Added by: bukka | Karma: 785.36 | Non-Fiction, Dictionaries and Encyclopedias | 28 March 2008
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Looking for a travel guide that goes where other guides fear to tread? One that rides roughshod over ad-copy puffery to smartly deliver the real scoop on a destination's sites and attractions? One that dares to be honest, hip, and fun? Look no more. Frommer's Irreverent Travel Guides are wickedly irreverent, unabashedly honest, and downright hilarious, and provide an insider's perspective on which attractions are overrated tourist traps and which are the secret gems that locals love. You'll get the lowdown on restaurants, lodging, and shopping, and even find out what the locals think of you.
The Encyclopedia of Community focuses on the hard-to-define
concept of community and works to explore and position that concept
within many disciplines and contexts. Entries such as Apartheid, Blogs, County fairs, Eugenics, Gangs, Shtetls, Social Darwinism, and Third places display the wide scope that the editors and contributors give to the notion of community.
Maurice Schwartz, Editor of the much acclaimed Encyclopedia of Beaches
and Coastal Environments (Hutchinson Ross, 1982) has now brought forth
a new volume with a fresh interdisciplinary approach that includes
geomorphology, ecology, engineering, technology, oceanography, and
human activities as they relate to coasts. Within its covers the
Encyclopedia of Coastal Science includes many aspects of the coastal
sciences that are only to be found scattered among scientific
literature. (1211 pages)
These 400 alphabetically arranged articles provide detailed accounts of
how Western maritime empires and their customs and values spread to all
corners of the globe, ultimately shaping the development of
non-European societies. Each one presents not only facts, but also
interpretations of the impact of European colonialism and is well
supported by charts, tables, maps, and black-and-white illustrations.