The Maple Book Corner
 Main Menu

  Home Page
  Our Links
  Reciprocal Links
  Feedback
  Search

  Top 50 Sellers

 Book Menu

  Best Sellers
  Arts & Photo
  Bargain
  Basement

  Biographies
  Business
  Children's
  Books

  Computers,
  Internet

  Cooking, Food
  Engineering
  Entertainment
  Health
  History
  Home & Garden
  Horror
  Law
  Literature,
  Fiction

  Medicine
  Michael Crichton
  Mystery,
  Thrillers

  Nonfiction
  Outdoors,
  Nature

  Parenting,
  Families

  Professional,
  Tech

  Reference
  Religion
  Romance
  Science
  Science Fiction
  Sports
  Star Trek
  Star Wars
  Stephen King
  Teens
  Travel
  True Crime
  Women's
  Fiction

  Women's
  Health

Keyword Search:
In Association with Amazon.com

Maui Revealed: The Ultimate Guidebook, Second Edition - Paperback

Buy Used/3rdParty

More product information

Find other editions
(Softback, Hardback, Audio, E-Book)

Maui Revealed: The Ultimate Guidebook, Second Edition

List Price: $14.95    Our Price: $10.17

You Save: 32%

Paperback - 01 November, 2002
Wizard Publications
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Author: Andrew Doughty, Harriett Friedman
ISBN: 0971727902

Number of Media: 1

More books by Andrew Doughty


Similar Products

                      


Reviews From Our Customers

Best Tourist Guide Ever Written

My wife and I just returned from our honeymoon in Maui where we used this book religiously every day. We found the reviews and ratings in this book to be right on. Warren and Annabelle's magic show was awesome as described; the driving tips for Hana (e.g., leave early) were very helpful; and the olivine pools were spectacular. If you are planning a trip to Maui, this book should be a requirement. The book saved us lots of money by steering us away from overpriced restaurants, boring activities, and other tourist traps. My only regret is that my wife and I could only partake in a small fraction of the wonderful things that Maui has to offer. Some things the book doesn't describe that should be included in a second addition are the Saturday morning Kahului Swap Meet (great t-shirt prices and cheap fruit); the Oct. 31 Halloween celebration in Lahaina (20,000 crazy Hawaiians and tourists walking Front Street); and a tour of Ono Plantation (outside Hana) where you can sample exotic fruit that you've never even heard of before.


The best and worst

This is a hard one to review, because while this and the others in the series are wonderfully organized, expertly written and unbelievably detailed, they also reveal the deepest secrets of the Hawaiian Islands, previously only known to locals.

First, the positives. You won't find a better tour book for Hawaii, on or off the islands - period. This goes for every book of the series - Maui, Oahu, Kauai and the Big Island. Doughty and Friedman expertly steer you around the islands, avoiding the crowds and avoiding the tourist traps (like the bike ride down Haleakala). You'll get tons of practical touring strategies, like, for example, on Maui, taking the Road to Hana later in the day and spending the night in Hana so you can have the Seven Pools to yourself for a few hours in the morning. That's just one example from the series; each and every book is loaded with this kind of pragmatism, so even on your first trip you'll feel like a seasoned visitor.

Every aspect of your trip is covered in the books, from the sites to see and avoid, the restaurants to hit, the best hotels, camping options, and island history. Every type of traveler from the luxury $1000 per night tourist to the canvas tent hiker will find useful info. More than anything, while realizing how much of Hawaii is truly still hidden to you in the almost uninhabitable reaches of the jungles and volcanic residues, you'll still feel as though you're seeing as much of it as any outsider can see.

Now for the bad. Because Doughty and Friedman live on the islands and have explored every hidden waterfall and pool, they are privy to spots on the islands that even many locals are unaware of. And naturally, many of the areas are located on private property. This however, doesn't seem to bother the writers. After giving a detailed description of how to access a remote waterfall on private property (stuff like, "Park on the pull-off a few hundred yards after mile-marker 23, and scale the guardrail. You should see a path that winds down into a bamboo forest. At the bottom of the path, go *left*, not right, away from the river..." etc.), they follow it up with a limp disclaimer, like "Technically, this is Hawaiian Forest and Game property, but we've been hiking on it for years without a problem..." The bottom line is that while the places they tell you to go are private and amazing, by definition these magnificent spots can't last. Because they've been revealed (as the book titles promise), a hidden location that may have previously had only a few dozen visitors per year now gets five or six visitors a day, thus destroying the serenity and privacy of the location, ruining what is the reason for going there in the first place. So it's somewhat of a self-defeating book, since by revealing these remote locations they are also condemning them to extinction.

Lastly, these books are quite popular and already the hidden waterfalls and trails are not so hidden. More than once I hiked a mile or two through rough, muddy terrain and rushing rivers to reach a waterfall, where I found a soccer mom, an over-weight dad in flip-flops, and two four-year olds frolicking in the pool, one of the inevitably clutching their copy of "Maui Revealed" or "Oahu Revealed." That sort of detracts from the sense of adventure I built up on the way there. In addition, some of the private property areas that he says have no signs posted now have "Keep Out!" signs posted in response to the hundreds of trespassers following Doughty and Friedman's advice. So be aware that some trails they mention as remote and tolerant of hikers may now be *very* intolerant to trespassers.

While this book is an incredible guidebook and you *should* use it to plan your Hawaiian vacation, ultimately, let your conscience be your guide as to where you do and don't venture.


Unfocused .

Frommer's was better in terms of real facts and information I needed. I liked Frommer's because when I needed an address or recommendation or restaurant price range I could find it in a snap. I found Maui Revealed a fictional work badly representing this perfectly beautiful spot.

 

Amazon.Com prices and availability subject to change.