Newcomer's Handbook Neighborhood Guide: Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston, and Austin (Newcomer's Handbooks)
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Average customer review:Product Description
This new book, first in our Newcomer's Handbook Neighborhood Guide series, focuses on the neighborhoods within Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston, and Austin, as well as on all the surrounding suburban communities. It provides detailed information about the types of housing and recreational opportunities found in each community, the character of each area, and helpful data on post offices, police departments, hospitals, libraries, schools, public transportation, and community publications and resources.
Following an introductory section, the Newcomer's Handbook Neighborhood Guide: Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston, and Austin devotes about 28% of its text to Dallas and its suburbs, including the Metrocrest and the Mid-Cities; about 18% to the Fort Worth region; 31% to Houston and surrounding communities, including Galveston; and 20% to the Austin area, including Round Rock.
Part of the Newcomer's Handbook series, called "invaluable" and "highly recommended" by Library Journal.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #434051 in Books
- Published on: 2006-10-30
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 251 pages
Customer Reviews
Useful as a general overview
I purchased this because we are considering a move to Austin. I had hoped to get the down and dirty information about the different neighborhoods, but instead got only the standard Chamber of Commerce type descriptions (all pros, no cons). It did help me to identify several neighborhoods that I didn't know the names of before.
Fairly good introduction to the neighborhoods
I used the listing on this book for Austin. It was very useful and quite accurate. I visited a lot of neighborhoods in and around Austin using this book.
chock full of valuable information
Ah, how luck changes. I once lived with my favorite person in my favorite neighborhood in my favorite city in the world: Austin, Texas. It was just the two of us. Quiet, peaceful and weird.
I also lived in what used to be my favorite apartment; it was perfect, until I unknowingly took in a flock of hungry, loved-starved fleas. Since that happened I have been fighting a constant war against these parasitic vermin. And it's not just me. Every neighbor I know has the same problem--and many do not even own a pet, which leaves us all, for better or worse, scratching our heads and everywhere else for a solution.
And this is why I'm on a quest for a new home in a new neighborhood - one free of fleas - a space with no more inhabitants than my husband and me, with a wish that I can, once again, wear short shorts without being embarrassed by the bite marks on my legs. So, let me be the first to say that studying the Dallas-Forth Worth, Houston, and Austin Neighborhood Guide was paramount to me. As the marketers write in the cover, these guides are "designed to help you find the community that is right for you."
It's the first book in the series, and it's chock full of valuable information about community publications, police departments, post offices, hospitals, libraries, schools, parks, websites and public transportation. It coverage includes the ins and outs of neighborhoods near and far, and it even speaks to the scintillating suburban areas of Dallas-Forth Worth, Houston, and Austin; fair suburbs, I raise my strip-mall purchased glass to thee! The book also chronicles the history of each different area, albeit from the perspective of a white, middle-class, male-leaning perspective.
The authors undoubtedly favor families, too, and though I have yet to help overpopulate the planet myself, I really have found its scrupulous details helpful in my new home search. The deft research deserves applause, but the book might be more enjoyable if it offered information about the shops, restaurants, and cultural aspects--you know, the things that make a neighborhood, well, a neighborhood.
While it's not an even mildly entertaining read, the book might prove useful. So, if you're living in or planning a move to Dallas, Houston, or Austin, it will give you an idea of your new surroundings. But you might, by serendipity, find a pub in one of the neighborhoods described and enjoy a nice beer in place of the cost of the book.




