Thursday, April 30, 2009

Hotel: An American History

Product Description

When George Washington embarked on his presidential tours of 1789–91, the rudimentary inns and taverns of the day suddenly seemed dismally inadequate. But within a decade, Americans had built the first hotels—large and elegant structures that boasted private bedchambers and grand public ballrooms. This book recounts the enthralling history of the hotel in America—a saga in which politicians and prostitutes, tourists and tramps, conventioneers and confidence men, celebrities and salesmen all rub elbows. hotel explores why the hotel was invented, how its architecture developed, and the many ways it influenced the course of United States history. The volume also presents a beautiful collection of more than 120 illustrations, many in full color, of hotel life in every era.

 

hotel explores these topics and more:

·        What it was like to sleep, eat, and socialize at a hotel in the mid-1800s

·        How  hotelkeepers dealt with the illicit activities of adulterers, thieves, and violent guests

·        The stories behind America’s greatest hotels, including the Waldorf-Astoria, the Plaza, the Willard, the Blackstone, and the Fairmont

·        Why Confederate spies plotted to burn down thirteen hotels in New York City during the Civil War

·        How the development of steamboats and locomotives  helped create a nationwide network of hotels

·        How  hotels became architectural models for apartment buildings

·        The pivotal role of hotels in the civil rights movement

 


Customer Buzz
Interesting to know how, in America, grand hotels emerged from the 'taverns' which preceded them, and how in Europe it was pretty much the same phenomenon.The writing is graceful, the details fascinating. A great read.


Customer Buzz
Well written but not complete. How thorough an examination can an history of the American hotel industry be if it fails to contain the word "Marriott," much less tell the Marriott story?

Customer Buzz
While this comprehensive history of the American hotel surely will become required reading for students in hospitality programs, it is not the sort of history of hotel management and technology that one might expect of a text book in this field. Rather, this seems to be the "American Studies" genre, primarily concerned with viewing the hotel as a phenomenon in a larger cultural context of the place and times.

While more attention to management practices and technology might have enriched the book, it serves a sufficient purpose as cultural history. The author clearly has done much homework, searching local newspapers across the nation for anacdotes about hotels. Naturally, what was reported was not behind-the-scenes hotel operation, but what would interest the public--the "front of the house" events.

All of us who have favorite historic hotels and their histories will regret that much has been missed, but considering the vast scope of his subject, the author has done a superb job.

Customer Buzz
Lucky me. A friend gave me this wonderful book about the rise of hotels and the hospitality industry in the United States. What an eye-opener. The author, an academic, has done massive, serious research and has come to some extremely interesting conclusions. Who would have dreamed what an important part of our social history hotels are, or what they have meant to us economically (including the rise of the railroads). As someone who has traveled extensively, I can attest that some hotels are more welcoming than others, some have better beds or better food, but being a guest in a hotel is almost always a treat. This book helped me relive childhood trips to Miami Beach, eating a glorious room service dinner during a blizzard Richmond, Va., and hightailing it to a Motel 6 in Carlsbad,California. It taught me about a valuable part of our history I had never thought about. And the pictures are fascinating. I'm giving Hotel: An American History to my traveling cousin for Christmas.




Customer Buzz
I'll never hear the snoring, coughing, wheezing, televisioning, or humping in the hotel suite next to mine without thinking of this history of the American Hotel.We have come a long way since the time when overnight accomodations included sharing a bed with a stranger (unintentionally). The slamming of doors, the ker-chunk of the ice machine down the hall, and the rowdy late nights of party-goers become understandable (if not tolerable) after reading this rich and detailed history of the American hotel. Indeed, it explains why "American Hotel" is redundant.



