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Fodor's Exploring San Francisco, 3rd Edition (Exploring Guides)
 
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Fodor's Exploring San Francisco, 3rd Edition (Exploring Guides) [Paperback]

Fodor's (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 28, 1999 Exploring Guides
+Description=

Praise for Fodor's Exploring Guides
"Astonishingly hip."  -- New York Daily News

"Handsomely designed...Fun to leaf through...Conveys a sense of what each destination is like."  
-- The Los Angeles Times

"Authoritatively written and superbly presented...Worthy reading before, during, or after a trip."
  -- Philadelphia Inquirer

"Concise, comprehensive, and colorful."  --  Washington Post

Fodor's Exploring Guides are the most up-to-date, full-color guidebooks available.  
Covering destinations around the world, these guides are loaded with photos, essays on
culture and history, descriptions of sights, and practical information.  Full-color
photos make this a great guide to buy if you're still planning your itinerary (let the
photos help you choose!) and it's a perfect companion to a general guidebook, like a
Fodor's Gold Guide.

All the great sights plus the history and anecdotes that bring them to life

Extraordinary coverage of history and culture

Itineraries, walks and excursions, on and off the beaten path

Architecture and art

Practical tips and full-color maps and photos

Getting there and getting around

When to go and what to pack

Quick tips on where to sleep in every price range

Savvy restaurant picks for all budgets

Editorial Reviews

From the Inside Flap

+Description=

Praise for Fodor's Exploring Guides
"Astonishingly hip."  -- New York Daily News

"Handsomely designed...Fun to leaf through...Conveys a sense of what each destination is like."  
-- The Los Angeles Times

"Authoritatively written and superbly presented...Worthy reading before, during, or after a trip."
  -- Philadelphia Inquirer

"Concise, comprehensive, and colorful."  --  Washington Post

Fodor's Exploring Guides are the most up-to-date, full-color guidebooks available.  
Covering destinations around the world, these guides are loaded with photos, essays on
culture and history, descriptions of sights, and practical information.  Full-color
photos make this a great guide to buy if you're still planning your itinerary (let the
photos help you choose!) and it's a perfect companion to a general guidebook, like a
Fodor's Gold Guide.

All the great sights plus the history and anecdotes that bring them to life

Extraordinary coverage of history and culture

Itineraries, walks and excursions, on and off the beaten path

Architecture and art

Practical tips and full-color maps and photos

Getting there and getting around

When to go and what to pack

Quick tips on where to sleep in every price range

Savvy restaurant picks for all budgets

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

San Francisco Is

A Melting Pot



Italians

San Francisco holds the largest concentration of Italian-Americans in the U.S., and their impact
on the city has been incalculable. Since the first wave of immigration in the 1880s, Italian names
have become dominant in city politics and business. The Italian population is now spread
throughout the city, but scores of Italian restaurants and cafes are still found in North Beach, the
original Italian district.




The Chinese



Largely through the racist restrictions which forced them into Chinatown during the late 1800s,
San Francisco's Chinese have long been one of the largest and most visible elements in the city's
ethnic mosaic. Traditionally, almost all have been of Cantonese origin, although the easing of Chinese
immigration restrictions by the U.S. in 1965 brought settlers from some of the country's far-flung
regions -- a fact evinced by the expanding selection of regional Chinese cuisines offered in Chinatown's
many restaurants.



Chinatown may provide a spiritual home for San Francisco's Chinese, but many have departed for
middle-class lifestyles in the Richmond District, where Clement Street holds some of the city's best
Chinese bakeries and restaurants.




Filipinos



Strong links between the U.S. and the Philippines enabled Filipinos to study and work in America
in comparatively large numbers. Many arrived during the 1920s to labor on California farms, while others
achieved American academic qualifications which led to powerful positions in their homeland.




The Japanese

Since the end of World War II, when its Japanese-American population returned from internment
camps, the Japanese community of San Francisco has consistently numbered just under 2 percent of the
city's total population, currently around 12,000. Few of them, however, actually live in Japantown,
where Shinto and Buddhist temples, Japanese shops, restaurants, and social centers nevertheless
provide a focal point for the community and a site for its festivals.




Southeast Asians



California's Asian population increased by a startling 127 percent in the 1980s, a significant
proportion of which came from the countries of Southeast Asia. Recent waves of Vietnamese,
Cambodian, and Laotian immigration have resulted in a proliferation of new businesses -- mostly
restaurants -- in the Tenderloin, carrying the promise of regeneration in this run-down neighborhood.




