Los Angeles Travel

One of the best places in the world to visit is Los Angeles, California.  Los Angeles travel is easy and fun on so many levels!  It’s easy to get here, easy to get around, and there are so many incredible things to see!

Travel to Los Angeles: Probably the best and easiest way to get to LA is by plane.  There are five convenient airports that service the Southern California area.  The first, and most well known, is of course Los Angeles International, also known as LAX.  Because of the volume of flights that come through here, this is where you will often find the best deals on flights.  However, depending on the area of Los Angeles that your trip will be concentrated in, you might be better served by one of the smaller airports - Burbank (BUR), John Wayne (SNA), Ontario (ONT), or Long Beach (LGB).

What to Do in Los Angeles: There are countless activities you don’t want to miss during your trip to the Golden States’ biggest tourist attraction.  Within the city itself, you will want to make sure that you see the Griffith Observatory, Universal Studios, the La Brea Tar Pits and the LA Zoo.  In glamorous Hollywood, just north of LA, you will want to make sure that you see the Walk of Fame, including the famous Chinese Theater, and the big, new Hollywood and Highland complex.  West of Hollywood, out to the beaches, you will want to spend at least a day exploring the gorgeous beachs of Malibu, the Santa Monica Pier and Third Street Promenade, and artsy Venice Beach.  Lastly, if amusement parks are more your style, you will be thrilled to know that within an hour’s drive of Los Angeles, you can find Disneyland and California Adventure, Knott’s Berry Farm, and Six Flags Magic Mountain.

Where to Stay in Los Angeles: LA offers a bounty of hotel and motel options, from the forty dollar a night range all the way up into the thousands.  Whatever you plan to spend, you can find lodging to accommodate your style and budget.  There are also many pet-friendly hotels and motels in Los Angeles, if your furry friend is planning to accompany you on your vacation jaunt.  You have your pick between all of the major hotel chains, as well as many of the most accommodating and interesting boutique hotels to be found in any city in the world.

Where to Eat in Los Angeles: While not widely known as being one of the big “food cities” of the United States, LA offers some of the most scrumptious dining to be found anywhere.  Where it really excels is in ethnic food.  Because LA is such a diverse melting pot, you can find one hundred percent authentic food here from almost any culture you can imagine - Thai, Italian, Mexican, Persian, Ethiopian, Chinese, Indonesian, Japanese - you name it!

Although this is a taste of what you will experience when you visit the City of Angels, it is far from the whole story.  You simply have to come and see it for yourself!

Wine Tasting in San Diego & Beyond: Partake of the Grape in San Diego, Temecula, Baja, Rancho Cucamonga and Los Angeles (Paperback)

Wine Tasting in San Diego & Beyond: Partake of the Grape in San Diego, Temecula, Baja, Rancho Cucamonga and Los Angeles

Product Description

2nd Edition of Wine Tasting in San Diego & Beyond with over 40 wineries listed. Coverage includes wineries located in Southern California as well as Baja California. A book for anyone visiting or living in or near Southern California who enjoys the pleasures of wine tasting. Includes coverage of wine tasting techniques, local wineries and local happenings.



About the Author

Janene Roberts has lived in San Diego for more than 15 years and is a Southern California native who has traveled extensively sampling regional wines. She is an advertising professional who received her B.A. degree in Journalism from San Diego State University.


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From Los Angeles to Ukraine: The power of Jewish pilgrimage.(Memoir)(Travel narrative): An article from: Midstream [HTML] (Digital)

From Los Angeles to Ukraine: The power of Jewish pilgrimage.(Memoir)(Travel narrative): An article from: Midstream

Product Description

This digital document is an article from Midstream, published by Thomson Gale on September 1, 2007. The length of the article is 2774 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: From Los Angeles to Ukraine: The power of Jewish pilgrimage.(Memoir)(Travel narrative)
Author: Sheila Clapkin
Publication: Midstream (Magazine/Journal)
Date: September 1, 2007
Publisher: Thomson Gale
Volume: 53 Issue: 5 Page: 40(3)

Article Type: Travel narrative

Distributed by Thomson Gale


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An Architectural Guidebook to Los Angeles (Paperback)

An Architectural Guidebook to Los Angeles

Product Description

Known as “the bible” to Los Angeles architecture scholars and enthusiasts, Robert Winter and David Gebhard’s groundbreaking guide to architecture in the greater Los Angeles area is updated and revised once again. From Art Deco to Beaux-Arts, Spanish Colonial to Mission Revival, Winter discusses an impressive variety of architectural styles in this popular guide that he co-authored with the late David Gebhard. New buildings and sites have been added, along with all new photography. Considered the most thorough L.A. architecture guide ever written, this new edition features the best of the past and present, from Charles and Henry Greene’s Gamble House to Frank Gehry’s Disney Philharmonic Hall. This was, and is again, a must-have guide to a diverse and architecturally rich area.