Images ScreenShot


About Hotel: An American History detail

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #312995 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-12-02
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 384 pages

Read more Hotel: An American History

Related Product





Source From SHOPPING MALL
Have a Nice Days!
Cheers

Hotel

Product Description

OscarÂ(r) nominee* Mike Figgis (Leaving Las Vegas) delivers a deliciously disturbing, erotically charged thriller fueled by standout performances from his all-star cast: Saffron Burrows, Salma Hayek, Rhys Ifans, Lucy Liu, Burt Reynolds and David Schwimmer!A slick Hollywood film crew has just descended upon a mysterious, crumbling Venetian hotel to create a cinematic masterpiece. But, unbeknownst to them, there are malevolent forces at work in the hotel, and soon the production is beset by a series of strange incidents, dragging the guests on a terrifying journey into the dark catacombs of desire, madness and death!*1995: Director and Adapted Screenplay, Leaving Las Vegas

Customer Buzz
One of the most bizarre things about this film is the all star cast. How could they appear in this movie? It is one of the stupidest things I have ever seen. I am embarrassed for them. This move is not thrilling, not engaging, not entertaining. Boring. Imbecilic. This film is about as appealing as dog-do on my shoe. The jacket description is totally misleading. Thank God I got this one in the bargain box. $4.00 is still too much to pay for this. I pity anyone who has purchased this at Amazon's current price.

Customer Buzz
We cannot get into watching this movie. it is to convoluted to keep up with. Should have a negative rating system for this one.

Customer Buzz
heh...the words on the jacket: "a deliciously disturbing and erotically charged thriller"... are rather shameless hyperbole.

Instead, this film is remarkable for one thing alone: how the director squanders acting talent and beauty (Salma Hayek, Chiara Mastroianni, Ornella Muti, Lucy Liu!), financial resources, and the luminous backdrop of Venice to produce a film that is not even a flop but rather resembles an uncut first year film student's independent project... a very average project, that is.

The words that come to mind are 'breathless', 'pretentious' and 'incompetent'. Generally, the designation "art film" means that the director is unable to focus or use a script and needs to resort to gimmickry. this certainly is true for the Hotel. The 'macabre' we see is simply an excuse for Figgis' lack of imagination; the exquisite Dutchess of Malfi text is abused rather than used. The two good scenes (with John Malkovich, in the beginning; the flamenco scene in the middle) are never developed.

My basic issue with the film is that it is basically soul-less.

This is not due to Figgis' incompetence alone. The film should never have been produced.

Come to think of it, The Hotel should be required viewing for film students, a lesson in how great actors and a lot of money are not enough to make a good flick. There is something else.

Customer Buzz
This movie is simply one of the best films I've ever seen in my life. Yes, it is unconventional but not in some far out, puzzling way like Peter Greenaway's films. Every moment made perfect sense. It is incredibly erotic, funny, and fascinating. It moves like a poem, and I found myself rewinding several times just to watch a scene again and catch the phrasing. This is not Legally Blonde. Your brain will be engaged. Highlights are Salma Hayek's adorably bad singing, Rhys iffans acting like the director from hell, and the absolutely luminous acting of Saffron Burrow's who in my opinion is one of the finest and most underated actresses working today. If you are ever looking for a good film, just look at her filmography -- she has chosen very excellent and difficult films.

Customer Buzz
I saw this film in the theater when it came out. When the DVD came out I was one of the first to get a copy. It's not an easy film to grasp, being a DOGMA type of film, but try watching it with the subtitles on soo that you catch all the dialogue, and then it will make more sense to you. I give it 5 stars.

Customer Buzz
The "Special Features" section said this movie had no script. That explains but doesn't excuse it.

Customer Buzz
Talk about a waste of money, I'm still mad that I wasted $4.19 to rent this theme-bloated, overcooked/overthought, forgetful disaster of a flick. Sure it has the cast-names to fatten up the dvd jacket, sure it's got the critics' quotes, sure it claims to be an "erotically charged thriller", but caveat emptor: "it ain't all that" -not by any stretch of imagination. If you're looking for entertainment, here's a better idea: take 4 random books of fiction, toss them in a shredder, take the shreddings and drop 'em in a blender, turn mixing speed to 'high', empty out and glue back together in any order you choose; guarantee you'll have more fun.

Customer Buzz
I tried and tried, but never got passed the first 10 or 15 minutes of this film, could not take it, had to turn it off every time, movie theaters and video stores should refound the fee when the film is this bad.

Customer Buzz
The description on the movie jacket is totally misleading. It is not thrilling and it is not terrifying. The only scene of Venice you will see is St. Mark's Square. All-star cast? Yup, and I suppose they made the best of it, but then if I was paid big bucks to spend some time in Venice I would too... A horrible movie! A waste of 1hr. 51minutes.

