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UK Holidays - England as You Like It

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List Price: $12.95
Our Price: $1.99
Your Save: $ 10.96 ( 85% )
Availability: N/A
Manufacturer: Ballantine Books
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 914.204859 EAN: 9780345401908 ISBN: 0345401905 Label: Ballantine Books Manufacturer: Ballantine Books Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 256 Publication Date: 1996-03-05 Publisher: Ballantine Books Release Date: 1996-03-05 Studio: Ballantine Books
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Editorial Reviews:
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"Tucked into the deep hills of western Dorset, just off the major tourist routes across England, Chedington is so small that its handful of cottages doesn't even appear on some large-scale maps. Here, far from crowds that haunt Blenheim Palace, Stonehenge, Stratford-upon-Avon, or Haworth, I find the England of my dreams--quiet, pastoral, and sometimes endearingly eccentric...." Join Susan Allen Toth as she takes you along on her fascinating journeys to London, to enchanting gardens, to a fairy-tale castle on the Cornish coast with a history-laden past--and to sights both hidden and known. With a novelist's eye for detail and an intrepid traveler's love of adventure, Ms. Toth reveals the secrets of impeccable preparation, while leaving plenty of room for surprising discoveries. And ever practical, she offers her experience on how to keep a travel journal, how to be your own travel agent, how much time to allow for your visits, as well as the pleasures of bed-and-breakfasts, supermarket souvenirs, and hidden gardens in the city of London. Lively, trenchant, personal, and above all, entertaining, England As You Like It puts the armchair and real-life traveler under the wing of a seasoned and multitalented tour guide. "A delightfully written book full of anecdotes and tips, lived and learned by the author. Toth's personable style makes readers feel as though they are actually traveling with her through the charming corners and coves of Great Britain." --The Toronto Sun
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: anglophiles unite Comment: I've been to England over 15 times and I still refer to Susan Allen Toth's books for help and inspiration.
It helps that we share an interest in literature and gardens, but the important thing to me is the quality of Toth's writing and the sheer exuberance she brings to her attitude towards my favorite country.
England As You Like It, as well as Toth's other books, is great for dreaming about England, planning to visit England, and reminiscing about your England trips.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Objective theory, subjective application Comment: Having just finished Susan Allen Toth's earlier collection of essays "My Love Affair with England," I knew her travel-tastes run to gardens and rural pathways, and her writing-tastes run to lengthy descriptions of gardens and rural pathways. So I didn't have any hesitation in harvesting from "England as You Like It" a bunch of useful ideas, resources, and destinations, and then skimming over (or skipping entirely) yet more essays about gardens and paths. Other readers may well enjoy those parts of the book too -- I'm not slighting them: they seem popular enough with other reviewers. They're just not my particular cup of Twinings.
What I found most memorable -- and pertinent to my own pending trip to England -- were things like the "thumbprint theory of travel," her methods for making long flights in the economy section more bearable, and her defense of the virtues of packing heavy instead of light. Her M.O. of staying in one set of lodgings for a week or two at a time, and using that as a base from which to explore nearby areas, certainly seems both more restful (as a vacation) and more worthwhile (as a means to get to know a place) than a frenetic rush from hotel to hotel as you check off one "must see" attraction after another. And her comment that the first thing she does on arrival in London is to hit a bookshop to stock up on good, detailed maps is an idea I definitely plan to appropriate.
The first chapter, "How to Be Your Own Travel Agent," also had many useful ideas and recommendations for thing to look into. Since the book was published in 1995, however, many of the specifics she gives could be replaced by a red rubber stamp reading "Use the Internet!" Still, for giving a traveler enticing ideas of places to see and ways to see them, anyone England-bound could find this book worth spending a little time with.
Customer Rating:      Summary: When An Author Creates A Completely New Genre... Comment: What happens? Some don't get it, and others do. I agree wholeheartedly with Amazon.com's reviewers here insofar as the absolute wonder of these "essays" that are travel guides but not really the kind you would compare with a road map. This is great literature - along with its humor, savvy, sophistication and most importantly its understanding that America (albeit the beautiful) has a lot to learn from the ancient culture and art of that wonderous English Isle.
Customer Rating:      Summary: ENCOURAGEMENT TO BE YOUR OWN TRAVEL AGENT Comment: So far, this book is absolutely incredible. The amount of detail is a bit baffling at first, better too much than too little. It gives suggestions for how to find excellent hotels and B&B's, good maps, restaurants, there are even suggestions on packing and keeping a travel journal. We're leaving for the British Isles in a matter of days, and I've been planning for the last 9 months. It would have been so much easier if I'd had this book. I can't wait to start planning our next trip. I don't like to use travel agents because it's been my experience that unless you are paying them to plan your entire vacation, you will be far from the top of their priorities list. Also, it's so much fun to plan your own vacation. This book is invaluable.
Customer Rating:      Summary: the weakest of Ms. Toth's three books about the U.K. Comment: I gave Susan Allen Toth's first travel memoir about Great Britain, My Love Affair with England, five stars. It was what I had hoped Ms. Joan Cornblath's "Beyond the Tower: London for Return Travellers" would be.This, the second book chronologically in her series of three, was a bit of a letdown after that stellar beginning, though it is still an enjoyable read if you are missing England and would like to read some affectionate reminiscences. There is a bit too much about gardens and fauna for my taste (though in a testament to the principle of "less is more" the anecdotes of the earlier book have inspired me to add some English gardens to my next itinerary). I love forests but don't necessarily want to read about them in such detail. There is some very good information about various British map series and suggestions for obtaining them. NB: When reading I had thought the suggestions probably out-of-date, i.e. with the opportunity to buy materials at Amazon.com.uk, but when I checked it out I didn't find very many maps available online, on Amazon at least. Perhaps that will change, or maybe they are available from the publisher online. I hope so. The editor and author may want to consider adding this information to a later edition. There is also good information about various options for accommodation, and the author goes a long way toward demystifying self-catering holiday rentals (reserving a furnished apartment or home). Her observations on souvenir shopping in British grocery stores is charming, and her suggestions on journal keeping and thumbprint travel are pragmatic. In the third section of the book, "Special Places", I was not totally pleased with the author's choices of which places to cover. Though I understand that she can only write about where she has actually been, many were very similar to things she had already discussed in the first book. A lot of useful information and a good index.
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