Travel Books

Google

General

Travel

World

Asia
Africa
North America
South America
Antarctica
Australia
Europe
Caribbean

Countries

Argentina
Bahamas
Belize
Brazil
Canada
Chile
China
Costa Rica
England
France
Germany
Greece
India
Ireland
Italy
Japan
Kenya
Mexico
New Zealand
Norway
Panama
Portugal
Russia
Scotland
Singapore
Spain
Switzerland
Thailand
US

States

Alaska
Florida
Hawaii
Maine
Massachusetts
Michigan
New Hampshire
New Mexico
New York
Oregon
Tennessee
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington State
Wyoming
New England

Cities

Chicago
Dallas
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Miami
Moscow
New York City
Paris
Rome
Seattle
Vancouver
Washington DC

Videos

Travel VHS
Travel DVD

Travel With RJ


Search Now:

SOUTH AMERICA BOOKS

Posted in South America (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Effingham County  (GA)   (Images of America) By Arcadia Publishing. The regular list price is $18.99. Sells new for $10.29. There are some available for $43.99.
Read more...

Purchase Information
No comments about Effingham County (GA) (Images of America).






Posted in South America (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Wild Winds: Adventures in the Highest Andes Written by Ed Darack. By Darack ed Photography. The regular list price is $19.99. Sells new for $19.59. There are some available for $7.18.
Read more...

Purchase Information
1 comments about Wild Winds: Adventures in the Highest Andes.
  1. A superb book. Highly recomended first-hands descriptions of fantastic climbs in the andes. Full of interesting histories and facts. Outstanding!


Read more...


Posted in South America (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Compass American Guides: Kentucky, 2nd Edition (Compass American Guides) Written by Susan H. Reigler. By Compass America Guides. The regular list price is $21.95. Sells new for $13.10. There are some available for $2.93.
Read more...

Purchase Information
No comments about Compass American Guides: Kentucky, 2nd Edition (Compass American Guides).






Posted in South America (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Blair Howard. By Hunter Pub Inc. The regular list price is $15.95. Sells new for $12.00. There are some available for $0.03.
Read more...

Purchase Information
4 comments about Adventure Guide to the Great Smokey Mountains (1996 Edition).
  1. This exciting update covers Eastern Tennessee, Western North Carolina and Northern Georgia. Outdoor activities, plus craft hunting and fairs. All the information you need for an activity-filled vacation. Maps. Index. Photos.


  2. "[Adventure Guides] direct you away from the theme parks and into the great outdoors... the information on trekking routes, canoeing, wildlife refuges - even golf courses - is well researched." The Sunday Telegraph


  3. "...intended for the adventure-minded travelers with special affection for the outdoors and nature. Each Adventure Guide packs in outdoor-oriented activities set in different regions. There's something for nearly everyone." Midwest Book Review


  4. "Recommended for visitors who want to research a trip ahead of time and take the book along for repeated reference. An outdoors-oriented guide which includes all the best fishing spots, hiking trails in largely uncharted areas and whitewater rafting. An excellent guide." The Bookwatch


Read more...


Posted in South America (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

South America, Surprise! (Our Amazing Continents) Written by April Pulley Sayre. By Millbrook Press. The regular list price is $7.95. Sells new for $4.10. There are some available for $5.16.
Read more...

Purchase Information
No comments about South America, Surprise! (Our Amazing Continents).






Posted in South America (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Waterproof Chile Map by ITMB Written by ITMB Publishing. By ITMB Publishing. The regular list price is $12.95. Sells new for $8.00. There are some available for $23.14.
Read more...

Purchase Information
1 comments about Waterproof Chile Map by ITMB.
  1. This map has excellent details. However, because Chile is a very long, narrow country the map is broken into sections and moving from one section to another is confusing.


Read more...


Posted in South America (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Carnival In Rio mini: Samba, Samba, Samba Written by Terry George. By edel CLASSICS GmbH. The regular list price is $12.95. Sells new for $7.43. There are some available for $8.12.
Read more...

Purchase Information
1 comments about Carnival In Rio mini: Samba, Samba, Samba.
  1. This is a lovely depiction of Carnaval in Rio. The photos are from recent carnavals, it makes a good coffee table book. Surprisingly the CD accompanying the book is excellent. Its worth buying the book for the CD alone.


Read more...


Posted in South America (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

In Focus Ecuador: A Guide to the People, Politics and Culture (Ecuador (in Focus)) Written by Wilma Roos and Omer Van Renterghem. By Latin America Bureau. The regular list price is $12.95. Sells new for $7.48. There are some available for $7.36.
Read more...

