Book Description
A how-to guidebook written by an American couple who retired to Belize. It details many of the benefits Belize has to offer North American retirees, including: year-round warm weather, world class diving, and sportfishing. It outlines Belize's low cost of living and inflation rate. It gives information on free medical care and government land give aways. 144 pages. Color/B&W photos. Illustrations. Weight: 0.5 pounds. Size: 5.5" X 8.5" X 0.4"
Customer Reviews:
False Advertising.......2003-10-20
Okay, I haven't even read the book, I'm simply reacting to the title.
I've spent a bit of time travelling and lodging in BZ, starting in 1992, and I can assure you that no gringo can live there for $450/month-not at what he/she regards as "living". It is the most expensive country in Central America, and, while beautiful and friendly and easy (English spoken) it sure ain't any bargain. And I love the country.
The authors blow all credibility with that "$450/ month" balderdash. Why not entitle it "Free Money?" Same difference.
Jerry
There has to be something better out there.......2001-09-26
First of all, Bill and Claire Gray need to hire a good editor. Even a bad editor could improve this. Their book is so full of punctuation and grammar errors that it makes reading difficult and continually annoys.
Beyond that, the book is brief, anecdotal, and incomplete. It's poorly organized and badly illustrated. I simply don't understand the positive reviews. I'll be looking for something better since I'm hoping to spend time in Belize soon and possibly retire there.
Granted, the Blair's have shared some helpful hints from their years of living in Belize. There are tips on entering the country, transportation, and immigration. Some of these, though, seem unreliable and vague.
If this were the only book on the subject it might be worth having, but I'm guessing there has to be something better out there.
Excellent-Entertaining-Factual Retire to Paradise Guide!.......2001-06-16
Belize Retirement Guide has impressed me as much more than then other retirement guides! When I read it, I felt like I had a guide right next to me and that I was actually visiting Belize. The Gray's have provided a guide that is both entertaining and factual which you will understand, after reading it, could only have been written by someone who actually lives there and done that. They provide you with both the Pro's and Con's of moving to and living in Belize from their first hand knowledge and not armchair or internet research. I found the Belize Retirement Guide to be an excellent resource for anyone considering either visiting or actually retiring to Belize. If you have ever dreamed, like I have, of retiring to a warm tropical climate where living is much more affordable than the U.S., then the Belize Retirement Guide will help you beyond anything else I have discovered before. Everything you need to know is available in this complete guidebook. Just be careful, however, because after reading the Belize Retirement Guide you may find yourself calling your travel agent the next day to book a flight and you just may be ready to make it a one way ticket.
Hats off to the Gray's for a most helpful book!.......2001-06-15
Just returned from Belize-had a great time , will be returning in November. I just can't praise the retirement guide enough.It was with us all the time as a quick reference and gave my sister and I that special "edge". After practically memorizing "Belize Retirement Guide before we departed , it was as if, when we arrived , we were visiting an old friend. I could find no category in which comment or assistance and addresses or phone numbers had not been included.
We have found a house to rent and are planning on retiring in Belize.
Expat experts!.......2001-05-28
Of all the books I've read on Belize, and I've read plenty, the writings of Bill and Claire Gray are the only works I've found that are written by expatriates actually living in Belize.Their writing is a love affair with Belize.If you want to find out about living in Belize they are where we should start.
Book Description
Take a look at Americans in their natural habitat: guys shopping for barbecue grills, doing that special walk men do when in the presence of lumber; superefficient soccer Ubermoms who chair school auctions, organize PTAs, and weigh less than their kids; and suburban chain restaurants, which if they merged would be called Chili's Olive Garden Hard Rock Outback Cantina. Are we as shallow as we look? Many around the world see us as the great bimbos. Sure, Americans work hard and are energetic, but that is because we are money-hungry and don't know how to relax.
But if you probe deeper, you find that we behave the way we do because we live under the spell of paradise. We are the inheritors of a sense of limitless possibilities, raised to think in the future tense and to strive toward the happiness we naturally accept.
On Paradise Drive, at once serious and comic, describes this distinct American future-mindedness that shapes our personalities and underlies our beliefs.