Robert Winter is a recognized architectural historian who lives in Los Angeles, and has led architectural tours through the Los Angeles area since 1965. He is a professor at Occidental College in Los Angeles.



From the Inside Flap

CONTENTS Preface Acknowledgments Introduction Los Angeles A Brief History of Los Angeles Architecture Historic Preservation in Los Angeles Planning Landscape Architecture Area Reference Maps 1. Malibu 2. Pacific Palisades, North 3. Pacific Palisades, South 4. Santa Monica, North 5. Santa Monica, South; Ocean Park 6. Venice; Marina Del Rey 7. Los Angeles International Airport 8. South Beach Area 9. Palos Verdes, North 10. Palos Verdes, South 11. Santa Catalina Island 12. San Pedro 13. Wilmington 14. Torrance 15. Long Beach, Downtown and West 16. Long Beach, East; Naples; and Seal Beach 17. Long Beach, North 18. Inglewood; Hawthorne 19. Gardena 20. Baldwin Hills; Culver City 21. Brentwood 22. Bel Air 23. Westwood, West 24. Westwood, South and East 25. UCLA 26. Beverly Hills, North 27. Beverly Hills, South 28. Century City 29. Carthay Circle 30. South Carthay 31. West Hollywood 32. Central Hollywood 33. Hollywood Hills 34. East Hollywood; Los Feliz; Griffith Park 35. Silver Lake 36. Angelino Heights; Echo Park; Elysian Park 37. Wilshire Boulevard District; Hancock Park 38. MacArthur Park, West 39. MacArthur Park, North 40. MacArthur Park, East 41. Downtown 42. Downtown, Civic Center 43. Downtown, Plaza and Northeast 44. Downtown, South 45. Boyle Heights 46. Exposition Park, West; Leimert Park 47. Exposition Park, East 48. University of Southern California 49. Vernon; Commerce; Huntington Park; South Gate; Bell; Maywood; Watts 50. Highland Park 51. Mount Washington 52. Eagle Rock 53. Lincoln Heights 54. Alhambra 55. Montebello; Pico Rivera 56. Whittier 57. Santa Fe Springs 58. Downey 59. Norwalk 60. Artesia 61. San Fernando Valley 62. Glendale 63. Burbank 64. Universal City 65. North Hollywood 66. Toluca Lake 67. Studio City 68. Sherman Oaks 69. Encino 70. Tarzana; Woodland Hills 71. Calabasas 72. Highway 101 West 73. Simi Valley; Westlake Village 74. Canoga Park 75. Chatsworth 76. Northridge 77. Granada Hills; Mission Hills 78. Van Nuys; Panorama City; Sepulveda 79. Mission San Fernando Rey de Espana 80. San Fernando 81. Newhall; Saugus; Valencia 82. Palmdale; Lancaster 83. La Crescenta Valley 84. Tujunga 85. La Crescenta 86. La Canada-Flintridge 87. Route 66-San Gabriel Valley 88. Pasadena 89. Upper Arroyo Seco 90. Lower Arroyo Seco, North 91. Lower Arroyo Seco, South 92. Oak Knoll 93. Pasadena, Central Business District 94. East Pasadena 95. North Pasadena 96. Altadena 97. South Pasadena, Central Section 98. San Marino 99. San Gabriel 100. Sierra Madre 101. Arcadia 102. Monrovia 103. Duarte 104. Bradbury 105. Azuza 106. Glendora 107. San Dimas 108. La Verne 109. Temple City; El Monte; 110. Covina; West Covina; Irwindale; Glendora 111. Industry; La Puente 112. Pomona 113. Diamond Bar 114. Claremont Readings Index



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The Best Women’s Travel Writing 2009: True Stories from Around the World (Travelers’ Tales) (Paperback)

The Best Women's Travel Writing 2009: True Stories from Around the World (Travelers' Tales)

Product Description

This best-selling, award-winning series presents the finest accounts of women who have traveled to the ends of the earth to discover new places, peoples — and themselves. The common threads connecting the stories are a woman’s perspective and lively storytelling to make the reader laugh, cry, wish she were there, or be glad she wasn’t. From breaking the gender barrier on a soccer field in Kenya to learning the art of French cooking in a damp cellar in the Loire Valley to hitchhiking through Mexico in the 1960s, the points of view and perspectives are global and the themes eclectic, including stories that encompass spiritual growth, hilarity and misadventure, high adventure, romance, solo journeys, stories of service to humanity, family travel, and encounters with exotic cuisine.



