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Paperback Secret Hotels: Extraordinary Values in the World's Most Stunning Destinations Book

ISBN: 1584796235

ISBN13: 9781584796237

Secret Hotels: Extraordinary Values in the World's Most Stunning Destinations

A guidebook that aims to acquaint you with an array of lodgings including beachside cottages, hilltop villas and gracious, family-run guesthouses where you can stay in comfort and style without having... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Like New

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Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Nice travel book

Very nice review of off the beaten path foreign hotels. Great pics and well written.

Good Thing: The Secret's Out!

Whether you leave your cozy chair or not, "Secret Hotels" gives the reader a peek at myriad hotels that fit the gamut of sizes and styles. As a regular contributor to [...] and a travel guidebook author,[...], the book opened my eyes to places in some remote areas that I will add to my future travel itinerary. The color photos, by the way, are worth the price of the book alone. Erik Torkells sure knows a good deal when he sees one--of course; HE IS the editor of "Budget Travel" magazine. His descriptive style of writing and the behind-the-scenes stories with the innkeepers are a testimony to good travel writing. The hotels, typically priced at $200 or less a night, may just get you out of that easy chair to start dusting off the luggage--IF you can find affordable airfare to such destinations as Provence, Tahiti, Costa Rica and the French Riviera! Stacy Lytwyn Maxwell, Author/Book Reviewer/Teacher CONSUMMATE CONNECTICUT: DAY TRIPS WITH PANACHE

Beautiful places, bargain prices: go fast, before the others find out

You can't get a room during peak season at a resort for $1,500 a night --- the rich took them all long ago. So what can you get for less than $250 a night? You'd be surprised. The editors of Budget Travel challenged themselves to find resort hotels "that don't show up on big online booking engines or get written about in fussy travel magazines." They discovered an interesting, unreported truth: Not everyone who goes to live in a beautiful place is filthy rich. Some bliss-seekers have just enough capital to get themselves there and make the down payment on a property. A season of sweat equity later, and they're the proprietors of a small hotel --- a human-scaled retreat, "run by real people for real people, and run with love." This book features picture-and-text profiles of eight destinations: Provence, Bali, Cornwall, Costa Rica, Tuscany, the Caribbean, the French Riviera and Tahiti. I've spent a fair amount of time in Provence, Costa Rica and the Caribbean, so those are the sections I read most closely. Provence: I expected to find all the recommended hotels far from the madding crowd, tucked away on rocky hillsides in the Luberon. Well, the Mas du Loriot (the book says it's $63 to $157 a night --- but that was before the Euro began to stomp the dollar) is in those hills, but that's a good thing: Each room has a private terrace overlooking lavender fields. If you're off to see the Pont du Gard, La Begude Saint-Pierre ($88 to $251) is nearby; with welcome candor, the text alerts you that a few of its 23 rooms are right near the road. There's an urban hotel in Arles, a 12-room inn just five miles north of St.-Remy, a 23-room charmer five minutes from Avignon, and, to round it off, an auberge in a 12th century building in the Luberon. A nice selection, all with contact information that includes web sites. Costa Rica: We were there as eco-tourism was just revving up. But we never got to the Ylang Ylang Beach Resort (from $120, including breakfast and dinner), reachable by a 15-minute beach walk. Might have been worth it just for the swimming pool that has its own waterfall. We also missed the more developed Pacific coast, though the Amor de Mar (from $55) seems absolutely bucolic. Also on the Pacific side is the dramatic Moana Lodge (from $60), where surfers chill under Zulu shields. From the photographs, I could easily develop a soft spot for the 8-room, Swiss-owned hotel called The Place, and I am a fool for any hotel that's named after Milarepa, the Tibetan Buddhist saint. The rest of the hotels are all on the Pacific, which made me wonder: nothing in the rain forest or the Ossa Peninsula? Tuscany: It's the Provence of France. And so my initial thought was: Why not Umbria, just as nice and delightfully overlooked? Then I looked at La Rignana ($133 to $177), in the vineyards of Chianti, and Podere Torrena ($240, including breakfast and dinner) in nearby Radda. Ancient houses, carved furniture, family-style dinners --- what's not to lik
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