Download Description
"The author of the acclaimed bestseller Bobos in Paradise, which hilariously described the upscale American culture, takes a witty look at how being American shapes us, and how America's suburban civilization will shape the world's future. Take a look at Americans in their natural habitat. You see suburban guys at Home Depot doing that special manly, waddling walk that American men do in the presence of large amounts of lumber; super-efficient ubermoms who chair school auctions, organize the PTA, and weigh less than their children; workaholic corporate types boarding airplanes while talking on their cell phones in a sort of panic because they know that when the door closes they have to turn their precious phone off and it will be like somebody stepped on their trachea. Looking at all this, you might come to the conclusion that we Americans are not the most profound people on earth. Indeed, there are millions around the world who regard us as the great bimbos of the globe: hardworking and fun, but also materialistic and spiritually shallow. They've got a point. As you drive through the sprawling suburbs or eat in the suburban chain restaurants (which if they merged would be called Chili's Olive Garden Hard Rock Outback Cantina), questions do occur. Are we really as shallow as we look? Is there anything that unites us across the divides of politics, race, class, and geography? What does it mean to be American?
Customer Reviews:
An humorous and thought-provoking read.......2007-07-14
After writing "BoBos in Paradise," David Brooks certainly had a tough act to follow. I found that BoBos captured the psyche of the affluent baby boomers in a way that was both enlightening and rip roaringly humorous. For me, it's no overstatement to say that BoBos was a joy to read. I haven't enjoyed reading a writer as much since I faithfully read the columns of the late and legenday Mike Royko of the Chicago Tribune.
With "On Paradise Drive," Brooks does it again. This time he takes a broader look at segments of the American population and explains what motivates them to work so hard and be so optimistic. In the book, Brooks brings to life the diverse ways in which we Americans dream about our futures and live out our lives to accomplish our dreams. As it turns out we are united in our future orientation, self-determinism and optimism yet diverse in the paths we choose to pursue. It is delightful to see so many segments of the American population pursuing happiness and at least partially finding it in the pursuit. Aristotle and Thomas Jefferson would be delighted to read this book since they both understood how important it was for humans to seek happiness even with the some of the inevitable bad decisions we make and consequences we experience along the way.
The one area I would have liked Brooks to explore is the actual failure of western societies to improve subjective well-being (i.e the sociologists' term for happiness) since WWII. For those who are interested, two good books to read on this are David Myers' "The American Paradox" and Robert Lanes' "The Loss of Happiness in Market Democracies." Happiness has not increased since WWII and following September 11 people's values are changing. It would be fascinating to hear David Brooks thoughts on this development.
As a side note, Brooks the thinker/writer/commentator is certainly doing great work. As a person, I find his humility, realist's idealism, and sense of humor admirable. Two pieces I read that really give us a sense of David Brooks the person were his tribute in Readers Digest to the late Michael Kelly of The Atlantic (who died in an accident while on assignment in Iraq) and Brook's Times' column on his son's bar mitzvah. In them we sense Mr. Brooks love of liberty, doing good, family, and the friends such as Mr. Kelly that he admires for their strength of character.
I wholeheartily recommend this book. For thought-proving insight and good humor, the views of David Brooks on any subject and in in any media -- books, his tues/sat New York Times columns, or friday evening appearances on PBS's The New Hour)-- are always worth considering.
Bobo's On Paradise Drive.......2007-03-20
I have been reading David Brooks since moving to Silicon Valley to help me understand my new context, it has all his main areas: "Bike Messenger Land" - hip, urban centers, the "Crunchy Suburbs" - somewhat suburban environment but with urban values and mindset, and the "Professional Zones" - commercial zones inhabited by cosmopolitan highly-educated workforce. Palo Alto/Mountain View is all three of these "mushed" together. It is a more suburban environment than San Francisco, but with a corporate/commercialized version of the same basic worldview and values-system. David Brooks understands, admires, and critiques the people who choose to live in this type of environment. He calls them "BOBO's", which is a compression of Bohemian Bourgeoisie. These are people with a 60's radical mindset who have become part of the privileged upper class, ironically, part of the establishment. Bobo's is probably the better book, but On Paradise Drive has a bit broader application. It will not only help you understand places like San Francisco and Decatur, GA, but also the general trajectory of the US. - blogophobe -
suburban satire.......2007-01-18
Whenever I travel to a different country and enjoy a new culture, I experience my distinctly American identity with a new force. I'll often ask myself what part of "me," how I think, feel, act, speak, relate, worry, dream, work, etc., is truly Christian, and what part of "me" is merely American. For all of that, what does it mean to be American? That is the question David Brooks, PBS television commentator and columnist for the New York Times, tackles in this book. In particular, he tries to describe what life is like for upper-middle-class Americans, "the people who hover over their children, renovate their homes, climb the ladder toward success, and plan anxiously for their retirement." If you grind your own coffee or enroll your kids in SAT prep classes, Brooks has you in his social scientific sights. His purview ignores the very rich, the rural, and the poor (for the latter categories read Robert Kaplan's An Empire Wilderness; Travels Into America's Future). He further asks what motivates our mania to work, study, move, play and consume as frenetically and assiduously as we do. Finally, he wonders whether we are as shallow as we sometimes look.
