Columns

Here are a few of the latest travel-book reviews written by ITN readers.

“Fodor’s Paris 2006,” edited by Andrew Collins and Jennifer Paul (2005, Fodor’s, LLC. ISBN 140015480 — 372 pp., $17.95 paperback).

This guidebook has a layout similar to that of most, with chapters on essentials, eating, hotels and what to see and do.

One of the highlights is the “Exploring Paris” chapter, with suggested itineraries and walks with maps and detailed directions as well as suggestions...

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Dear reader, the most common question I’m receiving these days is “Will I need a passport?”

The government policy on this varies depending upon the destination and has changed several times within the last year, but the simple answer is this: if you are interested in traveling to any of the places mentioned in ITN, you must have one.

You can find a passport application form at www.travel.state.gov/passport/forms/forms_847.html.

A passport certifies your identity and your...

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Malaria just doesn’t get respect. Until, that is, someone catches it.

It is a wicked disease which infects between 300- and 550-million people (yes, that is one-third to one-half billion people — about 10 times the number of those suffering from AIDS) and kills between one to three million annually. It is spread by mosquitoes and is found through much of the world but primarily occurs in the tropics.

There are four species of this parasite which affect mankind. The most...

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by Philip Wagenaar, M.D.

It was Friday, August 25th, 2006. Our Holland America cruise ship, the MS Amsterdam, had docked an hour before in Tórshavn, the capital of the 18-island Faroe archipelago, under a deep fog cover.

Our tour

Dressed warmly against the cold, my wife, Flory, and I snuggled down in our toasty tour bus as we traveled north on the stunning, winding ridge road toward Nordradalur (North Valley), situated on the southern part of Streymoy, the main island...

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I had the opportunity to travel to Mendoza, the attractive city of 100,000-plus in the heart of northern Argentina’s booming viticulture region, in April ’06. While the city is a thriving regional commercial center, it is the huge wine industry — featuring literally scores of wineries (bodegas) in Mendoza and the surrounding districts — that primarily provides both its national identity and its popularity with foreign visitors. Mendoza has an annual 3-day wine...

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Dear Globetrotter:

Welcome to the 371st issue of your monthly overseas travel magazine.

In Kiev, Ukraine, racially motivated attacks by skinheads have increased, the U.S. Embassy stated in November. These have been occurring mostly against people of Asian, African or other non-European descent, without provocation, in downtown areas frequented by tourists.

In fact, people of color have been the victims of harrassment by both locals and police, who stop them on the...

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by Lew Toulmin

Fancy a romantic transatlantic cruise with your sweetheart? How about a nice, relaxing voyage where you row 16 hours a day for 60 days, eat lukewarm freeze-dried food, roll your vessel upside down four times and fend off the amorous advances of a 60-foot whale?

Meet Liz O’Keeffe and Richard Mayon-White, two British adventurers who have done all that and much, much more. I interviewed them at Nelson’s Dockyard in Antigua, West Indies.

Q: Tell me about the...

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Here are a couple of the latest travel-book reviews written by ITN readers.

“Panama” by Sarah Woods (2005, Bradt Travel Guides/Globe Pequot Press, Inc. ISBN 184162117X — 340 pp., $21.95).

There’s more to Panama than the canal, and the best thing you can do is let Sarah Woods’ guidebook introduce you to this fascinating land only three hours away from Miami.

When looking for a guidebook, “Bradt” does not easily come to mind, yet Hilary Bradt has been an established...

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