Visiting Small Town Florida
|
| List Price: | $14.95 |
| Price: | $10.17 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
24 new or used available from $9.05
Average customer review:Product Description
Bruce Hunt has combined and updated the two volumes of his popular Visiting Small-Town Florida series to bring you this exciting, new venture into real, old-timey Florida. Take a road trip around the Sunshine State with Bruce Hunt as he visits 70 of Florida’s most charming, historic, and often eclectic small towns—places with names like Sopchoppy, Ozello, and Two Egg. Tour historic districts, museums, galleries, antiques shops, and great local eateries. Marvel at the intricate architecture of past centuries. Learn about each town’s history and meet some of the unusual and endearing characters who call these small towns home.
This travelogue and guide book lets you experience the flavor of Florida’s backroads burgs and provides directions, addresses, phone numbers, and websites. Here at your fingertips is all the information you’ll need to make one (or all) of these special places a weekend or vacation destination.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #175954 in Books
- Published on: 2003-09
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 232 pages
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Bruce Hunt is a native Floridian freelance writer/author, photographer, and illustrator. His work has appeared in numerous publications, including the Tampa Tribune, the St. Petersburg Times, Backpacker Magazine, Rock & Ice Magazine, Skydiving Magazine, and Water Ski Magazine, among others. He is also a frequent speaker and slide show presenter for historical societies, libraries, booksellers, and writers groups, and he has taught travel writing seminars at the Colorado Writers Workshop. Bruce Hunt’s Adventure Sports in Florida and Florida’s Finest Inns and Bed and Breakfasts are also available from Pineapple Press.
Customer Reviews
This is Florida the way it used to be!
This book depicts a side of Florida rarely seen. Although in the last 50 years or so Florida has experienced unparalled growth at the hands greedy developers and susceptible politicians, this book proves that some of what makes Florida great still exists. Small towns such as Arcadia, Cedar Key, and LaBelle are mirrors into Florida's past, preserving the diverse history of our state while retaining their small-town character. One of things that surprised me the most about this book is the fact that there are still some small towns on the Florida coast. Towns like Boca Grande and St. George Island prove that a sustainable coastal community can be retained without high-rise condos and tacky tourist shops. Nonetheless, most of the towns depicted here are in the interior of the state, which for the most part has retained its small town character (with the exception of Orlando, a true eye-sore smack dab in the middle of the state). Tourists should buy this book to appreciate the true Southern flavor of a state taken over by Yankees. I should know--I'm a fifth-generation Florida cracker!
I visited small town Florida
I took this book along when we went to Florida over Thanksgiving. While we did the usual Orlando stuff, we also visited several of the towns listed in the book. It was a great experience to see what is "off the beaten path". Small towns with everyday people going about their daily business, much like our own home town. It was nice to walk through shops and sit down at restaurants that didn't have a "theme". If you are going to Florida, I highly reccomend it as a travel guide.
Get Off The Beaten Path
Be sure to look for the newer edition (2003) as it covers 70 small towns. I started out thinking I would just dip into this, and read a few pages here and there. Then it turned out to be so interesting with Florida history, local tidbits, interesting people and architecture, that I read it straight through.
Now I can't wait to visit Havana to see the antique shops or to see the 36 murals in Lake Placid.
Some of the towns merely have interesting names (Yeehaw Junction) or a single sight, but many sound worthwhile for a day trip or longer visit. Probably should keep this book in the car while in Florida and check it occasionally to see if you are near any of these interesting places.
It is arranged by regions (north, central and south),





