The Unofficial Guide Walt Disney World 2010 (Unofficial Guides)
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Average customer review:Product Description
- In 2008, combined Walt Disney World Resort© theme park attendance reached over 51 million, with the Magic Kingdom alone drawing over 17 million visitors. (Orlando Convention and Visitor Bureau)
- Despite signifcant downturns in the economy, Disney theme parks have maintained attendance rates and made gains in attendance at some parks.
- Walt Disney World Resort theme parks are rated best in the world. earning high marks for things outside of the traditional theme park experience. Epcot's International Food & Wine Festival, which takes place for six weeks every fall and showcases food from twenty-five countries, was rated by Forbes Traveler as one of the Best U.S. Food and Wine Festivals.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1673 in Books
- Published on: 2009-08-31
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 912 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9780470460269
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Test Your Disney Smarts!
Amazon-exclusive quiz from author Bob Sehlinger
Amazon-exclusive content from author Bob Sehlinger 1. Select the time of year for your visit: Walt Disney World is busiest Christmas Day through New Year’s Day. Thanksgiving weekend, the week of Washington’s birthday, the first full week of November, spring break for colleges, and the two weeks around Easter are also times when visitation can peak at 92,000 visitors in a single day. The park is far less crowded during the off season, but be advised that the parks often open late and close early during that time. You can find detailed charts and info on the best times to visit in The Unofficial Guide to Walt Disney World. 2. Shape up: Visiting Disney World requires levels of industry and stamina more often associated with running marathons. As you plan your time at Disney World, consider your physical limitations. It’s exhausting to rise at dawn and run around a theme park for 8 to 12 hours day after day. Every Disney World vacation itinerary should include days when you don’t go to a theme park and days when you sleep in and take the morning off. Plan these to follow unusually long and arduous days. 3. Formulate your park plan: First-time visitors should see Epcot first; you’ll be able to enjoy it without having been preconditioned to think of Disney entertainment as solely fantasy or adventure. See Animal Kingdom second. Like Epcot, it’s educational, but its live animals provide a change of pace. Next, see Disney’s Hollywood Studios, which helps transition from the educational Epcot and Animal Kingdom to the fanciful Magic Kingdom. Also, because DHS is smaller, you won’t walk as much or stay as long. Save the Magic Kingdom for last; it’s the park that epitomizes Disney World for most visitors. 4. Create your touring plan: Which rides and attractions appeal most to you? What are you willing to forgo? Planning your day in advance can save you up to four hours of waiting time in line. We have developed a hierarchy of categories that will help you evaluate each ride and plan the best way to enjoy them all. For example, SUPER-HEADLINERS are the best attractions the theme park has to offer – and they usually have the longest lines. MINOR ATTRACTIONS are midway-type rides, small “dark” rides (cars on a track, zigzagging through the dark) and walk-through attractions—which can be a lot of fun, without the long wait. Remember that bigger and more elaborate doesn’t always mean better. See examples of touring plans (and create your own) in The Unofficial Guide to Walt Disney World. 5. Getting hungry?: There are three lessons to learn before you dine in the parks. One: Theme-park restaurants rush their customers in order to make room for the next group of diners. If you want to linger over your expensive meal, don’t order your entire dinner at once. Order drinks. Study the menu while you sip, then order appetizers. Tell the waiter you need more time to decide among entrees. Order your main course only after appetizers have been served. Dawdle over dessert. Two: If you’re dining in a theme park and cost is an issue, make lunch your main meal. Entrees are similar to those on the dinner menu, but prices are significantly lower. Three: Disney adds a surcharge of $4 per adult and $2 per child to certain popular restaurants during weeks of peak attendance, including Easter, Thanksgiving, and Christmas, and in 2009 every day from Memorial Day through July 4.
From the Back Cover
"Best Travel Series of the Year"
—Booklist
"A Tourist's Best Friend!"
—Chicago Sun-Times
"Indispensable"
—The New York Times
Five Great Features and Benefits offered ONLY by The Unofficial Guide:
1 Exclusively patented, field-tested touring plans that save as much as four hours of standing in line in a single day
2 New color section with practical information for your trip
3 More than 200 hotels rated and ranked for quality and value, including the top non-Disney hotels for families
4 A complete Dining Guide with ratings and reviews of all Walt Disney World restaurants, plus extensive alternatives for dining deals outside the World
5 Attractions rated and ranked for each age group; extensive, objective, head-to-head comparisons of the Disney and Universal theme parks
Customer Reviews
Missing pages.
I would be giving this book 5 stars but I'm posting this review as a "heads up". I received my copy and discovered it was missing pages 179-242. I've got the 2009 version and use it often but the missing pages in the 2010 ed. dealt with Disney resorts we were looking to stay at. It's obviously a printing error but I'm holding off on a replacement until they've had time to correct it.
Big Book lacking Photos on Disney World with Errors and Missing Details
This book is the most detailed book about Disney World. It lacks some details on some shows but covers the majority of these shows. The book also lacks photos on Disney World Parks and Resorts. It includes excellent detail on Universal Orlando Resort and the attractions there and at Disney World. The dining information includes sample dining items and a detailed price lists for counter service items and some items at the local grocery store. The only thing it really lacks is some printing errors and some information on shows and the pictures. This book however is an excellent read with great detail on almost everything possible at Disney World. This could be one of my top favorite guides to the Walt Disney World Resort. The attractions include information that includes could deatil but not all the details that spoil the attraction from you. This book explains to you almost everything possible for you to enjoy your vacation. The problems with this book are the prices are outdated for hotels and the dining plan. The book also does not include information on all of the shows, but only on a select few live entertainment offerings. The printing errors include couple glitches in touring plans where numbers are cut off and the one resort says it cost $7 to stay at that resort. The book also only offers a select few photos for the book. The book lacks details on Captain Jack's Pirate Tutorial and World Showcase entertainment offerings and Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios and Animal Kingdom Street Entertainment. The book also tooked away the free website access for buying the book which is misrepresented in the book. The water park and Disney Quest attractions are not covered like the theme park attractions are and water parks and Disney Quest do not contain maps.
Things that this book could do is update the prices, add more photos, and add more detail to the shows and information about attractions and this book could be the best one out there.
A favorite!
This is the second edition we bought (first in 1998). It is very helpful for me (I need to know everything about a place before I go to really enjoy the trip) to read about all the little details and hints that the Official Guide skips over. (I bought the 2010 edition of the Birnbaum's Official Guide as well for my husband, who gets into the trip better with the Disney feel and color photographs, which the Unofficial Guide lacks.)
The Unofficial Guide has information about the other Orlando area attractions, which is helpful since we usually take one day off from WDW. It also gives detailed descriptions and ratings of hotels in the area, which is nice, even though I always stay on the WDW property.
Anyone who really enjoys planning their trip would enjoy this book!




