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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What Your Travel Agent Won't Tell You,
By A Customer
This review is from: What Your Travel Agent Won't Tell You: A Checklist for Your Safety Abroad (Paperback)
Travel sseems to be getting more difficult and dangerous as time progresses. The writers of this book seem to have made it safer for me and other travelers. I like their checklist format since that makes it easier to remember "the little things" that add up to safety. As a woman who sometimes likes to travel alone, I found this book to be invaluable.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
What Your Travel Agent Won't Tell You,
By A Customer
This review is from: What Your Travel Agent Won't Tell You: A Checklist for Your Safety Abroad (Paperback)
What Your Travel Agent Won't Tell YouPerhaps never before have Americans placed a higher priority on increasing their safety while traveling outside the U.S. Bold terrorist attacks on eastern cities in 2001 heightened concerns. This timely book shows Americans how to protect themselves against a variety of dangers, including terrorists, kidnappers, thieves, pirates, and even industrial spies. The authors, who include two former Navy Seals, intersperse thought-provoking text with detailed security checklists. Their goal? Provide a blueprint for making decisions that create a security "structure" for the American traveler. To build that structure, the writers describe tactics, techniques, and procedures to follow. Among the treasures in their security toolbox: common sense advice, and uncommon insight. Some examples: Such intriguing suggestions come from a series of special checklists broken out by topic. Via these checklists, the authors show the would-be traveler how to employ their new security toolkit. In chapter after chapter, the writers challenge readers to reconsider how they travel. Their exhaustive body of data suggests that detailed planning and careful thinking can increase the traveler's index of safety. Sixty pages into the book's text, the reader longs to hire a security expert to pump up the safety index on foreign travel. But that isn't the overall goal of the writers, one of whom (Monday) spent 30 years gathering and analyzing data on terrorism, and another (Ishimoto) who taught members of the FBI Hostage Rescue Team, CIA employees, and at both Army and Air Force special operations schools. Stubblefield served as commander of US Navy Seal Team Three. Steward, also a former Seal officer, formerly supported U.S. Department of Energy non-proliferation programs in Russia. These security experts want to make Americans safer travelers by teaching them some of the tricks of the security craft. One section of their book tells what to do if a captured traveler finds him or herself in the middle of a hostage rescue operation. Avoiding one possible response seems critical: it carries with it a 95 percent chance of being shot. (Perhaps it is worth the price of the book to discover the dread response.) Other chapters explain what to do when driving, riding a taxi, or staying in a hotel in a foreign country. Others give advice on traveling via ship, flight safety, and what to do if you're arrested overseas. The book provides such rich detail, the relatives of an endangered traveler can find out how to begin to assist. Authors show how to start gathering information about the plight of their loved one. Among other things, the names of possibly helpful government agencies are given for such relatives. Still more information is provided, including website addresses. Using those, readers can access travel advisories from the U.S. State Department, and data on foreign health issues compiled by the renowned Centers for Disease Control, and other data. "What Your Travel Agent Won't Tell You" will haunt you. It tempts the reader to slide a small, high intensity flashlight into the carrying case for a cell phone, even for a trip across town. It reminds one that being observant about one's surroundings is valuable even when tooling about the local neighborhood on innocuous errands. Security, it suggests, is, among other things, a function of an alert state of mind.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Outstanding Read for Travelers,
By The Traveling Writer "First Responder" (Coeru d'Alene, ID) - See all my reviews
This review is from: What Your Travel Agent Won't Tell You: A Checklist for Your Safety Abroad (Paperback)
This book is for new and seasoned travelers.It covers every aspect of traveling, pointing out key safety areas that will protect the reader from getting into trouble. Starting from the plannng of your trip to the differant travel modes to hotel safety tips. Read this and advoid problems.
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