Customer Buzz
Mike Figgis makes a supersized attempt to be artsy in this meandering film. The problem is that the story is so flat because there is no one about whom we can care. After the first confusing messy thirty minutes (John Malkovich sitting behind prison bars at a dinner table for no apparent reason other than to offer insipid dialogue to an uncaring dinner guest list), I decided to just look at the screen for the color and the wild camera work. Venice looks great but the stodgy staging of 'The Duchess of Malfi' and the weak plot associated with it doesn't even begin to cover the creaks in this silly film. This one is only for the Figgis fans out there - and for Venice addicts who will put up with about anything to just 'feel' the Venetian glow. A Must Miss. Grady Harp, August 05

Images ScreenShot


About Hotel detail

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #45815 in DVD
  • Brand: TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX HOME ENT
  • Released on: 2005-07-26
  • Rating: R (Restricted)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
  • Formats: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: English, French, Italian
  • Subtitled in: English, Spanish, French
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: 1.00 pounds
  • Running time: 93 minutes

Read more Hotel

Related Product





Source From SHOPPING MALL
Hope you guys had a great weekend
Cheers

100 Tips for Hoteliers: What Every Successful Hotel Professional Needs to Know and Do

Product Description

Twenty-two years ago, author Peter Venison's Hotel Management became a best seller in the hotel and tourism industry, labeled a "must read" on the curriculum of every hotel school, and landed on the bookshelf of every hotel manager. Despite many requests for a follow-up volume, Venison declined, on the basis that he had nothing new to say. Now he does.Holed up for several weeks in five star hotels while concluding a complicated business deal, Venison realized that the standards offered by the industry still fall short of perfection. As a result, he has put pen to paper to produce this handy catalogue of suggestions to hoteliers, based upon his considerable personal experience as a hotelier and perpetual hotel guest.100 Tips for Hoteliers guides you from the inception of a hotel to its opening and operation, offering practical tips for each stage of the journey. It should prove equally useful to hotel school students as a checklist of what they can expect, and also to practicing hotel managers as a reminder of their responsibilities.Proceeds from the sale of 100 Tips for Hoteliers will be donated to the Duke of Edinburgh Cup charity.

Customer Buzz
Peter Venison is a genius when it comes to hotel management. This is a must have, easy to read and implement, book for anyone involved in managing or running hotels. It is the best investment anyone interested in running a better hotel, can make.

Customer Buzz
Peter Venison knows what he is writing about, and knows how to write well. His "100 Tips for Hoteliers" is easy to read and every page gives you ideas about what to do better in your own business, hospitality or not.

This is one of the few books on hotel or resort management which acknowledges that things can go wrong too. Peter Venison shows how to deal with endless rain or falling off bed legs and many more of the daily troubles reality puts in our plate. "101 Tips for Hoteliers" is far more to the point than the hospitality management classics written from the viewpoint of managers who avoid leaving their A/C offices. I recommend it to every new and every old hotel or resort manager.

Images ScreenShot


About 100 Tips for Hoteliers: What Every Successful Hotel Professional Needs to Know and Do detail

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #14475 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-12-20
  • Released on: 2005-12-20
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 172 pages

Read more 100 Tips for Hoteliers: What Every Successful Hotel Professional Needs to Know and Do

Related Product





Source From SHOPPING MALL
�Have a great day everybody!
Cheers

Hotel: An American History

Product Description

When George Washington embarked on his presidential tours of 1789–91, the rudimentary inns and taverns of the day suddenly seemed dismally inadequate. But within a decade, Americans had built the first hotels—large and elegant structures that boasted private bedchambers and grand public ballrooms. This book recounts the enthralling history of the hotel in America—a saga in which politicians and prostitutes, tourists and tramps, conventioneers and confidence men, celebrities and salesmen all rub elbows. hotel explores why the hotel was invented, how its architecture developed, and the many ways it influenced the course of United States history. The volume also presents a beautiful collection of more than 120 illustrations, many in full color, of hotel life in every era.

