Mobil Travel Guide: Los Angeles, 2004 (Mobil City Guides) (Paperback)

Mobil Travel Guide: Los Angeles, 2004 (Mobil City Guides)

Product Description

Included in this guide is a brief history of the city, a top ten Must-See list, and fun facts about the city. Information on local radio, TV, and print media will tune readers in to the current local scene. State, city, and neighborhood maps, details on public transportation, and walking tours will offer a variety of options for getting around town and seeing the sights.


From the Back Cover

The City Guide Los Angeles provides extensive coverage of Los Angeles plus Disneyland, Malibu, and more. It includes Mobil’s One- to Five-Star quality ratings that reflect Mobil’s stringent inspection process. It takes you off the beaten path with historic driving and walking tours and across city lines with the Side Trips section. There are full-color regional, state, and city maps.


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Birnbaum’s Los Angeles 1993 (Birnbaum’s Travel Guides) (Paperback)

Birnbaum's Los Angeles 1993 (Birnbaum's Travel Guides)No description for this product could be found, but have a look over at Amazon for reviews and other information.
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Birnbaum’s Los Angeles 1992 (Birnbaum’s Travel Guides) (Paperback)

Birnbaum's Los Angeles 1992 (Birnbaum's Travel Guides)No description for this product could be found, but have a look over at Amazon for reviews and other information.
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Ulysses Los Angeles (Ulysses Travel Guides) (Paperback)

Ulysses Los Angeles (Ulysses Travel Guides)

Product Description

A sprawling city whose essence simply cannot be defined, Los Angeles surrenders its mystique in this Ulysses Travel Guide. Revealing the City of Angels’ renowned neighborhoods, from Beverly Hills to Hollywood and Pasadena, this guide will also take you to the mythical beaches of Venice, Malibu and Santa Monica, and to the city’s great museums, such as Exposition Park and the famous Getty Center.

In this guide you will find: descriptions of all the sites, star-rated so you can spot the “must-sees” at a glance; a precise, extensive listing of countless hotels, restaurants, nightclubs and shops for all tastes and budgets; excursions to Santa Catalina Island, Palm Springs and even Disneyland; more than 25 maps to help you plan your itinerary.

Let the Ulysses Travel Guide Los Angeles become your passport to the second-largest city in the United States!


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The Rough Guide to Los Angeles 3 (Rough Guide Travel Guides) (Paperback)

The Rough Guide to Los Angeles 3 (Rough Guide Travel Guides)

Amazon.com Review

From glamour and glitz to the La Brea tar pits, The Rough Guide Los Angeles takes readers on an informed and well-balanced tour of L.A.’s many personalities. Maps and lists of travel basics help clarify the tangle of freeways and present the diverse cityscape, neighborhood by neighborhood, for easy exploration. Brief cultural and historical essays place contemporary sights in context, introduce famous residents, and take on L.A.’s recent past of riots, gangs, mass-transit problems, and racial tensions. Sections on the rise of Hollywood, on books and films in L.A., and glossaries prove valuable inclusions. Thorough, honest accounts coupled with critical savvy give this guide a smart, streetwise flair. –Byron Ricks
–This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


Product Description

INTRODUCTION

A maddening collection of freeways and beaches, fast-food joints and theme parks, seedy suburbs and high-gloss neighborhoods, Los Angeles is California?s biggest and most stimulating city ? though an unconventional one by any standard. Indeed, LA?s character is so shifting and elusive ? understandable “only dimly, and in flashes,” according to F. Scott Fitzgerald ? that the city might be freely dismissed by many outsiders if it weren?t so central to the world?s mass culture. Its multiple personalities and lack of any unifying design make it seem at first neither approachable, nor perhaps even enjoyable; but once the free-spirited chaos of the place takes hold, you?ll be hard-pressed to resist.

Made up of scores of distinct municipalities, LA is a model for modern city development, having traded urban centralization for suburban sprawl and high-rise corporate towers for strip malls. It gets more than ample opportunity to show off its wares because of its stature as global entertainment center, which paints a picture of a sunny and glamorous place like no other. It is certainly unique, an unpredictable and addictive assault on the senses, where mud-wrestling venues and porn cinemas stand next door to chic boutiques and trendy restaurants, the whole of it under constant threat of the next earthquake, flood, or natural disaster.

Despite this uniqueness, LA has much in common with other major US cities. With the largest combined port in the country (and biggest in the world outside of China), LA is a center for transpacific trade and a dominant financial hub in its own right. Meanwhile, LA?s social gaps are quite broad, and there appears to be no end in sight for the nasty racial divisions broadcast to the world during the 1992 riots. Not a simple matter of black versus white, LA?s unparalleled diversity means that more languages are spoken here than in any other US city, even as some residents ? especially white suburbanites ? cordon themselves off from one another in gated communities.

Unlike more conventional cities, LA does not reward an attraction-oriented itinerary, going from one museum or official exhibit to the next. While there are world-class institutions here ? the Getty Center foremost among them ? the sights that are most worth seeing tend to be separated by vast distances, and you?ll doubtless spend most of your time on the freeway if you try to see them all. Instead, LA is perhaps best experienced as the locals do, by way of its innovative restaurants and dynamic nightlife, funky shopping strips and colorful boardwalks. Surprisingly for such a huge place, many of these places are concentrated in fairly compact neighborhoods, such as Venice and Old Pasadena, where you can often leave your car in a parking lot or just take public transit to get there. Outside the central city, LA can be surprisingly relaxing as well, whether you?re lounging on a deserted beach, taking an island tour of Santa Catalina, or skiing in the eastern mountains.



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