Product Details
Access Gay USA (Serial)

Access Gay USA (Serial)
From Access Press (HarperCollins)

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Product Description

Access Gay USA gives the inside story on the crowd, the scene and the important details you won't find in any other gay travel guide. What's the hottest dance club in town? What bars are where? Which hotels and restaurants make gay and lesbian guests feel the most welcome?

Access Gay USA not only provides the inside scoop on nightlife, accomodations, and restaurants, it also includes important details on local gay festivals, events, shopping, safety, visitors' information centers and more.

Written by gay and lesbian writers across the country, Access Gay USA gives travelers an insider's look at popular resorts including Provincetown, Key West and Fire Island, as well as gay magnets like New York, San Francisco and Miami's South Beach.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #3331026 in Books
  • Published on: 1998-04
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 416 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review
Access Gay USA takes gay and lesbian travelers to where the hottest dance clubs are, to bars at which to meet "compatible people," and to sights that pay homage to queer culture. You won't find information on the Statue of Liberty, for example, but you will learn that the permanent collection at the Whitney Museum includes "not-exactly-straight artists like Jasper Johns" and that it occasionally features gay-oriented exhibits. Each of the 23 cities--from Atlanta to Washington, D.C.--is introduced with a rundown on its gay culture and political climate (stay away from Atlanta's Cobb County suburb, which in 1993 passed an antihomosexual resolution). After brief coverage of transportation options, the authors delve into the heart of the guide: write-ups of gay- and lesbian-friendly restaurants, clubs, and shops, as well as outdoor activities, hotels, and sights and culture. Feel like dancing the night away while in New Orleans? Rubyfruit Jungle "is definitely where the girls are--though the high-tech dance floor, 80-foot copper bar, pool tables, and (occasionally fabulous) live music also bring in some gay guys and a few hip straights." Need a place to stay in Seattle? Try the museum-like Shafer-Baillie Mansion on Capitol Hill, which is "popular with discerning homosexuals." Color-coded text and maps make it easy to find what you're looking for and where it's located. Take along a supplementary guide for directions to mainstream sights, but rely on Access Gay USA for useful, accurate information on gay culture in the cities you visit.

About the Author
Access Press is a team of writers from across the United States that travel frequently, and know what you want and need from a guidebook and what you don't like and don't need.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Why a gay travel guide, you ask? Well, you've heard the cliché: no kids higher incomes, and always ready to party? That gays and lesbians "get around" more than the average American. As always, the truth is more complex, but there's no doubt that more than a few members of our tribe think nothing of dropping everything to zoom across the country for a wild weekend or a hot circuit party. Others save up for years for a few days of well-earned R&R. No matter where you fall on this spectrum, chances are you do your share of getting around, too.

Mainstream travel guidebooks do not specifically address the needs of a gay man or lesbian visiting an unfamiliar city or resort. What's the hottest dance club in town? In what bars will I feel at home and meet compatible people? In which hotels and restaurants are gay and lesbian guests made to feel most welcome? What historic and architectural sites reflect the contributions of our culture? This book aims to answer such questions, and to be your authoritative guide to having a cool and hot time in more than three dozen top gay destinations in the United States.

Unlike many other gay travel guides, this book focuses only on establishments and attractions that have a significant gay angle. The places listed aren't necessarily gay-owned or gay-targeted, but they are all gayfriendly and of specific interest to gay and lesbian travelers. Don't look here for information on the local Hilton or the Statue of Liberty. Not that you won't feel comfortable at the Hilton, or that gays have no interest in monuments, but duplicating what is already covered in "mainstream" guidebooks is a waste of space. This guide offers more focused coverage of what you really want-the hippest, the most interesting, the very best gay venues.

But it's not enough that a place is gay-to be included in ACCESS' Gay USA it's got to be good. If the food, service, rooms, or atmosphere are not up to snuff, you won't find them listed here (unless it's to warn you about them).

Finding your own kind of crowd in a new place isn't always easy. American gay culture is wonderfully varied, with venues in the bigger cities catering to guppies, buppies, gym bods, lipstick lesbians, bull dykes, urban primitives, Latins, cowboys, club kids, the leather crowd, and on and on. With so many choices and so little time, you want to go straight (so to speak) to the place that's right and comfortable for you. That's why each entry in this guide gives the inside scoop on the crowd, the scene, and the kinds of details you won't find in other gay guides. How else to pick among the myriad nightspots of New York City? Or the dozens of guest houses in Palm Springs?

The chapters in the book cover America's top destinations of gay interest, including popular resorts like Fire Island and Provincetown and the big gay "magnets" like New York, San Francisco, L.A.'s West Hollywood and Miami's South Beach. Feature stories on other places of gay interest, including popular regional resorts, can be found within related chapters (Northampton, for example, is in the Boston chapter, and Laguna Beach is in the Los Angeles chapter).

Each chapter starts with an overview of the destination and its gay scene, followed by basic information on transportation to and within the city/resort, and useful facts about accommodations, local gay festivals and events, shopping, safety, visitors' information centers, and the like. Finally comes a tour of the top local attractions for men and women: bars, clubs, restaurants, shops, and cultural sites, all pegged by number on a map of the area.

Many entries are accompanied by symbols that indicate that a place is mainly gay-male-oriented, mainly lesbian-oriented, or mainly gay-oriented with a male and female clientele. (See "Symbols", below.) In some cases, both genders may be welcome but only one symbol used; this indicates that the character of the establishment is defined more by patrons of one gender than the other.

Now, a couple of disclaimers: Throughout the book you'll see certain synonyms for "gay" and "lesbian" (such as "homo," "fag," "dyke," and "queer") that could be considered offensive. These words are not intended to offend anyone, but to follow common usage within the community, and to avoid the tedious repetition of "gay and lesbian." Also, you will note that some great cities have been left out of this book. Some tough choices were made to keep this book a manageable length, and only those destinations that have the largest tribe populations and attract the most gay and lesbian visitors were selected. That being said, bon voyage, play safe, and please send along your updates and comments!


Customer Reviews

Needs better editing....3
I got this book eagerly anticipating it to be updated from 1998. Unfortunately, it was not - several notable omissions (e.g., The Sports Connection in LA), several outdated entries (e.g., The Firehouse in LA), and ther choice of spots to pick and those to omit (such as Minneapolis) make this ediiton little different than the last.

That being said, this is the best overall gay travel guide around. It keeps in line with Access Press excellent manner of organization, with good maps and reviews. I just wish the contributors and/or editors would have put more time into reviewing the choices and making sure they were current.

Access Gay USA5
Received book perfectly and quickly.....Great seller!!!! Be advised this book does not contain all the cities in the USA.....just the most popular ones...not the seller's fault....I already had this book and was replacing a worn out copy....the publisher should probably update this book....it's from 2000....again, not the seller's fault and I knew what I was buying.

Very comprehensive and easy to follow5
I picked up ACCESS Gay USA before my trip to New Orleans and was delightfully surprised at its thoroughness! The maps are fantastic because they are broken up by neighborhood and there are color-coded entries of bars/clubs, restaurants, hotels and sights that are written by people who live in the area. Plus there are little "fun-facts" sprinkled throughout giving some history on areas like the French Quarter. I had a wonderful time on my trip!!