed to match it. A great guide!
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3 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An invaluable guide for the budget traveller in the USA, 24 May 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: USA (Paperback)
Whilst up-to-date and informative for the most part, Rough Guide USA fails to include some of the newer hostels springing up around the country. For example, on a recent visit to Tucson, I was lucky enough to stay at the Roadrunner Hostel. This new hostel is to be found just 3 minutes walk away from Greyhound and Amtrak. Rates are only $13 per night, or $70 per week, well worth a visit.

I understand how difficult it must be to keep these travel guides up-to-date, so I hope that the experiences of travellers like myself can be of some help.

Keep up the good work!!

Happy travelling.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Essential!
Simply the best. Do not go anywhere with out a rough guide in your pocket!
Published 5 months ago by R. Gray

5.0 out of 5 stars Indispensable, though a bit chunky!
I bought this from Amazon several years ago, and it was completely invaluable for my lengthy trip around the States. Read more
Published 13 months ago by Ash

4.0 out of 5 stars One of the better guides, but could be better
Rough Guide USA provides the traveller with just about all he needs - but there are notable omissions. Read more
Published on 4 Mar 1999

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