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National Geographic Traveler | 
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| Publisher: National Geographic Society Category: Magazine
List Price: $39.60 Buy New: $14.95 You Save: $24.65 (62%)
Avg. Customer Rating: 24 reviews Sales Rank: 116
Format: Magazine Subscription Type: Consumer magazine Subscription Issues: 8 Subscription Length: 12 Months Issues Per Year: 8 First Issue Lead Time: 12-16 Weeks
Release Date: November 23, 2001 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 2 to 4 months
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Product Description NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC TRAVELER is a resource for active, curious travelers. It uses storytelling and you-are-there photography. Features focus on domestic and foreign destinations, personal travel reflections, food and restaurants, great places to stay, photography, trends, adventure, ecotourism, road trips, cultural events, and travelers and TravelWise-which appears with every major feature-furnishes a lively and complete mini guidebook to help consumers plan their trips.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 19 more reviews...
Best of Class...a Travel Magazine You Can Actually Use August 24, 2004 45 out of 45 found this review helpful
I am now on my sixth year of subscription of this magazine, and I continue to enjoy it immensely. When I first read it, I knew the branding of "National Geographic" would mean exquisite, world-class photography, and based on this attribute alone, the "Traveler" edition does not disappoint. The target here though is not the anthropologist, the historian or even the cultural dilettante - it is the middle to upper middle class tourist in need of inspiration and pointers on travel. This is definitely not a backpacker's guide. This magazine is for those who have graduated from Rick Steves' backdoor guides but are not in dire need of an agent to help them plan their itineraries.
The various regular features always seem useful: "Smart Traveler" contains great insight into learning from other travelers' mistakes, or the best places to go for a given time of year; "Place of a Lifetime" spotlights an exotic fantasy place that makes you savor the idea of actually experiencing it firsthand; " 48 Hours" takes a given locale and tells you how to make the most of your limited time. Each issue focuses on one or two particular places and generally do a through job in highlighting what to see, where to stay and eat and a helpful street map is always provided. By comparison, "Travel and Leisure" seems to focus on the trendy and chic, and the articles in "Conde Naste Traveler" seem abbreviated and not very informative. Moreover, both seem overstuffed with advertisements. "National Geographic Traveler" just seems to have the right balance of great, easy-to-follow information and beautiful photography. I'm sure I'll be subscribing for many more years to come.
A Fabulous Travel Resource January 14, 2004 61 out of 65 found this review helpful
This is a wonderful magazine, and I look forward to the next one just as soon as I am done with the one I am reading. I like this magazine because it is about going to unique and beautiful places and seeing special sights. There are no articles like 'Where to Find the Best Martinis in West Palm Beach', or fluff like that. This magazine deals with the substance of truly unique domestic and international travel experiences. Before a trip to Iceland last summer, I studied a couple of issues with information on Iceland, and found the advice to be amazingly useful, practical, and accurate. That is just the latest of many times that I have used the information in this wonderful magazine to plan and execute vacations. Of course not everything or every destination appeals to me, but I can say, without reservation, that every single volume has something of great interest to me. I end up keeping most of these (which is very unusual for me), but only after reading and re-reading them several times! If you are interested in unique travels, this magazine is a must read!
Earth in all it's Glory May 3, 2002 45 out of 49 found this review helpful
By far, the most interesting travel magazine for the nature/adventure lover. It's a totally refreshing take on international travel. No hype about the chicest, trendiest or most expensive hotels - no "Gold" lists, just lots of practical information and glorius photos of planet Earth. And it's not only about whitewater rafting, a recent article on Brazil included great info on the city of Salvador.
Beautiful magazine. December 4, 2001 26 out of 27 found this review helpful
National Geographic Traveler is a great travel magazine with all the information you would expect about great places to visit, but what I like most about it is the photography. It is absolutely stunning! This magazine is worth getting just for the incredible photography. Plus, there's an annual photo contest where readers share their experiences through pictures.Now, it is a travel magazine, so I shouldn't forget to mention that the writers really do capture the feel and culture of the places they write about. Plus, they include practical information about where to stay and eat while you visit. I really have enjoyed receiving this magazine and keep the old issues around for reference.
You've Been Here? Great!! Now Go THERE!!! July 8, 2004 18 out of 18 found this review helpful
I must confess: I'm a magazine fanatic. Nothing makes a good afternoon or evening great than a cozy chair, a tall glass of liquid refreshment (choose your own!) and a great mag for some nice, relaxing reading. Well, National Geographic Traveler is large enough (100 pages plus) and intelligent enough (I like a periodical that respects the fact that I've got a brain) to appeal to the most literate would-be traveler. In an age where (almost) all periodicals (both rags and mags) are most noteworthy for their shrinking size and growing advertisement content, the Traveler is a welcome breath of fresh air, free of overt bias (why do so many publications these days seem to be lecturing me?) and absolutely crammed with fabulous photos, wonderful articles, and fantastic where-to-go-and-what-to-see-when-you-get-there resources. The mix is approximately 60-40 domestic/foreign destinations, and they have a very appealing approach to take you to cities and places that they believe are the TRUE heart of the state/country they visit. Examples: In the current issue (July/August 2004: Yes, there are only eight issues a year, but trust me, the quality is worth the wait!), foreign points of interest include Thessaloniki, Greece, instead of Athens, and Ghent, Belgium, instead of Brussels. (Don't worry: they don't always bypass the largest cities. The cover story is a first-rate piece on Sydney, Australia.) All this, plus a five-part, five-issue travelogue which covers America's midsection, and a beautifully-written ode to Maryland's Eastern Shore, will have you scurrying to your computer eager to book flights! Subscribe to National Geographic Traveler today. It will truly want to make you go THERE (off the beaten path) as well as HERE (the touristy places.)
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