 

hotel explores these topics and more:

·        What it was like to sleep, eat, and socialize at a hotel in the mid-1800s

·        How  hotelkeepers dealt with the illicit activities of adulterers, thieves, and violent guests

·        The stories behind America’s greatest hotels, including the Waldorf-Astoria, the Plaza, the Willard, the Blackstone, and the Fairmont

·        Why Confederate spies plotted to burn down thirteen hotels in New York City during the Civil War

·        How the development of steamboats and locomotives  helped create a nationwide network of hotels

·        How  hotels became architectural models for apartment buildings

·        The pivotal role of hotels in the civil rights movement

 


Customer Buzz
Interesting to know how, in America, grand hotels emerged from the 'taverns' which preceded them, and how in Europe it was pretty much the same phenomenon.The writing is graceful, the details fascinating. A great read.


Customer Buzz
Well written but not complete. How thorough an examination can an history of the American hotel industry be if it fails to contain the word "Marriott," much less tell the Marriott story?

Customer Buzz
While this comprehensive history of the American hotel surely will become required reading for students in hospitality programs, it is not the sort of history of hotel management and technology that one might expect of a text book in this field. Rather, this seems to be the "American Studies" genre, primarily concerned with viewing the hotel as a phenomenon in a larger cultural context of the place and times.

While more attention to management practices and technology might have enriched the book, it serves a sufficient purpose as cultural history. The author clearly has done much homework, searching local newspapers across the nation for anacdotes about hotels. Naturally, what was reported was not behind-the-scenes hotel operation, but what would interest the public--the "front of the house" events.

All of us who have favorite historic hotels and their histories will regret that much has been missed, but considering the vast scope of his subject, the author has done a superb job.

Customer Buzz
Lucky me. A friend gave me this wonderful book about the rise of hotels and the hospitality industry in the United States. What an eye-opener. The author, an academic, has done massive, serious research and has come to some extremely interesting conclusions. Who would have dreamed what an important part of our social history hotels are, or what they have meant to us economically (including the rise of the railroads). As someone who has traveled extensively, I can attest that some hotels are more welcoming than others, some have better beds or better food, but being a guest in a hotel is almost always a treat. This book helped me relive childhood trips to Miami Beach, eating a glorious room service dinner during a blizzard Richmond, Va., and hightailing it to a Motel 6 in Carlsbad,California. It taught me about a valuable part of our history I had never thought about. And the pictures are fascinating. I'm giving Hotel: An American History to my traveling cousin for Christmas.




Customer Buzz
I'll never hear the snoring, coughing, wheezing, televisioning, or humping in the hotel suite next to mine without thinking of this history of the American Hotel.We have come a long way since the time when overnight accomodations included sharing a bed with a stranger (unintentionally). The slamming of doors, the ker-chunk of the ice machine down the hall, and the rowdy late nights of party-goers become understandable (if not tolerable) after reading this rich and detailed history of the American hotel. Indeed, it explains why "American Hotel" is redundant.



Images ScreenShot


About Hotel: An American History detail

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #240653 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-12-02
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 384 pages

Read more Hotel: An American History

Related Product





Source From SHOPPING MALL
Cheers and have a GREAT day!
Cheers

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Hotel

Product Description

OscarÂ(r) nominee* Mike Figgis (Leaving Las Vegas) delivers a deliciously disturbing, erotically charged thriller fueled by standout performances from his all-star cast: Saffron Burrows, Salma Hayek, Rhys Ifans, Lucy Liu, Burt Reynolds and David Schwimmer!A slick Hollywood film crew has just descended upon a mysterious, crumbling Venetian hotel to create a cinematic masterpiece. But, unbeknownst to them, there are malevolent forces at work in the hotel, and soon the production is beset by a series of strange incidents, dragging the guests on a terrifying journey into the dark catacombs of desire, madness and death!*1995: Director and Adapted Screenplay, Leaving Las Vegas

Customer Buzz
One of the most bizarre things about this film is the all star cast. How could they appear in this movie? It is one of the stupidest things I have ever seen. I am embarrassed for them. This move is not thrilling, not engaging, not entertaining. Boring. Imbecilic. This film is about as appealing as dog-do on my shoe. The jacket description is totally misleading. Thank God I got this one in the bargain box. $4.00 is still too much to pay for this. I pity anyone who has purchased this at Amazon's current price.

Customer Buzz
We cannot get into watching this movie. it is to convoluted to keep up with. Should have a negative rating system for this one.

Customer Buzz
heh...the words on the jacket: "a deliciously disturbing and erotically charged thriller"... are rather shameless hyperbole.

