The 1,000 Places to See books are pleasurable, inspiring, wondrous, a best-selling phenomenon and, yes, practical: Announcing the updated edition of "1,000 Places to See in the USA & Canada Before You Die," "The New York Times" No. 1 bestseller. Because USA & Canada is not only a wish book but also a guide, this information, including phone numbers, Web addresses, and more, is now completely revised and updated. For travel season, for long summer weekends, for whenever the mood strikes to pack up the car and set out to discover a new piece of America (and Canada!), "1,000 Places to See in the USA & Canada" is a map to all the unique and wonderful places just around the corner: Sail the Maine Windjammers out of Camden. Explore the gold-mining trails in Alaska s Denali wilderness. Collect exotic shells on the beaches of Captiva. Play tennis the way it was meant to be on grass at the lavish Victorian Newport Casino. Take a barbecue tour of Kansas City Arthur Bryant s to Gates to Snead s. There s the ice hotel in Quebec, the stalacpipe organ in Virginia, out-of-the-way Civil War battlefields, dude ranches and cowboy poetry readings, and what to do in Louisville after the Derby s over.More than 150 places are highlighted as family-friendly, and indices in the back organize the book by subject wilderness, dining, beaches, world-class museums, sports, festivals, and more. "
Patricia Schultz is an American travel writer and author. Her books include the bestseller 1,000 Places to See Before You Die, which had over three million copies in print as of 2019.
This book is perfect for those who love driving, planning their drive and not missing the most important sights. If you are based in the USA or Canada this is a 5* book, if you are based in the UK, like me, then you are going to have to visit North America many times to get full value. So far, I've managed to see 45 of the main attractions listed and have yet to be disappointed. If you find that you enjoy touring in North America, I would also recommend "Road Trip USA" by Jamie Jensen and "The Most Scenic Drives in America" a Reader's Digest publication which both give good ideas for routes and one or two different ideas. Give yourself lots of time for your tours because distances between attractions can be enormous.
I never leave for a vacation without this book!! I love to travel and often wonder if I am truly hitting the most important landmarks when touring cities and towns. This book gives me a guideline to follow so that I know I am hitting some of the most important places. I love that the book gives suggested restaurants and places to stay as well as important festivals and historical sites. I also love that there is background information for each location as well as historical information and addresses.
Although site seeing and historical must-sees are very subjective thoughts that importance varies from person to person, but this book gives me some direction and a starting point when planning my next vacation as well as what we will do, see and eat while we are there!
1.5 star I'm not sure there is anything in this book that you can't find with a good search online. Yes, it may help you find a couple of extra places - I don't know. The layout is poor and descriptions are underwhelming. The book does not fit the title. I don't need to know about three hotels in an area to see before I die, unless they are the most amazing structural marvels to mankind. Bleh. 2-stars because there is probably some valuable stuff in here.
I was disappointed. I was hoping for a book with some deep, personal insight into some of these places. Inside tips on where to go, what to do. Instead, this reads like a typical tourist guide. I checked out some of the places I've been on the list, and if you follow this guide, you're going to miss the best parts.
It's okay I guess. I still feel as if some places were divided multiple times just so they could reach 1000 places without doing all that much traveling.
I don't like that there are just towns that need to be seen. I was looking for fun places when going on a road trip and just tells me to go to a specific town and basically figure it out myself. Not at all what I wanted.
It was okay. I wanted more details in the places that I should see to see if I would actually want to go and see them. Perhaps some more pictures as well.
Amazing guide for everywhere you might want to go! It was super cool reading about places I've been and writing down places I want to go in the future!
I use this as a go-to reference and have listened to most of it. Unfortunately it is a bit out of date and listening to it is a nightmare of URLs and phone numbers most of which probably no longer are accurate. Fortunately those bits come after the to-dos are described. Many human created places referred to have changed ownership / names or have since gone out of business. But the benefit of this book is in the outline which shows you places in nature that of course are not changing as much. So if you're travel planning and you just want to know maybe the top five things in nature to do, this is a decent starting point.
Well, any place in the USA will need to wait at least a few years before we visit. And as this being a US publication, it overlooks a lot of fantastic Canadian destinations.
That said, I've added a few to my already-long Canada trip list
Chester, Nova Scotia, 50 miles west of Halifax Icefields Parkway (drive between Banff and Jasper National Parks) Yoho National Park (BC) Gulf Islands & Salt Spring Island, Hastings House Country Hotel Haida Gwai Okanagan Valley
This book is long. Too long to be very good. It ultimately is not 1000 places you need to see it more like 1000 things to know about places that you may visit one day. A solid 1/5 to 1/3 of the book is hotel reviews. Many of them 300+ per night ( 2001 dollars). Another 1/5 to 1/3 is restaurant reviews. So, basically over 1/2 of the book are hotel and restaurant reviews from 2001.
I travel a lot, most of the stuff I would consider seeing is not in the book. Many of the things in the book I’ve seen and didn’t find it to be spectacular. Of course that’s my opinion.
Some of this stuff may not exist any more. Which by definition means it wasn’t worth it to begin with.
I appreciate the effort and research the author put into this book. Just the mere writing alone is substantial. I just think the title is misleading. These are not 1000 great places to see.
For someone who loves to travel this is a must have. The descriptions of each place were well done and wide ranging. The only criticism I have is that the author often designates things such as "historic hotels" or "restaurants" for a certain city. I would rather landmarks be pointed out and hotels and restaurants (unless they are themselves a landmark like the Oyster House in Boston) for other guides like Frommer's or Lonely Planets. Maybe that way Ms. Shultz would have had room for a landmark in South Carolina outside the lowcountry. :)
I love these books because it inspires we to travel to all these different locations with my tiny family. If you are planning a family vacation you should read this book.
