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Book Reviews Philosophy USA

My top US road trip guidebooks

Although significant travel events have been a bit scarce around here lately, mine is a road-tripping family at heart.

Whenever it’s time to plan one, there are a few guidebooks that I turn to again and again, because they are well-edited, accurate and it’s easier to skim through them than it is to plow through a jillion websites of dubious vintage.

You’ll notice that none of them are kid-specific;  I like the unusual, unknown and offbeat, and my children usually do, too. Plus, hey, I’m driving, so I get to pick.

Other than my other favorite tips (see my earlier post on how to plan a tailpipe-kicking road trip) here are my favorite references….

***  Road Trip USA – This is a top reference for me because Jamie Jensen’s Road Trip USA finds the most wonderfully obscure stuff. The book covers 6 major routes, and if my trip area isn’t included it doesn’t do me much good, but I always check it first (and the Road Trip USA blog, of course.) The series now has books for certain routes, like the Pacific Coast Highway.

***  Off the Beaten Path travel guide by Reader’s Digest – Yes, the old fogies at Reader’s Digest have one of my favorite guidebooks. Off the Beaten Path is packed with useful information about unusual sights that I don’t find anywhere else; I always check it for each state that I’ll visit.  Worth tracking down a copy, along with Most Scenic Drives in America and See the USA the Easy Way (great loop tours.)

***  Insiders’ Guide: Off the Beaten Path – from Globe Pequot Press, these are easy to find in the travel section of any bookstore. Super-detailed and usually written by locals, the Missouri and Kansas versions were invaluable to me when I drove from Texas to Chicago and back for BlogHer a few years ago, exploring the “Square States.”

***  1,000 Places to See Before You Die – Overly dramatic title, but I do find good things here, arranged by state.

***  Anything Frommer’s – my favorite general guidebook. I always have the current edition for wherever I’m living (currently Texas.)

***  RoadFood by Jane and Michael Stern – because, well, food. Must have. Preferably not from yet another Chili’s, although they’re fine in a pinch.

***  For any particular city where I’ll spend significant time, I look for the TimeOut guides. Very British, very detailed, very thorough. Can read them over and over during subway rides and never be bored.

My biggest guidebook surprise over the last decade?

The quirky and detailed Lonely Planet Guide to Louisiana and the Deep South, used to death during our Great American South road trip from Florida to Arkansas and back. At the TBEX travel blogger’s conference recently, I had the pleasure of telling the US Lonely Planet editor, Robert Reid, how much I used and adored this guidebook.

What are your road trip planning favorites? Please let us know in the comments.

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Product Reviews Site reviews Tips

Just for you: customized Offbeat Guides

My husband was heading to a teacher’s conference in Grand Rapids, Michigan last July, so I thought we’d check out Offbeat Guides.

The Grand Rapids guidebook selection is pretty thin at our local Barnes & Noble north of Austin, Texas, and Sainted Husband had very little sightseeing time, so there was no sense in shelling out a bunch of money for information. I’ve written an article for Education.com — Must-Sees in Michigan for Family Fun (which included the Grand Rapids Fish Ladder) — but we still wanted a little more depth.

I first heard of Offbeat Guides in a Robert Scoble blog post last summer; Scoble is a tech explorer for Fast Company and I was intrigued by his description of the product.

Guides founder Dave Sifry wrote up his own blog post about why he started the company, and you can follow Offbeat Guides on Twitter.

To order a guide, you go to the Offbeat Guides front page, type in your destination, put in some other info on the next pages — when you’re going, where your hotel is located (if you know,) some of your specific interests — then Offbeat Guides takes a few minutes to generate a custom guidebook based on your input.

Our Grand Rapids guide included an AccuWeather forecast for the teacher conference days, restaurants/bars/pubs near the hotel, Google maps, city history because I’d requested it, sites of cultural interest, music concerts and arts events during the specific conference days in July, local transportation (including local street-naming quirks) and even a discussion of the large amount of Grand Rapids public art and where to find it.