Latin Americans



Spanish is more prevalent than English on the busy streets of the Mission District, which was
settled in the 1940s by a Latin American population lured northward by the prospect of work in
shipyards and in other industries stimulated by the war. Latin Americans now comprise 14 percent of
the total population; around 50,000 live in the Mission District.




Russians



The livestock of 19th-century Russian peasants who migrated to escape religious persecution became
a feature of the Potrero Hill area until the late 1950s. More in evidence today are the cafes and
bakeries dispensing Russian specialties in the Richmond District, which gained a significant community
of urbanized Russians settled during the Soviet era. The neighborhood's magnificent Cathedral of the
Holy Virgin is the main Russian Orthodox church in the western U.S.





Architecture

Early Structures



Protected from earthquake damage by its thick adobe walls, Mission Dolores dates with dignity from
the 18th-century Spanish settlement and is easily the city's oldest structure. The only other evidence
of Spanish-era building survives as a small section of adobe wall which forms part of the Presidio's
Officers' Club.




Handsome Victorians



Architectural refinement was the last thing on most people's minds in Gold-Rush San Francisco. But
among the great influx of arrivals aiming themselves at the gold fields were a number of highly
trained architects who, when fortune eluded them, took up their trade in the growing city.



As new residential areas sprang up to house the booming city's more affluent population, innovations
in mechanized carpentry were allowing wood to be shaped in ways previously impossible. San Francisco,
by now the West Coast's major port, received shiploads of mail-order building materials, and pretty
wood-built Italianate homes -- modeled on Italian villas and commonly marked by extended porches
and Corinthian columns -- arose during the 1860s as the favored dwellings of the wealthy.




Stick and Queen Anne



Through the 1870s and 1880s, the Stick style -- which involved the use of flat wooden boards to
emphasize the building's vertical lines -- was increasingly favored over simple Italianate. Desire for
greater ornamentation led to a prevalence of Stick-Eastlake homes, so named for their elaborate
decoration inspired by the work of British designer Charles Eastlake.



By the 1880s, the extravagant towers, turrets, and sharply gabled roofs of the Queen Anne style
were popular in high society. Each decorative flourish -- stained-glass windows were a definite plus
-- was seen as an indication of the owner's financial standing.



Approximately 14,000 Victorian houses survived the 1906 earthquake and fire -- as well as more
recent efforts by developers to raze them -- and roughly half have been fully restored by their owners.
The main groupings of these wood-built houses are found in Pacific Heights, the Western Addition,
Haight-Ashbury, the Mission District, and Russian Hill.




Commercial Building

The fire which followed the 1906 earthquake destroyed much of the city, including the Financial
District and the area around it. Forsaking stone walls for terracotta facades and adapting
classical themes into what became a new American urban architecture, the rebuilding of the Financial
District was characterized by ground-level glass fronts intended for retail purposes and upper stories
holding office space. Of numerous remaining examples, some of the best are on the lower sections of
Sutter Street and Grant Avenue.



In 1925, the completion of the Pacific Telephone Building, its cultured profile still visible just
south of Market Street, heralded another new look -- one of stepped-back towers and art deco
decoration echoing Eliel Saarinen's award-winning Tribune Tower in Chicago. Though stunted by the
Depression of the 1930s, this phase of building began studding the Financial District with tall towers
which poked above surrounding rooftops to become visible from all over the city.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Fodor's; 3rd edition (September 28, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0679004696
  • ISBN-13: 978-0679004691
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.3 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #9,744,793 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars First Timer, December 9, 2001
This review is from: Fodor's Exploring San Francisco, 3rd Edition (Exploring Guides) (Paperback)
I bought this book for my first trip to San Francisco. It touched upon all the major tourist traps but the descriptions didn't go into enough detail. The writing was very dry and activities not geared enough to those using public transporation.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Color pictures and rich historical information, August 22, 2000
By 
"kij" (New York, NY USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Fodor's Exploring San Francisco, 3rd Edition (Exploring Guides) (Paperback)
This guide contains beautiful color pictures and lots of information about the history of each of the sights you'll visit in San Francisco. It also ranks these sights from "Do not miss" down to "Worth seeing", which makes it easy to plan a trip if you're only there for a few days and just want to hit the major highlights. The guide has some information about accomodations and restaurants, but it focuses mainly on places you'll visit as a sightseer. The maps and color photos are extremely helpful; after seeing the picture of the cherry blossoms in bloom in the Japanese Tea Garden, I made sure I visited there on my recent trip.
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