Purchase Information
2 comments about In Focus Ecuador: A Guide to the People, Politics and Culture (Ecuador (in Focus)).
  1. If you are looking for a good overview of Ecuador without all of the tourist related fluff, this is the book for you. It briefly covers topics from Ecuador's early history right up to present day politics, people and enviroment.


  2. This short book packs in a great deal of honest and accurate information about the beautiful, complex, culturally rich, and ecologically threatened country of Ecuador. It is not a tourist guide, but recommended for prospective visitors who want to understand the culture and politics of Ecuador, and understand it quickly. It is especially valuable for its summary of the destructive effects of the petroleum industry on the ecology and economy of the country, and for its its brief but accurate introduction to the country's powerful indigenous movement. It gives a sense of the country's cultural riches, and has some great color photos.


Read more...


Posted in South America (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Peru and Bolivia, 8th: The Bradt Trekking Guide Written by Hilary Bradt. By Bradt Travel Guides. The regular list price is $17.95. Sells new for $5.75. There are some available for $5.45.
Read more...

Purchase Information
4 comments about Peru and Bolivia, 8th: The Bradt Trekking Guide.
  1. Although writing the perfect trekking guide is an almost impossible excerise, there is certainly room for improvement in Bradt's latest offering. Whilst generic lonely planet guide blueprint is limited, the layout employed here is quite confusing and random, with maps, route descriptions, silly anecdotes, natural history, local culture and general travel advice thrown in together in a very messy fashion which limits the usefulness of the book as a reference material. The content itself is extremely bloated with superfluous info and suffers from inconsistent writing - at times it feels more like a disparate collection of internet postings than a trekking guide. Whilst is great to see the alternate and no less spectacular routes getting a mention, some serious thought needs to be given to the editing process - it is a difficult task to write a concise and informative guide, but this is what is necessary to stand out from the dross.


  2. We love the Bradt guides, because they're "personal", innovative, well-written and in-depth. If you like to explore the non-obvious, to get off the beaten track (without necessarily missing out on the highlights), this is the guide you're looking for!!


  3. This book provided the information I needed and was more thorough than the new Lonely Planet equivalent, Trekking the Andes. I bought both and I'll take the Bradt guide to the Andes.


  4. A friend let me borrow his book! I liked it so much I had to buy one of my own! Great info in preparing for my trip!


Read more...


Posted in South America (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Where the Earth Ends Written by John Harrison. By John Murray Publishers Ltd. Sells new for $12.95. There are some available for $3.09.
Read more...

Purchase Information
3 comments about Where the Earth Ends.
  1. A thoughtful, informed and sometimes wry travel book, a welcome addition/update to Chatwin's "In Patagonia" and Wheeler's "Travels In a Thin Country."


  2. In 1996 a former town planner took his first trip to Patagonia, an experience which would change his life and which was inspired by the earlier travels of a sailor great-grandfather. His exploration of the island where the real Robinson Crusoe was shipwrecked and his discovery of native tribes, exploitation of native peoples and harsh environment comes to life in a 'you are there' adventure travel guide, a recommended pick for any who would visit the region from the comfort of an armchair.

    Diane C. Donovan
    California Bookwatch


  3. _Where the Earth Ends_ by John Harrison is an informative and entertaining travelogue and history of southernmost South America, mostly about the lands of Tierra del Fuego but also other areas of Chile as well as the author's travels to Antarctica and Juan Fernandez Island.

    Harrison from an early age had wanted to visit this region of the world. His great-grandfather had sailed past the Horn in the great square-riggers, his grandfather sailed the Horn in steam and diesel, and the author himself had grown up reading accounts of the region, always wanting to "sail the waters of Coleridge's albatross and enter the watercolors' blue horizons and sit on Crusoe's imaginary shore."

    The indigenous inhabitants of the region were of great interest to the author as he provided accounts of their long lost ways of life, stories of first contact with Europeans, and sale tales of his seeking out the last full-blooded members of various tribes or information on extinct groups. The reader will learn something about the Tehuelche Indians (the name literally meaning "people of the South"), a people who once lived in toldos (guanaco skin tents) and hunted not with bows or arrows but with bolas. They later became such excellent horseman that several brought home the top lassoing and riding prizes from the 1904 St Louis World Fair, beating American cowboys and South American gauchos. Another Indian group was the Yamana, who once lived in shelters made of branches and beech leaves along the shores of the straits. They ate great quantities of mussels, throwing the shells outside the door, moving the door around as the wind changed; eventually, circular middens of trash grew up and were colonized by various plants fond of the calcium-rich waste. These circles are common in the area.