The Guide had lots of details, like the fact that Grand Rapids is a center for Christian publishing, and that the surrounding area of Michigan is known for fruit production (apple, peach and blueberry.) Grand Rapids sister cities include Bielsko-Biala, Poland.  I love that kind of obscure stuff in a guide, but others may not care for it.

A nice touch was a list of local radio stations, so that visitors can immediately program their favorite sort of music into a hotel clock radio or rental car radio.  Sainted Husband, the actual user of the guide, was less interested in that feature.

There are a few photos, most of which still need proper captioning; Offbeat Guides is still in beta, so not everything is smoothed out yet.

The Events section was packed with all sorts of activities that were scheduled for the days of my husband’s visit. Here’s my favorite:

“Kuhnhenn Beer Dinner — The chefs at Hop Cat are putting on another of their famous beer dinners with the focus on the beers from Kuhnhenn Brewery. The dinner will be a 4 course meal paired with 4 drafts….The whole event will be graced with the presence of the brew crew from Kuhnhenn Brewery.”

That’s the kind of cool, localized information that made my husband a hero with his fellow high school faculty members. He distributed some PDF copies of his guide to the other teachers at the conference, and they were all impressed with how well he’d gotten ready for the trip, and how many things there were to do in the city during their event.

The primary sources of data for the guide were Wikipedia and Wikitravel, so it’s obviously not edited by any travel experts other than a general “hive mind” of wiki contributors. I’m OK with that when a guide is a nice-to-have adjunct to a trip, not my main planning document.

Would I depend on such a guide for planning an entire family vacation? No, but it’s certainly a terrific starting point. Customers need to understand that there’s no editorial vetting of any of the information, but the hard work of collating it and focusing it on your particular days of travel is a worthy endeavor.

A full color printed guide (mailed to you) is US$24.95, a downloadable PDF guide (our option, we printed some of the pages ourselves at home) is US$9.95 and a full color printed guide AND Downloadable PDF together are US$24.95.

Offbeat Guides offers a money-back guarantee if you aren’t happy with their service.

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Tips

Guidebooks: my travel buddies

Lonely Planet guidebooks on a shelf (courtesy jasonnolanplymouth at flickr's Creative Commons.)Sainted Husband and I did some of the usual weekend yard work, but we also decided to get into the garage and bring in the last book boxes from our Summer 2006 move to Texas from Florida.

What the heck’s in those slightly misshapen boxes?

The answer is that I knew we needed to buy more bookshelves, but I didn’t quite realize just how much we needed more bookshelves! Still, if I’m going to have anything piled up around the house that doesn’t bother me, it is books. Neatly arranged and stacked up against the walls is better than hidden in boxes in the garage.

The travel guidebooks, however, are another matter.

Those babies get bookshelf space right away, no matter what. I was able to open up a little territory on my “guidebook shelf” when I discovered that I have two copies of Road Trip USA and two of Roadfood, but it was a squeeze to pack in everything from around the globe.

I am absurdly pleased to have Suzy Gershman’s guidebooks for shopping in London & Paris next to “TimeOut Tokyo” next to Lonely Planet’s “Louisiana and the Deep South” (an invaluable reference a few years back, during our Great American South Road Trip.)

All but the most recent of these are out of date; in fact, parts of every guidebook are out of date as soon as it’s printed. That’s why the best travel research is a mix of thoroughly reading a good guidebook, coupled with some Internet work for the latest info and different opinions. You can save weight by tearing out only the guidebook chapters that you need, or downloading just your specific requirements. When they depart a destination, many travelers then leave their books in their hotel lobby or other public spot like a library, so someone else can use them.

When I leave a place, I usually keep the guidebook as a memento. Sure, if I ever return to Bali I’ll pick up the latest Lonely Planet guide (plus peruse the BootsnAll Bali Blog) but I still like my own old copy of “Bali and Lombok” sitting on the shelf.

It keeps Maastricht, Hong Kong and Florida company — they’re like a bunch of old, experienced, crumple-paged wanderers hanging out together, swapping tall tales about who used the worst squat toilet or found the best seafood restaurant.

What a nice way to spend a Sunday evening; returning old guidebook friends from Garage Exile to the Travel Guidebook Shelf of Good Memories.

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