About the Author

Lucy McCauley’s travel essays have appeared in such publications as The Atlantic Monthly, The Los Angeles Times, Harvard Review, Science & Spirit, and Salon.com. She is series editor of Best Women’s Travel Writing, and editor of three other Travelers’ Tales anthologies - Spain (1995), Women in the Wild (1998), and A Woman’s Path (2000), all of which have been reissued in the last few years. In addition, she has written case studies in Latin America for Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, and now works as a developmental editor for publishers such as Harvard Business School Press.


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Ask Arthur Frommer: And Travel Better, Cheaper, Smarter (Paperback)

Ask Arthur Frommer: And Travel Better, Cheaper, Smarter

Amazon.com Review

  • Organized by travel topic
  • More than 500 entries
  • Each entry is a short, digestible take–no longer than a page.
  • 250 b&w photos
  • Arthur’s style is personable and engaged–his personality shines through

Amazon Exclusive: Q&A with Author Arthur Frommer

Q: How has technology changed the travel landscape in the last 50 years?

A: It has given us the tools to be our own travel agents. By devoting a small effort to ferret out the best airfare and hotel search engines, we can snare bargains and discounts in travel that used to go unused. We can lower the cost of travel—and thus travel more frequently.

Q: What is your favorite travel destination and how many times have you been there?

A: Paris leads the list; I can’t get enough of it (have vacationed there dozens of times). I find it occupies the frontiers of art and culture, history and cuisine, political discourse and literary events. The Parisians have become excellent, courteous hosts (contrary to a popular misconception), and the city itself is, to me, a place of enchantment that never grows stale. A runner-up: the island of Bali.

Q: You seem to be unhappy with many aspects of the American travel industry. What bothers you most, and why?

A: The shortness of the vacation time enjoyed by average Americans; we urgently need legislation mandating a minimum of three weeks per year of paid leave; the failure of our newspapers, magazines and television outlets to provide Americans with useful facts about affordable travel, in place of their fascination with deluxe facilities that only the wealthy can enjoy; the mindless quality of so many vacation resorts and tours that treat their guests as ignoramuses. I’ve devoted much of my travel career to disclosing the reverse of what most of the commercial travel industry recommends.

Q: What are the top destinations for travel within the United States? Where do you recommend that we go for our vacations?

A: First and foremost, the U.S. National Parks, especially Yellowstone, Yosemite, Grand Canyon and Great Smokey Mountains. Second, I recommend the non-tourist neighborhoods of New York, especially its world of provocative, mind-enlarging, off-Broadway theaters. Third, Boston, New Orleans and San Francisco, the Oregon coast, the southwest coast of Florida (especially Sanibel Island and its “Ding” Darling Nature Preserve). There are many more.

Q: How has the current economic climate changed the way we travel?

A: It has forced us to consider the use of “alternative” lodgings in place of standard (and far more expensive) hotels: guesthouses and B&Bs, hostels, student residences, convents and monasteries, vacation homes and apartments in resort areas, vacation “exchanges” (you live in their apartment or home while they live in yours), the extra rooms and beds offered by “hospitality clubs”. By using such facilities, you not only save money but enjoy a far more authentic travel experience among actual residents. And I am proud that the Frommer guides have always devoted more attention to these excellent alternative accommodations than any other travel book series.



Product Description

“Arthur Frommer is still dispensing practical advice to travelers.” -USA Today

“Written in Frommer’s trademark light and conversational tone , [Ask Arthur Frommer] covers more than 800 topics, from packing quandaries to the best airport-food options, all arranged alphabetically for easy reference. Each entry is brief, informative, and entertaining. -American Way magazine

“Packed with practical advice for budget travel…Frommer’s strong opinions and conversational writing style make the book a fun, easy read.” –About.com

“Reading [Ask Arthur Frommer] is like having dinner — and a glass of wine and then coffee and dessert — with the world’s best travel advisor.” -Jeanne Leblanc, Courant.com

“Arthur has a unique perspective on the changes that have take place over the past 50 years. This book is packed with everything from airfares and lodging to vacations for nudist and vegans.” -Tripso.com


  • Organized by travel topic
  • More than 500 entries
  • Each entry is a short, digestible take–no longer than a page.
  • 250 b&w photos
  • Arthur’s style is personable and engaged–his personality shines through.
  • –This text refers to the

    Kindle Edition
    edition.



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