    Most Indian tribes seemed to have perished from disease and/or assimilation, but some were actively destroyed. The nomadic Selk'nam for instanced didn't build canoes or fish, but hunted guanaco. When the settlers came, drove off the guanaco, and brought in sheep, the Selk'nam hunted the sheep, and in turn the settlers hunted them. Bounties were placed on them, made on production of an Indian's ears.

    Much of the history of the region revolved around shipwrecks and mutinies. At Puerto San Julian, Ferdinand Magellan had to contend with a mutiny in April of 1520, when three of his five ships came under the control of rebel officers. Fifty-eight years later, Francis Drake in the very same spot (some of Drake's men made souvenirs out of parts of Magellan's ship that were found) had to contend with his own mutiny. In between that time, twenty-one other ships had been unable to repeat Magellan's trip, either wrecking or being forced to return home, and many other ships wrecked in the centuries since then, several vividly described by the author.

    Some ships were wrecked deliberately. Harrison visited the sunken hulk of a once great clipper ship. Once the _County of Peebles_ which under clouds of canvas could reach 14 knots even in light winds rounding the Horn, it was now a partially sunken ship and part of a pier. Square-rigged sailing ships remained in service long after steamships had replaced them throughout most of the world because it could take months to unload two or three thousand tons of cargo (chiefly copper ore at first but later nitrates, much of it the product of vast seabird colonies). As steamers could not afford to be idle so long, what finally put the sailing ships out of business was not it seems replacement by steam ships but rather the invention of methods to synthesize nitrates at home in Europe.

    Not all disasters and sad tales involved ships. One story Harrison related was that of Captain Allen F. Gardiner, one of the first missionaries to attempt to work in the region and a "walking evangelical catastrophe...of a masochistic brand of religion." His 1850 mission plagued by hostile natives, lost supplies, storms, scurvy, and starvation, everyone on it died, leaving behind diary entries.

    The author visited many of the cities and towns of the region. He spent a good deal of time in Ushuaia, Argentina which is billed as the southernmost city in the world, a city originally founded by missionaries. Another Feugian town he visited was that of Puerto Williams, the most southerly town in the world, founded in 1953 to help consolidate Chile's claims to Antarctic territory.

    Interestingly, for many years the Chilean and Argentinean governments believed that the only way to settle the south was for convicts to build the town's infrastructure and for settlers to follow; Punta Arenas in 1842 was the first, which began with 600 convicts and prison guards. In 1851, there were 248 prisoners and families, 144 soldiers, and 44 free civilians. The next year new arrivals found ashes and skeletons, not a single survivor.

    Harrison saw a great deal of wildlife on his trip. He visited a Chilean colony of Magellanic penguins, 130,000 strong, and interviewed a researcher who had been working with them for twelve years. On his way to Antarctica the author viewed wandering and black-browed albatrosses, various petrels (which he said were named after St. Peter because sailors saw them pattering on the water), Minke whales, and dolphins. While in Antarctica he saw Adelie and gentoo penguins, snowy sheathbills, and leopard and elephant seals among others.

    The author spent some time considering the albatross that was shot in Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem of the _Ancient Mariner_ and the one shot by a man by the name of Simon Hatley in 1726 (described in a book on the voyages of George Shelvocke around the world and a source of inspiration for Coleridge).

    Another detective story the author related was the search for Elizabeth Island, a place discovered by Drake in 1578. For many years regarded as a lie or an erroneous report, later researchers determined that the island had been volcanic and had sunk beneath the waves.


Read more...


Page 51 of 250
10  20  30  40  41  42  43  44  45  46  47  48  49  50  51  52  53  54  55  56  57  58  59  60  61  70  80  90  100  110  120  130  140  150  160  170  180  190  200  210  220  230  240  250  
Effingham County (GA) (Images of America)
Wild Winds: Adventures in the Highest Andes
Compass American Guides: Kentucky, 2nd Edition (Compass American Guides)
Adventure Guide to the Great Smokey Mountains (1996 Edition)
South America, Surprise! (Our Amazing Continents)
Waterproof Chile Map by ITMB
Carnival In Rio mini: Samba, Samba, Samba
In Focus Ecuador: A Guide to the People, Politics and Culture (Ecuador (in Focus))
Peru and Bolivia, 8th: The Bradt Trekking Guide
Where the Earth Ends

Copyright © 2005
*Amazon.com prices and availability subject to change.
Last updated: Sat Oct 11 15:17:44 EDT 2008