Fodor’s New York City 2010 (Full-Color Gold Guides)
- ISBN13: 9781400008377
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Fodor’s. For Choice Travel Experiences.
Fodor’s helps you unleash the possibilities of travel by providing the insightful tools you need to experience the trips you want. Although you’re at the helm, Fodor’s offers the assurance of our expertise, the guarantee of selectivity, and the choice details that truly define a destination. It’s like having a friend in New York City!
•Your vacation never looked better. This Fodor’s full-color guide paints an unforgettable picture of New York City with vibrant maps, vividly illustrated features, and stunning color photos.
•Updated annually, Fodor’s New York City provides the most accurate and up-to-date information available in a guidebook.
•Fodor’s New York City features options for a variety of budgets, interests, and tastes, so you make the choices to plan your trip of a lifetime.
•If it’s not worth your time, it’s not in this book. Fodor’s discriminating ratings, including our top tier Fodor’s Choice designations, ensure that you’ll know about the most interesting and enjoyable places in New York City.
•Experience New York City like a local! Fodor’s New York City includes unique photo-features that impart the city’s culture, covering trips to the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island; quintessential museum; a look at Ground Zero; Central Park activities; and much more!
•Indispensable, customized trip planning tools include “Top Reasons to Go,” “Word of Mouth” advice from other travelers, and tips to help save money, bypass lines, and avoid common travel pitfalls.
•Full-color pullout map
Visit Fodors.com for more ideas and information, travel deals, vacation planning tips, reviews and to exchange travel advice with other travelers.
Rating:
(out of 22 reviews)
List Price: $ 19.99
Price: $ 11.96



Review by Steven A. Peterson for Fodor’s New York City 2010 (Full-Color Gold Guides)
Rating:
This is a good resource if you are thinking of visiting New York City. Frommer’s is another resource, too.
However, this volume has a number of very important pluses. For one thing, there are well detailed maps of different parts of the city.
For another, there are very helpful maps of museums. For instance, the floor plan map of the American Museum of Natural History would be most useful for people wanting to explore this facility. Just so with a map of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. And so on.
As with other publications, there are sections on hotels, restaurants, shopping, entertainment, etc. Very well done in this volume. The problem, of course, is that there is much change. Restaurants come and go; the same with other facilities. Nonetheless, this volume provides enough depth that such matters are only secondary.
All in all, this is a good reference for those who are thinking of visiting New York City.
Review by Mom of 4 Boys for Fodor’s New York City 2010 (Full-Color Gold Guides)
Rating:
This Fodor’s guidebook does a thorough job of breaking down the different neighborhoods of NYC (with helpful maps), and there are some unexpected extras, such as a full-color section on Central Park (with maps), a section on the galleries of the Metropolitan Museum of Art (with a gallery floorplan), and a detailed section on “Ground Zero.” However, this book also seems to leave out “insider tips” that I found in Frommer’s NYC guidebooks (such as Frommer’s “New York City Day by Day” or the “Portable NYC” guide). For instance, while the Fodor’s book does explain how to catch the free Staten Island Ferry, Frommer’s “Portable” guide recommends that you sit on the right side for the best views of the Statue of Liberty. Despite all its break-out maps, Fodor’s guide doesn’t include a theatre district map. In addition, information on transportation options for getting to and from the area airports is shoved to the back of the guidebook like an afterthought. Finally, the organization wasn’t the most effective for me; attractions are organized by neighborhood, so if you don’t know, for instance, that the Empire State Building is located in the Union Square district, you have to use the index. It would be nice to have an overview of famous sites at the beginning of the guide to get oriented rather than have to start out “digging” for all the places you may want to see.
Unfortunately, this 500+ page guidebook is just too bulky to carry around NYC. However, it does provide a solid overview for those people still in the planning stages of their trip. I plan to take this book with me to NYC, but to pull out the lengthy sections on “Where to Stay” (I already have hotel reservations) and “Where to Dine” (I’ve already made dining arrangements). I do think Fodor’s complements the Frommer’s guides because it (Fodor’s) provides great maps and interesting historical information about some sites; however, I still prefer the portable Frommer’s guides, which provide compact, but meaty information.
Review by Blake Harding for Fodor’s New York City 2010 (Full-Color Gold Guides)
Rating:
I found this guide slightly cumbersome due to the breadth of information, but what can you expect when covering such a vastly rich expanse such as New York City? I enjoyed the pictorial nuances and especially the “Word of Mouth” section that includes what you might expect: thoughts, recommendations & suggestions from native New Yorkers. These tid-bits are included in various parts of the guide–I thought this was an exceptionally informative touch. The introduction is well written, especially the suggestion on seeing the sights on foot.
As a side note: I have visited New York on many occasions but had never invested in a guide. I would certainly recommend the Fodor’s over perhaps Frommer’s, but would also caution those to purchase a secondary guide as well. There are a couple of wonderful publications around the superficial premise of “secrets” of New York–these are actually helpful and insightful guides. I’d also recommend: The Best Things to do in New York: 1001 Ideas.
Review by tikcuf for Fodor’s New York City 2010 (Full-Color Gold Guides)
Rating:
We looked at perhaps a dozen guidebooks for NYC when we first arrived in town, and liked this one the best. Many guidebooks seem to be a bit stuffy. This one was written with warmth and panache by people who seem intimately familiar with their subject matter. The authors also included excerpts from various on-line reviews/blogs and the like which are interspersed in the text and add to the hipness of the book.
Sightseeing is particularly well covered in this book. It describes the various neighborhoods of NYC, their history, sociological quirks, as well as their architectural and cultural highlights extremely well and also includes detailed lists of restaurants and shopping opportunities in each neighborhood. The book also includes a number of interesting “field trips” which many travellers might not otherwise consider, such as a foot tour of the Brooklyn Bridge (one of the highlights of our trip), a tour of Harlem gospel choirs, pub crawls, best views, festivals, boat excursions, etc. etc. Major museums, such as the Metropolitan and MOMA are covered in great detail, and there is also an entire chapter on lesser known “niche” museums as well as detailed coverage of art galleries.
Hotels are reasonably well covered, although online review sites specifically devoted to hotels will be more comprehensive and current than any general guidebook can be. This book also does a good job covering theatre, clubs, bars, and restaurants with separate chapters devoted to each. Again, however, the NYC restaurant scene, in particular, is so vast that hard-core foodies will also want to check out Zagat’s guide and online review sites.
Review by Su for Fodor’s New York City 2010 (Full-Color Gold Guides)
Rating:
I have in addition to Fodor’s NYC 2007 the Frommers 2007 guide and Pauline Frommer’s Guide to NYC.
I wish I bought this book first. It is full of useful information and the way it’s set out makes it much easier to read than the Frommers guides. It’s organized in a much “neater” way which makes referring back certain pages very easy.
There are some attractions and tips which are not contained in this book however, which are found in my Frommers NYC 2007 guide. So having the two books makes for a good complete guide.