Scenic Driving Kentucky
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Average customer review:Product Description
Scenic Driving Kentucky accompanies you on 37 drives through some of the most beautiful scenery in the United States. From Totz to Firebrick and Rabbit Hash to Monkey's Eyebrow, you will see the magnificent horse barns in the Bluegrass country, covered bridges, and the rugged beauty of Red River Gorge. In the Eastern mountains travel the Country Music Highway, visit Grayson and Paintsville Lakes, and take in the beautiful mountain scenery along Kentucky 32 between Louisa and Morehead. In addition to the scenery, you will read about the blue people of Troublesome Creek, the real inventor of radio, the mummies of Mammoth Cave, the tortuous journeys of Mary Ingles and Jenny Wiley, and much, much more. This FalconGuide provides comprehensive route descriptions, including travel information on local services, best seasons to travel, historic sites, parks, preserves, and more. So pack up the car, grab your camera and Scenic Driving Kentucky, and explore the land of Daniel Boone and Colonel Sanders.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #274561 in Books
- Published on: 2000-04-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 256 pages
Editorial Reviews
From the Back Cover
Scenic Driving Kentucky accompanies you on 37 drives through some of the most beautiful scenery in the United States. From Totz to Firebrick and Rabbit Hash to Monkey's Eyebrow, you will see the magnificent horse barns in the Bluegrass country, covered bridges, and the rugged beauty of Red River Gorge. In the Eastern mountains travel the Country Music Highway, visit Grayson and Paintsville Lakes, and take in the beautiful mountain scenery along Kentucky 32 between Louisa and Morehead. In addition to the scenery, you will read about the blue people of Troublesome Creek, the real inventor of radio, the mummies of Mammoth Cave, the tortuous journeys of Mary Ingles and Jenny Wiley, and much, much more. This FalconGuide provides comprehensive route descriptions, including travel information on local services, best seasons to travel, historic sites, parks, preserves, and more. So pack up the car, grab your camera and Scenic Driving Kentucky, and explore the land of Daniel Boone and Colonel Sanders.
Customer Reviews
Good Idea; Poor Detail
This is a good starting place for searching out interesting drives, but you'll want to go online and/or purchase additional books to get any in-depth information about history or anything else in the area. Gives little more than the actual driving route.
for people who don't like getting out of their car
The authors of this "scenic driving" book took the title of the publisher's series quite literally, which means they rarely venture far away from their vehicle. This is a book for people who don't want to get out of their car, who prefer to see the world through their windshield. Maybe there are people out there who are actually looking for a book like that. But I expect a book that directs me to places where I can do some investigating (by hiking or taking cave tours or etc.). This isn't that book. As another reviewer pointed out, the authors drive into a corner of Mammoth Cave and then immediately exit the park. They go nowhere near Big South Fork. They spend much of the Land Between the Lakes section talking about an inventor named Stubblefield while neglecting the true subject of the drive -- LBL. During each drive, the authors typically choose to focus on one aspect, providing decent background on that one aspect (such as the Stubblefield example), but in the process they neglect the area that they're driving through, limiting their comments to driving directions (turn left on Highway 90, drive 2.3 miles, etc.). Once again, if you don't want to be bothered with getting out of your car (or at most you only want to waddle a few yards away from your vehicle), this book might fit your expectations. If, however, you view the book as a means to lead you to some of the best sights in the state of Kentucky -- at which point you'll get out of car and spend considerable time investigating (maybe hiking for several miles) -- well, then this book won't fit your needs. Interestingly, Scenic Driving Tennessee (which I recommend) works for both these audiences, so apparently you have to be careful with the Scenic Driving series because each author defines it a little differently.
poor entry in the Scenic Driving series
I've read several Scenic Driving books from Falcon, and this is probably the worst one. Scenic Driving the Ozarks by Don Kurz is quite good, as is Russ Manning's Scenic Driving Tennessee, but Scenic Driving Kentucky is infuriatingly bad. For example, in their description of the Mammoth Cave area, the authors don't provide any info about cave tours. They merely direct you into the park and then say "going right will take you to the visitor center and the cave tours." That's it! Then they leave the park. This is an absolute joke! Likewise, for Land Between the Lakes, the authors give horribly generic descriptions of the route, while hardly venturing away from The Trace. Author William A. Kappele is a rock hound who has written several rock hounding books, but here his description of how caves are formed (in the Mammoth Cave trip section) is full of misconceptions. He really needs to study this subject -- from real geologists, not his rock hounding buddies. This book is full of entries that contain no worthwhile information whatsoever. Co-author Cora Kappele's name is even misspelled on Page 1. Avoid this book.