I have enjoyed Brooks as a sensible commentator on television's McNeil Lehrer Report, and I enjoyed reading this book. If you like large doses of good-natured caricature, satire, exaggeration, sarcasm, and generalizations about Americans and life in America, as I do, then you will likely appreciate Brooks's style. His riff on suburban Ubermoms, for example, is marvelous. Ubermoms raise huge sums for school causes, drive monster SUVs, weigh less than their kids, are tech savvy, and entertain with effortless charm and verve. They have children whose first names sound like last names and they use "summer" as a verb. I saw myself in his chapters on how we educate our children, how we work, and how we shop. In addition to his biting satire, he employs a staple of statistics about consumption patterns, how often we move, household incomes, and the like. Finally, Brooks is not all laughs; he weaves into his cultural analysis extensive interactions with scholarly social criticisms from sociology, economics, history, and literature.
America might be the Rhino of the World, as Brooks suggests, a sort of bull in a china shop, or alternately the Global Bimbo that is vulgar, crass and shallow. But that is not all that is true about us. Brooks clearly loves America, and is not ashamed to say so. Whatever its many faults, and it has many, America truly is a place of equality, opportunity, mobility, and dreams about a possible future: "Born in abundance, inspired by opportunity, nurtured in imagination, spiritualized by a sense of God's blessing, and realized in ordinary life day by day, this Paradise Spell is the controlling ideology of American Life" (p. 268). Paradise Drive is a simple read about an important subject by an informed critic.
Hilarious Taxonomy of Suburban Archetypes.......2006-11-19
Comedy works when it says something true and Brooks' comic piece of pop cultural criticism is indeed true as he glibly fillets the various suburban types, including "crunchies," self-righteous, do-gooder Trader Joe shoppers who tend to their "anti-lawns"; downtown urban hipsters, upper class Audi-driving professionals with manicured lawns. Brooks' 3-page description of "morally elevated supermarkets" in which he describes the manner in which it seems "that every cashier is on temporary furlough from Amnesty International" is alone worth the price of this funny book. Fans of this type of biting "sociology" will also want to check out Paul Fussell's Class: A Guide Through the American Status System.
Brooks' Enthusiasm Exceeds End Result.......2006-09-18
On Paradise Drive is a fairly amusing pop-sociological study of the modern American middle-class man and woman--especially the suburban-American. In doing so, Brooks attempts to defend the American Dream in its current incarnation and interpretation (consumerism, materialism, sunny optimism) as something just as sacred and legitimate today as it was 100, 200 years ago. DB takes us on a whirlwind Great American Road Trip to illustrate his point, stopping in suburbs, exurbs, middle-ring-suburbs, etc., etc.
In his zeal to entertain, Brooks, as he often does, gets ahead of himself and sometimes tries too hard to make us laugh, letting the point get away from him. He is in the category of social commentators who is head over heels in love with his own witticisms and coin phrases--so much so that this coinage often gets tiresome. He uses composites and generalizations to support his theses, such as the dichotomy between a blonde (superficial, cheery, ambitious) and brunette (self-reflective, insecure, confused) mentality that exists in America. These also begin to sag after a while, with chapters sometimes running past the length required to make the point glibly.
Brooks' main idea, that the very things that make us seem so crude, vulgar, and shallow to the outside world--our obsession with success, indomitable work ethic and ambition, and endless material accumulation--are the manifestation of a deeper (and peculiarly American) spiritual quest, is compelling, to be sure. He often approaches elaboration--but, at the end, seems to recede from it, settling for overquoting sociologists and writers on America, and encouraging independent research. It's almost as if Brooks loses surety and abandons the quest to us.
Average customer rating:
- Up-dated version needed--
- Blueprint for Paradise: How to Live on a Tropical Island
- No understatement
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Blueprint for paradise: How to live on a tropic island
Ross Norgrove
Manufacturer: Moon Publications
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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Caribbean Style
ASIN: 0918373158 |
Customer Reviews:
Up-dated version needed--.......2006-03-31
Things have changed - even on islands--in past 19 yrs. A lot of the information is seriously out-dated.