Instead, this film is remarkable for one thing alone: how the director squanders acting talent and beauty (Salma Hayek, Chiara Mastroianni, Ornella Muti, Lucy Liu!), financial resources, and the luminous backdrop of Venice to produce a film that is not even a flop but rather resembles an uncut first year film student's independent project... a very average project, that is.

The words that come to mind are 'breathless', 'pretentious' and 'incompetent'. Generally, the designation "art film" means that the director is unable to focus or use a script and needs to resort to gimmickry. this certainly is true for the Hotel. The 'macabre' we see is simply an excuse for Figgis' lack of imagination; the exquisite Dutchess of Malfi text is abused rather than used. The two good scenes (with John Malkovich, in the beginning; the flamenco scene in the middle) are never developed.

My basic issue with the film is that it is basically soul-less.

This is not due to Figgis' incompetence alone. The film should never have been produced.

Come to think of it, The Hotel should be required viewing for film students, a lesson in how great actors and a lot of money are not enough to make a good flick. There is something else.

Customer Buzz
This movie is simply one of the best films I've ever seen in my life. Yes, it is unconventional but not in some far out, puzzling way like Peter Greenaway's films. Every moment made perfect sense. It is incredibly erotic, funny, and fascinating. It moves like a poem, and I found myself rewinding several times just to watch a scene again and catch the phrasing. This is not Legally Blonde. Your brain will be engaged. Highlights are Salma Hayek's adorably bad singing, Rhys iffans acting like the director from hell, and the absolutely luminous acting of Saffron Burrow's who in my opinion is one of the finest and most underated actresses working today. If you are ever looking for a good film, just look at her filmography -- she has chosen very excellent and difficult films.

Customer Buzz
I saw this film in the theater when it came out. When the DVD came out I was one of the first to get a copy. It's not an easy film to grasp, being a DOGMA type of film, but try watching it with the subtitles on soo that you catch all the dialogue, and then it will make more sense to you. I give it 5 stars.

Customer Buzz
The "Special Features" section said this movie had no script. That explains but doesn't excuse it.

Customer Buzz
Talk about a waste of money, I'm still mad that I wasted $4.19 to rent this theme-bloated, overcooked/overthought, forgetful disaster of a flick. Sure it has the cast-names to fatten up the dvd jacket, sure it's got the critics' quotes, sure it claims to be an "erotically charged thriller", but caveat emptor: "it ain't all that" -not by any stretch of imagination. If you're looking for entertainment, here's a better idea: take 4 random books of fiction, toss them in a shredder, take the shreddings and drop 'em in a blender, turn mixing speed to 'high', empty out and glue back together in any order you choose; guarantee you'll have more fun.

Customer Buzz
I tried and tried, but never got passed the first 10 or 15 minutes of this film, could not take it, had to turn it off every time, movie theaters and video stores should refound the fee when the film is this bad.

Customer Buzz
The description on the movie jacket is totally misleading. It is not thrilling and it is not terrifying. The only scene of Venice you will see is St. Mark's Square. All-star cast? Yup, and I suppose they made the best of it, but then if I was paid big bucks to spend some time in Venice I would too... A horrible movie! A waste of 1hr. 51minutes.

Customer Buzz
Mike Figgis makes a supersized attempt to be artsy in this meandering film. The problem is that the story is so flat because there is no one about whom we can care. After the first confusing messy thirty minutes (John Malkovich sitting behind prison bars at a dinner table for no apparent reason other than to offer insipid dialogue to an uncaring dinner guest list), I decided to just look at the screen for the color and the wild camera work. Venice looks great but the stodgy staging of 'The Duchess of Malfi' and the weak plot associated with it doesn't even begin to cover the creaks in this silly film. This one is only for the Figgis fans out there - and for Venice addicts who will put up with about anything to just 'feel' the Venetian glow. A Must Miss. Grady Harp, August 05

Images ScreenShot


About Hotel detail

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #39529 in DVD
  • Brand: TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX HOME ENT
  • Released on: 2005-07-26
  • Rating: R (Restricted)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
  • Formats: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: English, French, Italian
  • Subtitled in: English, Spanish, French
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: 1.00 pounds
  • Running time: 93 minutes

Read more Hotel

Related Product





Source From SHOPPING MALL
I would be grateful if you would give me the Interview
Cheers !.