Full product information for this item, together with my review, my ranking of the product, and any reader comments, can be found at http://www.amazon.com.
Jim Kaese and Paul Huddle have given us a reference work, not a discussion of what it means to be an athletic-minded traveler nor how to become athletic minded if you are a traveler doubling as a couch potato.
Mind the subtitle: ‘Where to work out and stay when fitness is a priority.’
If a reference book for your or your travel agent is what you need, this is your book.
If you want to figure out how to maintain some level of fitness in an ever-changing travel environment that seems to mock the very thought of it, this is not your book. Those books do exist (see my other reviews) and you’d be wise to buy one of them.
The book under review here is organized by major U.S. metropolitan areas. Since airport fitness facilities are still not widely available, the writers have to presume you’re willing to part company with two taxi fares for many of the venues. Things get a little better on the hotel side, where noticable improvement in most major hotel chains now makes it possible to get a workout without falling down the steps, where you are fortunate to be found within the week.
Bottom line: the book delivers what the subtitle promises.
Leave a comment