Selected Product: | America from the Air: A Guide to the Landscape Along Your Route Paperback Author: Daniel Mathews, James S. Jackson Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Release Date: 2007-12-14 ISBN-10: 0618706038 ISBN-13: 9780618706037 List Price: $19.95 Average Customer Rating: | | Our Dumb World ISBN-10: 0316018430 ISBN-13: 9780316018432 List Price:$17.99 Transit Maps of the World ISBN-10: 0143112651 ISBN-13: 9780143112655 List Price:$25.00 Cartographia: Mapping Civilizations ISBN-10: 0316997668 ISBN-13: 9780316997669 List Price:$60.00 Hard Road West: History and Geology along the Gold Rush Trail ISBN-10: 0226519627 ISBN-13: 9780226519623 List Price:$17.00 Off the Map: The Most Amazing Sights on Earth as Seen by Satellite ISBN-10: 0786718633 ISBN-13: 9780786718634 List Price:$15.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for America from the Air: A Guide to the Landscape Along Your Route by Daniel Mathews, James S. Jackson (ISBN-10: 0618706038, ISBN-13: 9780618706037). At this time we have not yet written a review for America from the Air: A Guide to the Landscape Along Your Route by Daniel Mathews, James S. Jackson (ISBN-10: 0618706038, ISBN-13: 9780618706037). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com An illustrated guide, in both book and CD-ROM, of landscapes seen from commercial airplane windows across the United States.
This is a guide to what an airline passenger sees from his seat while flying over the United States. Through its ingenious construction and a map of preferred flight paths, it's easy to find those pages that correspond to whatever flight a passenger happens to be on, and then to identify features that can be seen from the air. The book marries geology, natural history, and human history for a glorious portrait of the continent, from the Atlantic City Boardwalk to Mount St. Helens.
Each two-page spread features an aerial photo with captions identifying features passengers will see and an essay interpreting the features. Each chapter is a Flight Corridor, with pages sequenced to follow a trip from takeoff to landing. Because many flight paths overlap, the fifteen corridors cover the forty most heavily traveled flight segments in the continental United States, plus many others. In many regions of the country, readers will have a new page to read about every twenty minutes. The entire book is also on the included CD-ROM, which can easily be used on a laptop in the air. For those who love a window seat on the airplane | Customer Rating: | | Great explanations of all those sites that you see from the window when flying across the USA. | Air Tour | Customer Rating: | | Fabulous book with CD. A must have for the constant traveler or sighseeing buff. | Great for Pilots and Dads alike! | Customer Rating: | Got this for my father-in-law and grandfather for Christmas - both of whom are former pilots. They especially enjoyed reading about things they had flown over but never known about. The entire family enjoyed the great photography, descriptions, and the CD-ROM in the back cover. We are all now taking turns looking at the CD-ROM - it's a great little perk!
| Interesting gift, needs more pictures | Customer Rating: | I bought this book as a gift after a review in Wired. It has major routes, and large area pictures of main land features and discussion of the routes. I wish it had more pictures, more analysis, and and more blowups of the land features. Perhaps looking at the images by computer on the CD (which comes with the book, and which is a copy of the book) would allow zooming in on features in more detail (which I haven't tried). I was a little disappointed in the book expecting even more discussion and analysis of 'what one sees from air'. Most of what was pointed out I already knew. However, my spouse has taken the CD on several trips and hasn't complained.
The pictures are still great. | Such unrealized potential | Customer Rating: | The idea is excellent - what, exactly, am I flying over right now? Selecting the most traveled air routes in the country is a great way to constrain the scope to a manageable effort. Unfortunately, this is a great idea that is very poorly executed.
For starters, the routes are very confusing to follow as they often have alternate paths. Just show me what LA to New York looks like, don't divert my attention by diverting me to Las Vegas or Phoenix or whatever.
Second, the pictures aren't very good. It is safe to say that very few of the pictures were taken from the window of a commercial jet. As a result, the view is not even close to what you would see from your window seat (unless you regularly fly in a satellite).
Again, a great idea. And kudos for making it a low-cost paperback. But the execution is poor. |
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