Moon Nashville (Moon Handbooks)

Moon Nashville (Moon Handbooks)

by Margaret Littman (Author)

Synopsis

Moon Handbooks give you the tools to make your own choices, with * Insider tips on the best spots to eat, drink, sleep, shop, and explore, marked with a Moon symbol, including the Best Place to See Elvis; the Most Theatrical Dining Experience; the Most Inventive Brewery; the Best Live Radio Show; the Best Place to Browse for Tunes; and the Most Histric Hotel *6 easy-to-use, full-color neighborhood maps * Excursions to Land Between the Lakes, Lynchburg, and Bell Buckle * The firsthand experience and unique perspective of author Margaret Littman

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Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 256
Publisher: Avalon Travel
Published: 12 Sep 2013

ISBN 10: 1612385184
ISBN 13: 9781612385181

Author Bio
Margaret Littman is both an old-timer and a relative newcomer to Nashville. After graduating from Vanderbilt University, she left Tennessee for points north over the course of her writing career. But after 17 years she could no longer resist the siren song of the Parthenon, bluegrass music, or fried pickles, so she returned to Nashville, where she writes about Music City, Southeast travel, food, pets, and more. An avid stand-up paddler, she loves being a day trip away from the Tennessee River to the south, Reelfoot Lake to the west, and Norris Dam to the east. There's nothing Margaret loves more than telling natives something they didn't know about their home state. And with 75,000 miles on her station wagon already, she has lots of ideas for little-known places to listen to music, eat barbecue, paddle a lake, hike to a waterfall, or buy works by local artists. Margaret's work has appeared in national and regional magazines, including Wine Enthusiast, Entrepreneur, The Tennessean, and many others. She is the author of several guidebooks as well as the Nashville Essential Guide, an iPhone app. Margaret has loved lots of places she's lived, but the day she looked down and realized she was wearing cowboy boots in synagogue, she knew she had become a Nashvillian.