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Travel Industry Wire - Directory for Travel Travel Guides |
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Restaurant Resource Group
Making a profit in the restaurant business is a challenge. We know first hand, having created and operated many restaurants over the last twenty-five years. Adequate sales, experience, and capital can help, but without solid financial and operational controls in place, long-term success is not assured. That's why the The Restaurant Resource Group was created.... to empower restaurant operators by providing these "controls" in the form of simple, yet powerful, financial and management products and services.
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As the Romans Do : The Delights, Dramas, and Daily Diversions of Life in the Ete
KIRKUS REVIEWS A glowing tribute to the Eternal City, from an American who became infatuated with Rome some 20 years ago and later moved there with his wife and two young sons. To call Epstein (the president of an association -- also called As the Romans Do -- that provides guided tours of Rome and Italy) enthusiastic about his adopted home is an understatement. He praises the city's love of culture and sense of history, celebrates the Roman's live-for-today attitude and flair for the dramatic.
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Dorling Kindersley Eyewitness Travel Guide: Great Places to Stay in Europe
Want to know where to get a great espresso on your way to the Uffizi? Or how much to tip a hotel maid in New York City? Try these travel guides, each an intricate trove of 3-D aerial views, landmark floor plans, color photos and essential eating, shopping and entertainment info. With titles covering Paris, Prague, and London, these pocket-sized guides are like a Michelangelo fresco: deliriously rich in detail. (People Magazine)
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Eyewitness Travel Guide: Paris by Alan Tillier
One of the best things about the Eyewitness series are the guided walks for each city. In Paris you have a choice of five 90-minute walks: around Parc Monceau, along the Canal St.-Martin, around the Ile St-Louis, in Auteuil or in Montmartre--the directions for each are clear, the sites well worth seeing, and each provides you with the best possible way of getting to know the city. Don't be deceived by Eyewitness Paris's picture-heavy format--this little picture book packs a lot of information! Don't leave home without it.
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Fielding's the World's Most Dangerous Places (Serial) by Robert Young Pelton, Co
Fielding's The World's Most Dangerous Places is not a comforting book; its pages bristle with tales of land mines, war zones, terrorists, mercenaries, mafiosi, massacres, kidnappers, drug smugglers, and all the other travel disasters that are the stuff of nightmares. But then, as the editors point out in their foreword, as travelers are kidnapped and executed in Cambodia, a recognized dangerous place, they also are hunted down and murdered in Los Angeles. In other words, the most dangerous place in the world is more of a state of mind: ignorance
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Lisa Weber's Ultimate Internet Travel Planning Guide, Travel Planning Made Fast,
Reviews and critiques of over 400 travel-related websites including toll-free numbers. Categories include; hotels, car rentals, airlines, bed & breakfasts, weather, currency, passports, senior travel, adventure travel, and more. Travel suggestions and tips are also included throughout the book.
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Relais & Chateaux
Excellent Travel BookReviewer: Jacob Knudsen from Missoula, MTFinally, there is a travel book that gives information on more than cliche hotels in places like Branson, MO or nowhere Florida.The 2002 edition of Relais & Chateaux showcases more than 460 of the finest hotels, resorts, and restaurants in over 51 countries while providing incredible color photos and detailed but not draggy descriptions of everything about the properties. Everything from prices of the rooms and restaurants, to whether you can bring pets is included. And, the pictures that are provided will blow any other travel books out of the water in terms of information displayed and quality. Besides, just the scenery of some of the resorts is breathtaking. So, you could look for a better travel book, and I can promise that after looking for myself, I found none of more superior quality than this.If nothing else, the book is worth the price for the pictures, and the cover which highlights any bookshelf with its eyecatching gold lettering on a pearl white background. Even if you don't travel, you owe it to yourself to add this book to your collection.
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Rick Steves' Europe Through the Back Door (Rick Steves' Europe Through the
Along with tried-and-true tips on packing, transport, sleeping and eating well on a budget, and meeting the locals, Steves reveals more than 30 back doors found throughout Europe, from a tiny lake town in Austria to the narrowest gorge in the world, which winds through Crete. If Europe is your destination, this book is more important than your luggage.
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