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APA Publications Limited - Pocket Rough Guide Las Vegas (Travel Guide with Free eBook) (Pocket Rough Guides)

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APA Publications Limited Pocket Rough Guide Las Vegas (Travel Guide with Free eBook) (Pocket Rough Guides)
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Pocket Rough Guide Las Vegas
Make the most of your time on Earth with the ultimate travel guides.
Entertaining, informative and stylish pocket guide, now with free eBook.
Discover the best of Las Vegas with this compact and entertaining pocket travel guide. This slim, trim treasure trove of trustworthy travel information is ideal for short-trip travellers and covers all the key sights (the Strip, Downtown Las Vegas, the deserts), restaurants, shops, cafs and bars, plus inspired ideas for day-trips, with honest and independent recommendations from our experts.Features of this travel guide to Las Vegas:
  • Compact format: packed with practical information, this is the perfect travel companion when youre out and about exploring Las Vegas
  • Honest and independent reviews: written with Rough Guides trademark blend of humour, honesty and expertise, our writers will help you make the most of your trip
  • Incisive area-by-area overviews: covering the South Strip, Central Strip, North Strip and more, the practical Places section provides all you need to know about must-see sights and the best places to eat, drink and shop
  • Handy pull-out map: with every major sight and listing highlighted, the pull-out map makes on-the-ground navigation easy
  • Time-saving itineraries: carefully planned routes will help inspire and inform your on-the-road experiences
  • Day-trips: venture further afield to see the rest of the city or the deserts. This tells you why to go, how to get there, and what to see when you arrive
  • Travel tips and info: packed with essential pre-departure information including getting around, health, tourist information, festivals and events, plus an A-Z directory and handy language section and glossary
  • Attractive user-friendly design: features fresh magazine-style layout, inspirational colour photography and colour-coded maps throughout
  • The ultimate travel tool: download the free eBook to access all this from your phone or tablet
  • Covers: The South Strip; City Center and around; The Central Strip; The North Strip; Downtown Las Vegas; The rest of the city; The deserts
Looking for a comprehensive travel guide to the US? Try The Rough Guide to the USA for an informative and entertaining look at all the country has to offer.About Rough Guides: Rough Guides have been inspiring travellers for over 35 years, with over 30 million copies sold. Synonymous with practical travel tips, quality writing and a trustworthy tell it like it is ethos, the Rough Guides list includes more than 260 travel guides to 120+ destinations, gift-books and phrasebooks.

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CONTENTS LAS VEGAS A dazzling oasis where about forty million people a year - photo 1
CONTENTS

LAS VEGAS A dazzling oasis where about forty million people a year escape the - photo 2

LAS VEGAS

A dazzling oasis where about forty million people a year escape the everyday, Las Vegas has made a fine art of indulging its visitors every appetite. From its ever-changing architecture to cascading chocolate fountains, adrenaline-pumping zip lines and jaw-dropping stage shows, everything is built to thrill; as soon as the novelty wears off, its blown up and replaced with something bigger and better. The city of excess is home to many of the largest hotels in the world and thats pretty much all but its these extraordinary creations everyone comes to see.

Fremont Street Experience Shutterstock Best places to get a view of the Strip - photo 3

Fremont Street Experience

Shutterstock

Best places to get a view of the Strip

Although towering hotel blocks jostle for position along the Strip, there are surprisingly few places that offer non-guests a panoramic view of the whole thing. Possibilities include the summit of the Stratosphere (but thats a little far north and not quite aligned with the Strip), and the Voodoo Rooftop Nightclub at the Rio, off to one side. So the winner is the observation platform at the top of Pariss Eiffel Tower, perfectly poised to look north and south along the Strips busiest stretch, as well as west, and down, to the fountains of Bellagio.

Each hotel is a neighbourhood in its own right, measuring as much as a mile end to end; crammed full of state-of-the-art clubs, restaurants, spas and pools; and centring on what makes the whole thing possible an action-packed casino where tourists and tycoons alike are gripped by the roll of the dice and the turn of the card.

Even if its entire urban area covers 136 square miles, most visitors see no more of Las Vegas than two short, and very different, linear stretches. Downtown, the original centre, now amounts to four brief (roofed-over) blocks of Fremont Street, while the Strip begins a couple of miles south, just beyond the city limits, and runs for four miles southwest. Its the Strip where the real action is, a visual feast where each mega-casino vies to outdo the next with some outlandish theme, be it an Egyptian pyramid (Luxor), a Roman extravaganza (Caesars Palace), a fairytale castle (Excalibur) or a European city (Paris and
the Venetian).

