Discover the best of Cape Cod and the Islands. Veteran travel writer and photographer Kim Grant completed hundreds of hours of on-the-road research to provide readers with select up-to-date recommendations for lodgings of every stripe; hundreds of dining reviews, from clam shacks to four-star restaurants; Cape-wide itineraries; and "Perfect Day" itineraries for each town. She leads travelers to nature preserves, bicycle trails, beaches, lighthouses, whale watching, antiques shops, local artisans, summer theatre, and nightlife. The guide also includes 22 up-to-date maps, an alphabetical "What's Where" subject guide to aid in trip planning, and handy icons that point out places of extra value, family-friendly establishments, rainy day activities, lodgings that accept pets, year-round fun, wheelchair access, and good locations to have a sunset drink.
Travel books are definitely a hard sell in an internet age, but this one does a good job of providing a helpful overview and curated lists of interesting things. Well-organized and pleasing to read.
We first came across this book a few years ago in a cottage we stayed at mid-Cape. It was the best guide in the stack and we found it came in really handy for finding obscure beaches, all types of restaurants, trails, campgrounds, and sites of historic interest. Later, when we moved to MA, we purchased a copy of the 8th edition and have since used it on many day and weekend trips to the cape and have found some of our favorites spots with this book.
It is an incredibly comprehensive guide and is organized quite clearly with listings for just about any and every place on the cape and islands...not a small feat. This is it's main strength and you can find a wealth of information on places to eat, things to do, places to explore, as well as suggested itineraries for each area of the cape that highlight the best things in each town/village/etc. I'm not one for following guidebook itineraries but the info has come in handy when we only have a small amount of time and want to find the most interesting thing in a specific area.
It is a slightly outdated edition and I have not reviewed more recent ones, but we have occasionally run into instances where posted hours differed from that which was listed in the book. I mainly chalk that up to the Cape being the Cape with odd summer hours for smaller family run venues. The main weakness of the book however really lies with it's maps: they're terrible. Depend on them only to situate yourself mentally and buy a good road map to actually get around as the maps in this book are very poorly drawn and inaccurate, some just leaving out entire main roads and intersections, much to our chagrin when we are attempting to navigate new areas.
Review of the 2021 updated version, co-authored by Katy Ward.
I enjoyed the section on Martha's Vineyard so much that I went back and read the rest of the book, even with no concrete plans to visit Cape Cod or Nantucket. Even more so than the Moon guidebooks, the Explorer's Guide series allows their writers to highlight their own voices and opinions. Thanks to this book, I now definitely want to visit Cape Cod: so many historic towns and houses, beautiful beaches, and interesting things to do.
Bookmarked for Martha's Vineyard: * Oak Bluff's Featherstone Center for the Arts (classes! exhibitions! film series!) * Mad Martha's ice cream (around the island) * Menemsha fish markets: Larsen's (name-checked in The Beetlebung Farm Cookbook: A Year of Cooking on Martha's Vineyard) and Menemsha * Oak Bluff's Island Alpacas--why yes, I *would* like to do alpaca yoga
Bookmarked for Cape Cod/Nantucket: * East Sandwich's Green Briar Nature Center & Jam Kitchen * Yarmouth Port's Edward Gorey House * Yarmouth Port's Parnassus Book Service * Harwich's cranberry bog tours * Wellfleet's Atwood-Higgins House
I read parts of this after a trip to Cape Cod focusing especially on Providencetown and Nantucket. Yes, I saw a number of the referenced attractions and especially enjoyed reading the brief historical accounts of the specific areas. In the Nantucket section I learned that Maria Mitchell, the noted female astronomer, had resided on Nantucket. Not one time in my day long trip did I hear or see any reference to Maria Mitchell, how disappointing. Good guide book overall and will refer to it for a future visit to Cape Cod.
I took the 2014 edition of this along to have a handy hard copy when our internet connections were weak. It has some good suggestions for families with young kids. When it was too cool to sit at the beach, this book provided a number of great ideas for sight seeing and related activities.
Excellent guidebook. We used his recommendations for places to eat, shop and sightsee. We were never disappointed. Without this book we would have been wandering around aimlessly for hours and days.