Hike to thundering waterfalls near a volcano, climb slopes of gold and red on a drive through the cascades, wander around the largest Chinese garden outside China, browse the stalls of a bustling historic market, or educate your palate with delicious pinot noir and pinot blanc— Fodor's Pacific Northwest offers all these experiences and more! Our local writers have traveled throughout the area to find the best hotels, restaurants, attractions and activities to prepare you for a journey of stunning variety. Before you leave for your trip be sure to pack your Fodor's guide to ensure you don't miss a thing.
The San Francisco Chronicle sums it up best —"Fodor's guides are saturated with information."
- We frequently update our Pacific Northwest guide, and we make every effort to bring you the most accurate and thorough book. Plus we provide timely updates about the area to Fodors.com. - Unlike other travel books, Fodor's guides rely heavily on local experts who know the territory best—so you know you're seeing the real Pacific Northwest. - We give you the planning tools you need to tailor your trip. We give options for all budgets. You make the choices.
----------------------------------- With Fodor’s you get much more than a guidebook–we make it easy for you to customize your dream vacation.
Visit www.fodors.com to find up-to-date travel bargains, mini-guides to worldwide destinations, information on local festivals, dazzling drives, maps, vacation planning tips and much more!
And, for more insider secrets, visit “Travel Talk” and “Rants and Raves” online at www.fodors.com/forums to get advice from other travelers like you.
Fodor's Travel Publications is a United States-based producer of English-language travel guides and online tourism information. It was founded by Hungarian Eugene Fodor in 1936. Fodor’s was acquired by Random House in 1986 and sold to Internet Brands in 2016.
Quite helpful in planning a trip. This travel book is well-organized, and the links made it easy to get to the longer reviews and descriptions on the Fod0r site (at least from the Kindle edition).
One small thing that didn't detract, but did strike me as amusing was a trend I noticed in descriptions. Apparently, the author of these descriptions is fixated on ceilings, especially in restaurants and wineries. The taller, loftier, more soaring, etc. they are, the better. I have a feeling that every new place I walk into now, I'm going to look first at the ceilings. At the same time, not one word about the floors of any of the hotels, and that's something I definitely look at when traveling. "Do I want to walk on that barefoot? Nah."
My mother gifted this to me for Christmas since I am planning a 2020 Pacific Northwest tour with our kiddos. I blew through this book quickly--it is well paced and logical and offers so many wonderful travel ideas and schedules for this area. I wish we could do them all! But sadly, we only have two weeks to see Oregon, Washington, a smidge of Victoria, BC, and Alaska (separate book for that one!) But I appreciate the detail and thought put into this edition and look forward to hitting some of their highlighted features.
I honestly just cannot with their enthusiasm about zoos/aquariums/captivity as travel entertainment. For the rest of you this is probably a 3 or 4 star review guide book. Anyway I'm usually a Lonely Planet girl but I found this in a little free library before my trip to Vancouver and Oregon. I did learn some fun stuff. I've now passed it on to... the unknown person who will pick it up in Seattle.
Love it that Fodor's breaks out a city by neighborhood and includes useful tips, like where to find a hiking trail inside Seattle or outside the city. It also keeps it real with phrases like, "If you don't enjoy....you may find visiting the island boring."I like that it helps maintain people's expectations. Additionally, the Outdoors sections are divided into boating and kayaking, hiking, etc., which is nice.
I would have enjoyed seeing a table of things like: bookstores, grocery stores, outdoor parks, etc. or at least a way to find them. I didn't always receive cell phone service, so just a listing of things would have been helpful. I had not realized this book lacked that. Maybe it's trying to cover too much so it ends up not being helpful for a specific area, not sure.
Useful & full of information, but could have been better organized. It was a bit clumsy to search for particular information/places and map out your route. Could also use better map placement.
Covering Washington, Oregon, and Vancouver, this book was fitting for me because of the dining and lodging guide to Portland. I also liked the Willamette Valley and Wine Country itineraries.
I love Fodor's guidebooks, and this is no exception. They manage to hit all the hot spots, while also addressing things like marijuana legalization in these states. Whether you want a great hotel or restaurant, or a some historical background on a place, this guide has the information you need.