In 1940, Las Vegas was home to just eight thousand people. It owes its extraordinary growth to its constant willingness to adapt; far from remaining kitsch and old-fashioned, its forever reinventing itself. Entrepreneurs race to spot the latest shift in who has the money and what they want to spend it on. A few years ago the casinos realized that gamblers were happy to pay premium prices for good food, and top chefs now run gourmet restaurants in venues like Bellagio and the Cosmopolitan. More recently, demand from younger visitors has prompted casinos like Wynn Las Vegas and MGM Grand to open high-tech nightclubs to match those of Miami and LA.

The reputation Las Vegas still enjoys, of being a quasi-legal adult playground where (almost) anything goes, dates back to its early years when most of its first generation of luxury resorts were cut-throat rivals controlled by the Mob. In those days illegal profits could easily be skimmed off and respectable investors steered clear. Then, as now, visitors loved to imagine that they were rubbing shoulders with gangsters. Standing well back from the Strip, each casino was a labyrinth in which it was all but impossible to find an exit. During the 1980s, however, visitors started to explore on foot; mogul Steve Wynn cashed in by placing a flame-spouting volcano outside his new Mirage mega-resort. As the casinos competed to lure in pedestrians, they filled in the daunting distances from the sidewalk, and between casinos.

With Las Vegas booming in the 1990s, gaming corporations bought up first individual casinos, and then each other. The Strip today is dominated by just two colossal conglomerates MGM Resorts and Caesars Entertainment. Once you own the casino next door, theres no reason to make each a virtual prison; the Strip has therefore opened out, so that much of its central portion now consists of open-air terraces and pavilions housing bars and restaurants.

The city may have tamed its setting, but the magnificent wildernesses of the American West still lie on its doorstep. Dramatic parks like Red Rock Canyon and the Valley of Fire are just a short drive away, or you can fly to the Grand Canyon, and Utahs glorious Zion National Park makes a wonderful overnight getaway.

When to visit

Visitors flock to Las Vegas throughout the year, however the climate varies enormously. In July and August, the average daytime high exceeds 100F (38C), while in winter the thermometer regularly drops below freezing. Hotel swimming pools generally open between April and September only.

Its which day you visit that you should really take into account; accommodation can easily cost twice as much on Friday and Saturday as during the rest of the week.

Valley of Fire iStock Where to Shop Shopping now ranks among the principal - photo 4

Valley of Fire

iStock

Where to
Shop

Shopping now ranks among the principal reasons that people visit Las Vegas. Downtown is all but devoid of shops, however, and while the workaday city has its fair share of malls, tourists do almost all of their shopping on the Strip itself. Their prime destination is the amazing Forum at Caesars Palace, followed by the Grand Canal Shoppes at the Venetian and Miracle Mile at Planet Hollywood. Stand-alone malls include Fashion Show opposite Wynn Las Vegas, useful for everyday purchases, and high-end Crystals in CityCenter.

OUR FAVOURITES: .

Eat

Las Vegas used to be a byword for bad food, with just the occasional mobster-dominated steakhouse or Italian restaurant to relieve the monotony of the pile-em-high buffets. Those days have long gone. Every major Strip casino now holds half a dozen or more high-quality restaurants, many run by top chefs from all over the world. Prices have soared, to a typical minimum spend of $50 per head at big-name places, but so too have standards, and you could eat a great meal in a different restaurant every night in casinos such as Aria, Bellagio, Caesars Palace, the Cosmopolitan and the Venetian.

OUR FAVOURITES: .

Drink

Every Las Vegas casino offers free drinks to gamblers. Sit at a slot machine or gaming table, and a cocktail waiter will find you and take your order (tips are expected). In addition, the casinos feature all kinds of bars and lounges. Along the Strip, bars tend to be themed, as with the Irish pubs of New YorkNew York or the flamboyant lounges of Caesars Palace; downtown theyre a bit more rough-and-ready. Note that the legal drinking age is 21 you must carry ID to prove it.

OUR FAVOURITES:.

Go out

The Strip is once more riding high as the entertainment epicentre of the world. While Elvis may have left the building, headliners like

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