1. Most of these things are not places I want to see. Patricia Schultz leans too much on high-end dining and accommodations. Those are nice, if you have the money, but not the reason most people travel.
2. They go out of date too fast. Places to stay and especially places to eat change hands, names, websites, owners, or go out of business. So once the book is published the contact information starts to age.
3. The scope is too broad. Even with a number like 1,000, when spread over 50 states in the US and the whole breadth of Canada (which gets just 10 percent of the pages of the US) it misses too many places that people really would love to see. Any local or someone with a little regionalized knowledge will be able to recommend more and better places.
To be fair to Schultz, I'm reviewing a book that is 15 years old, and the 1,000-things concept can introduce readers to new places far from home that they didn't know about. I just think at this stage in the internet travel era your favorite search engine is a better source for travel suggestions.
Since I am trapped by COVID I have been indulging in travel porn and building my list of places to go once I'm free. This book is pretty good for that as road trips are probably going to be the most accessible travel adventures for a while.
I would be interested to see what didn't make the cut. I'd say that 7-800 of the 1,000 are places I might like to go or have already seen. The ones I'm not interested in are mostly golf courses and resorts. I like resorts, but the ones this book recommends are more expensive and less fun than I'd like.
There are lots of places that I had not heard of, which is the best reason to read this book. North America is full of things to do and I think this gave me at least 100 places to go that I wasn't aware of before reading.
Wow. I’m shocked by how Euro & American-centric this book is. Here’s the breakdown in case you’re interested:
38% Europe 24% US & Canada 11% Asia 8% Latin America 6% Africa 5% Australia, New Zealand & Pacific Islands 5% Caribbean, Bahamas & Bermuda 2% Middle East
I... honestly don’t know what to think. Obviously you can get most of this information from the internet, but I thought it would be fun to plan my “Around the World” trip with this list as the starting point. So disappointed in this book.
If you’re traveling in Europe and really like castles, this is the book for you. If you want to go anywhere outside of the US or Europe... don’t even bother picking it up.
I love this book! My husband and I love to road-trip and have taken many road adventures over the years. (The adventure is, not in the destination, but in the journey.) This is one of my favorite go-to travel guides to reference before, during, and after each trip. A fun reference book to reminisce about past trips, and to help plan future ones. My copy is dog-eared with many sticky tabs throughout... The 'Places To See' are organized by state, with brief descriptions of each place and locations on maps.
I love this book - and while I think I have been to a lot of places, this book points out so many things I haven't seen and now want to put on my own personal "bucket list." I could honestly envision myself packing up, hitting the road, and just going from place to place with this book as a guide. Too bad I don't have the resources to go do it full time!
If you're looking for a vacation idea for a long or short getaway or even a longer trip, start here
I just don't get why these books are so popular. Both the ones I've read so far have been a disappointment. With a name like "1000 Places to See Before You Die" I expect some great locations, specific adventures and great things not to be missed.
Instead, what I got was vague towns, rather than explicit locations, not a lot of places that, as a traveler, I think really SHOULD be seen, and not a lot of effort to really inform people of what this country has to offer.
This boon is an adventurous read, but having already visited many of the places featured, it can sometimes seem more of an advertisement for failing tourist traps than true gems that must be on every single person's bucket list. Nevertheless, this is a great book to have when you travel, just to see something that is not so often seen. And for those who do not travel, you can clearly imagine what each place is truly like by the colorful descriptions written on each and every place.
This is a good reference if you are moving or looking to explore a new area.
Some areas are so highly covered that I have to wonder what are the stretch locations and what are the real favorites? There are a lot of golf and spa type locations in the book that I would not have chosen but overall I agree with the list.
Not enough maps and poorly organized.... Alphabetical, not locational, so I have to take these ideas and go to the internet to find out if they are near where I'm going. The special indexes are useful... I can easily look up all the surfing places, etc, but that doesn't make up for the fact that this requires a lot of additional time to lookup where everything is.
Lacy Cox APA Citation: Schultz, P. (2011). 1,000 Places to See in the United States and Canada before you die (Updated ed.). New York, NY: Workman Publishing Company, Inc. Call Number: Ref 402.03 Sch Reference: Encyclopedia Relevance & Relationship: This is one of the only travel books available in the reference collection. This book could be used in geography classes, marketing classes, and advertising classes. This is most relevant travel wise to students because most will not be able to explore the world, but might be able to explore the United States. Purpose: The purpose of this book is to identify interesting and famous places within the U.S. and Canada to visit. Validity: Publisher's Weekly provides a positive review and states that the scope is very in-depth. Format: Found in print form in the reference room. The book has two columns to describe destinations with numerous pictures (almost one per page). There is not a bulleted list but many key facts are found in bold letters such as best time to visit, prices, etc. Arrangement & Presentation: An introduction to the reader is provided with a table of contents that divides the states by regions and provides page numbers. There is also a section for U.S. destinations and Canadian destinations. A special index is also included that includes golf courses, nature information, and places for sports fans. There are several different indexes besides the special index listed. There is also an activity index, culinary experiences index, and alphabetical index of places. The multiple indexes make at least 10 different ways to access a destination. Diversity: There are several travel books but this is the only one specific to the top 1,000 places to visit in the United States. This is also the easiest to follow and find a destination. This should be applicable to most students who would more likely be able to travel the United States and Canada compare to world wide travel. Citation Review: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/1000-...