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Writer's Guide to Places

Writer's Guide to Places
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Writer's Guide to Places

 
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ACOMMP2_book_usedlikenew_1582971692

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A Writer's Magic Carpet Ride - Carry Your Readers from Coast to Coast without Leaving Home





Fill your settings with the insider details readers love - without spending days in a library or weeks on the road. Writer's Guide to Places makes it easy! Featuring all fifty states, ten Canadian provinces, and fifty-one North American cities, this book provides a writer's eye view of hundreds of fascinating locales, from bustling cities and scenic landscapes to tourist traps and small town squares.





You'll find detailed information on each area, including the best locations to set a scene, regional foods and slang, the people and places your characters love, and much more.





Start saving valuable research time and create more realistic settings today. Writer's Guide to Places has all the information you need in a single volume.

 
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Product Details
Author:Don Prues
Paperback:448 pages
Publisher:Writers Digest Books
Publication Date:December 25, 2002
Language:English
ISBN:1582971692
Package Length:10.8 inches
Package Width:8.9 inches
Package Height:1.3 inches
Package Weight:2.4 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 12 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:3.0 ( 12 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

26 of 28 found the following review helpful:


2Skip it  Jul 05, 2004 By Darshan "darshan1"
Writer's Digest comes out with a lot of helpful books, but this one isn't one of them. I'm glad the book description here explains that the book only covers the United States and Canada. In the Writer's Digest ads, it doesn't. So if you want to set a story in Venice or Cairo, you'll get no help.

A lot of the information the book does have seems more appropriate for a rather unexciting history book about the states than something that helps create a setting. I don't see myself writing anything where a character says "Virginia is the second largest seafood processor in the nation" or "The Pennsylvania Turnpike was begun in 1940 and completed in 1956." If this is the kind of information you need, it's available on the internet.

There does seem to be some helpful information about some cities that would tell you which neighborhood your character would live in if he's rich or middle class. However, after looking at information that I know a bit about, there's a lot that's wrong or out of date. For example, the book describes New York City's "Hell's Kitchen" as bombed out and full of gangs when actually it's gentrified to the point that realtors have renamed it Clinton and it's pretty upmarket. On the other hand, the book says Houston's Sharpstown is a good place to raise a family. Nope, it's dangerous to the point that people are warned not to go to the mall. It makes one wonder what one can trust in this book.

I might still use this book to help me find information elsewhere about settings. But since there are no international settings (except Canada) and the internet is going to be more current, I don't think I'll use it much.

15 of 15 found the following review helpful:


1Seemed like a good idea at the time  Jul 19, 2004 By K. McLeod "designer"
What a good idea;a guide that lists both the chamber of commerce facts (like "the city was founded in...") and great local information (where to hang out, what the neighborhoods are like). What a shame the author has clearly never been to some of these places and that much of the information is wildly inaccurate. The Jacksonville [Florida] section for example lists Orange Park as a family oriented suburb, yet makes no mention at all of one of the main drivers of the local economy, Dog Racing at the big track on Kingsley. That's like describing Elmont, NY and not mentioning that little Triple Crown/Belmont Stakes thing. And imagine my horror on reading the Los Angeles [California] section, which tells me that my cute San Pedro home is like a third-world country! That will be news to the Mayor of LA, who also lives here, and to the literally dozens of movie and TV shoots that happen in San Pedro every year. I shudder to think of the thousands of copies of this "guide" out there being used as reference, with people assuming that the information is correct, just because it's in a book. It just goes to show you, there's no substitute for real research.

14 of 14 found the following review helpful:


1Don't waste your time or money  Jan 27, 2006 By Lou Novacheck
Writer's Guide to Places by Don Prues & Jack Heffron

I bought this book for obvious reasons suggested by the title. I should have read the previous buyers' reviews first!

The first thing I did when I received it was to compare the cities covered with places I've lived. For Honolulu and Oahu, for instance, no mention is made of the palaces, the Bishop Museum, the Pali, Diamond Head Park, the North Shore, Haleiwa, Sunset Beach, Sandy Beach, the Blow Hole, Mokuleiea, Valley of the Temples, Fort Shafter, Tripler Medical Center and maybe another hundred places that are all part of the very fabric of the place, even part of the air one breathes on Oahu.

I could go on for pages, but I won't. I did, however, check the other areas where I've previously lived and the same applies as the Honolulu comparison. Pittsburgh, Baltimore, Washington DC and Milwaukee are just as pathetic and outdated in their coverage.

Don't waste your money!
Lou Novacheck


6 of 7 found the following review helpful:


2Ugh!  Aug 10, 2006 By Rebecca Vining
What a complete waste of time. If you just have to see what this volume has to offer, save your hard earned money and get it from the library.

As other reviewers have noted, it only has info on the 50 states and a few Canadian provinces. Not only that, but after reviewing cities listed that I have lived in or spent much time in, there was incorrect and misleading info. I wouldn't dare trust this as reference.

Do yourself a favor and just get a guidebook to the location and check out the local websites as well.

8 of 10 found the following review helpful:


1Too many errors  Jul 31, 2003
This is a great idea for a book... but it'll only work if the information is accurate. I found numerous mistakes in the section on Canada. Some information was outdated (by years!); some other things were just plain wrong. According to one of the maps, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia now sit on an isolated island. That's news to me! If this is indicative of the research done by the authors, I would be wary of using any of the information in the book.

I would say that if you want to use "Writer's Guide to Places," use it with caution. Decide on the setting for your story and use this book as a starting point... but do LOTS more research yourself before you start to write.

See all 12 customer reviews on Amazon.com

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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