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Frommer's Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine (Frommer's Complete)

Product Type: Book
Product Price: $19.99
Manufacturer: Frommers
Purchase
Description
- Itineraries for special interests and overall highlights: from hiking in New Hampshire's White Mountains, to spending two weeks on the Maine Coast, to seeing the Best of Vermont in a week.
- Each chapter offers an entire "Enjoying the Outdoors" section, with tips and suggestions for every season.
- If you're a leaf-peeper, we list The Best Places to See Fall Foliage.
Per Frommer's usual convenient design, the inside flap of the front cover displays a color map of New England--so you can see the whole region at a glance--and the rest of the guidebook continues the pattern of thoughtful, practical, helpful travel information in a portable, accessible format. Chapter 1 summarizes the best of Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine: the best small towns, best country inns, best restaurants, best shopping, best family destinations, and best places to see the fall foliage. Wayne Curtis then introduces the various regions, their history and geography, literary legacy, and contemporary style. Curtis provides trip-planning details, such as climate information, a calendar of events, how best to get there and get around, and where to check on the Web for New England sites. Then come the comprehensive state sections, each with recommended places to stay and eat, a discussion of outdoor activities, and interesting snippets on the Ben & Jerry story, the history of maple syrup, ferries to Nova Scotia, and the debate over Maine's North Woods. Excellent maps accompany each section, as do lists of useful phone numbers, tourist information offices, and suggestions of what there may be to do at night, resulting in a smartly compiled guidebook with lots of useful information and no excess fluff. --Stephanie Gold
Reviews
Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2010-08-26
Summary: "Frommer's VT, NH, ME takes a fresh look at Northern New England"
I'm the editor of the latest edition of Frommer's Vermont, New Hampshire & Maine (the seventh edition!) and I love finding out about the latest that's going on in Northern New England. The author, Paul Karr, gives both specifics and a big-picture perspective of these three states that reflects both their history and how they might change (and what will surely stay the same) in the 21st century.
Paul starts it out with the Best of New England, from the classic resorts, to alternative and moderately priced accommodations, B&Bs, and the amazing variety of food & drink: from fine-dining in destination restaurants (I had one of the finest meals of my life at Primo in Rockland, ME (p. 327), which gets three stars from Paul), to the classic New England diner, like the Blue Benn, in Bennington, VT (p. 90).
It's the In-Depth chapter that gives me the measure of the region, starting with an overview of its mountains, forests and coastline (well, except Vermont's!). He gives a history of the place(s) from when and why people first settled there, and what they did, and how it changed after the Revolutionary War, and how industry came (and went), and how the various growth spurts and economic downturns of the U.S. affected the people and the landscape.
Talking about the land itself, there's a helpful guide to the flora and fauna of the region (p. 25). I haven't seen a bear or a moose in the wild (yet!), but we have been whale-watching, and we even got up close and personal with a Harris hawk in a falconry lesson at the Equinox Resort in Manchester Village, VT (p. 97).
The destination chapters proceed north and east, starting inland in Vermont, from South to North, over to Southern and Central New Hampshire (where there's a lovely section on historic Portsmouth), up to the White Mountains (and no, our car has NOT climbed Mt. Washington!), over to Coastal Maine (where I once did two seasons of summer stock, in Belfast and Bar Harbor, but that's another story...) all the way up through the North Woods.
I spend more time reading about and editing books about New England than I do traveling in one of my favorite regions. But on "the list," as in places we want to visit, is Vermont's "Northern Kingdom," where we want to follow Paul's Driving Tour from Hardwick to St. Johnsbury. I must see the Haskell Free Library and Opera house (which lies half in Vermont, half in Canada), and see the remote, beautiful St. Johnsbury Athenaeum, which features the famous painting, The Domes of Yosemite, as well as original works by members of the Hudson River School. So many guides...so many places to go...so little time.
Rating: 1 / 5
Date: 2008-09-10
Summary: "Seriously Disappointing"
I took this guide, 2008 8th Edition ( note the other reviews for this guide are very dated), along with Fodor's New England 2007, on a 10-day tour through New Hampshire & Maine. NORMANLLY, Frommer's does a very good job of guiding you to best that either a country (or state) has to offer. NOT this guide. This guide is seriously disappointing.
Yes, the guide does cover the tourist site, and like all of the major guides (Fodor's, Footprint, Rough Guide, Lonely Planet, Moon) it will point you to the "must see" places. Also, to be fair, WHEN it does list a restaurant or hotel the guide does a fairly decent job describing the place. BUT, what really set guides apart are the quality and quantity of their accommodation and restaurant recommendations. These recommendations, along with the author's writing style and the interesting sidebars filled with tidbits (this guide has none) make or break a guide.
Frommer's is dismal when it comes to restaurant recommendations. Dismal. For example, New Hampshire's largest city, and the largest city of northern New England, Manchester, has only two (2) restaurant recommendations. Two! It has one (1) accommodation listing. For New Hampshire's State Capital, Concord, there is one (1) restaurant recommendation and it is vegetarian!
Skip to Maine and if you look for restaurants or accommodations in the city of Bangor you won't find any listed. IN FACT Bangor (Maine's third-largest city) is not even mentioned! HELLO. Who in the heck is editing this guide?
I could go on about the pathetic maps, lack of statistics (population, altitude etc.) but really, save your money and get either Lonely Planet New England 2008 or Fodor's New England 2007 (strongly recommended). This guide is not recommended.
Rating: 1 / 5
Date: 2005-03-27
Summary: "Inaccurate, obnoxious, deceptive"
What's worse than a guide that doesn't know his way? A guide that leads you far up the wrong path. Imagine buying a map where the streets and roads led you into all the wrong places.
According to the ad copy: "...avoid tourist traps. Frommer's Portable Guides help you make the right travel choices...Outspoken opinions on top attractions - what's worth your time and what's not...The best hotels and restaurants in every price range, with candid reviews...The expert guidance you need to take charge and travel with confidence."
The haughty tone of this particular edition would make you think the author(s) were steeped in expert knowledge about the history and traditions of the long-standing established hotels and attractions in the region. And this illusion is effective until you arrive at more than one location expecting to find a rural paradise only to discover that it has become a gated community/housing development. So what do the authors actually know other than what they seem to have compiled from the hotel brochure you find at McDonald's? Not a whole heck of a lot.
For several of the hotels reviewed in this "guide", the reviews were obviously at least two years out of date and completely unrepresentative, to the extent that there was an impression that the guide was protecting the interests of the establishment being described, or should I say, advertised. So, am I actually paying for a compendium of advertising?
Any guide can draw a fine line between objective "candid review", favoritism and deceptive promotion. Many aspects of this guide fall into the last category. Someone's not doing their research, which is why a reader may actually pay for a book, or perhaps, someone is getting some money under the table. This guide is inaccurate and deceptive. Check their reviews at their Frommer's site on the Internet. Then check what's actually going on at sites like Tripadvisor or other travel forums. In this aspect, print is dead.
Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2001-08-14
Summary: "Lovely Northern New England"
Frommer's guidebook provides an excellent overview of the sights to see, things to do, and places to stay in the three Northern New England states of New Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine. The overviews are very accurate and provide a good description of the places, making the book an excellent way to decide where to go in the areas, and a good guidebook once you arrive.
The biggest problem with the book is that there is not enough individual descriptions of each area. Chances are most tourists are not visiting several regions in all three states, but are choosing one or two to explore in-depth. For example, I went to Bar Harbor and Acadia National Park in Maine, an area that was given around 20 pages of coverage. Therefore, more research on the specific areas you plan to visit will probably be necessary to help you get the absolute most out of your trip!