Blueprint for Paradise: How to Live on a Tropical Island.......2002-10-31
This book is very informative for anyone thinking of living on a tropical island. I lived in Fiji for five years and found his information to be right on the money. I lived there before reading the book. I was especially interested in the break down of the different types of islands. Its very helpful to know what each kind of island offers in relation to what type of life you want to lead. Some parts, like building a boat, I skipped over, but I found the day to day info extremely well researched or lived as is his case. He talked from his own experience. It will prove helpful for the neophyte to island life. If you are thinking of moving to a tropical island, read this book first.
No understatement.......1999-10-23
This book is rated in 5 catagories from"Catcher in the Rye" rocks to luxury islands. Each catagories presents different challenges, although the difficulty in living on a catagory 5 island centers mostly on the laid back tropical lifestyle in relation to either getting your place built on time or being patient thru expected bureaucratic red-tape. This is not a run of the mill guidebook. Its like a Time-Life fix-it manual focusing on tropic islands. I am now read up on tropical architecture, plumbing, cisterns, septic tanks, boatbuilding and several other practical activities.The book certainly delivers on what the title promises. Personally, I was expecting less technicality, but thats my problem. I would recommend this to anyone thinking of roughing it on an island.
Book Description
In the tradition of Under the Tuscan Sun and A Year in Provence, here is Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson’s ode to his personal paradise–his adopted home, New Zealand. After living in California, why did Masson settle– out of all the places on earth–in such a faraway land? It turns out that while visiting a beautiful sandy beach just fifteen minutes from bustling Auckland, Masson and his family were utterly seduced by the exotic locale. There was little deliberation. This place, surrounded by lush forest on a bay dotted with volcanic islands, would be their new home.
Masson takes readers on a remarkable journey to another world, as he and his family “slip into” the paradise that is New Zealand. For anyone who has ever dreamed of finding utopia, Masson reveals a country where neighbors talk to one another and provide a sense of real community–rarely, outside of the big cities, locking their doors–and where politics are as mellow as the weather. New Zealand is also a land of spectacular scenery, made even more famous for being the shooting location for the Lord of the Rings films. The flora is plentiful. Mangroves, banana plants, papaya trees, and more than ten thousand species of ferns grow wild and freely. The fauna is benign. There are no snakes, tarantulas, or scorpions. Children can walk to school barefoot without a care– there is nothing to sting them, bite them, or give them a rash. In the blue waters near the lush coastline, dolphins and orcas abound.
While describing his love affair with the country and his affinity for its citizens, Masson reflects on the meaning of home, the importance of acting on intuition, and what happens when we lose our connection to the place we live in. Responding to an impulse, Masson reveals, he realized a dream.
Featuring a its glossary of phrases used by New Zealanders and important Maori words, as well as the author’s recommended travel itinerary, Slipping into Paradise is ideal for anyone planning a visit to this exquisite land. Full of photographs, delightful anecdotes, and little-known facts (jogging, for example, was invented in New Zealand), Slipping into Paradise is also a book for those who fantasize about dramatically changing their lives–and who imagine something better for themselves. Jeffrey Masson’s message: New Zealand awaits.
Customer Reviews:
Not really about NZ.......2006-08-04
But about the author himself. Obviously an intelligent and well-traveled man. You can't miss that point , as he reminds you of such every other paragrah. I do , though , actually enjoy his writing style and enjoyed the book despite him. More on the actual state of living in NZ would be called for. After reading the book , I know little of how the common Kiwi spends his day , week or year. How the children grow through school and society. The state of business and commerce. I know much much more of the author's political beliefs (Michael Moore is courageous, American Blacks are entitled to reparations etc etc) that have no connection with , or bearing on , New Zealand. I know that he and his wife are well read , well traveled , well met(oh the name dropping!) and certainly , well off. I know that, with broad brush strokes , and 'not quite right' fellings in his gut, he paints entire countries and cultures - not as inferior to new Zealand's - but as unworthy of his residence. And thus Mr. Masson's book , in it's essence, is not really more than so much of the same pseudo-intellectual fluff that he so casually , yet specifically, dismisses.
Why did I find this book so annoying?.......2006-02-08
Speaking as an American living in New Zealand (indeed, a Berkeleyite, just like Masson), this book really got under my skin, and not in a good way. Masson arrives in New Zealand with all his Berkeleyan world-explaining ideas (The Despoiling White Man, The Noble Savage, The Oppressed Native Peoples ) intact, needing only a smattering of experience to trot them out and apply them to his adopted country. There is next to no learning in this book, remarkably little writing of charm, insight or wit--just an endless litany of "I did...", "I felt...", "I was affected by..." paragraphs, interspersed with the kind of factual material that a high-school student might include. As journalism it is far too slapdash. As memoir, its self-regard and -indulgence far outweighs its meager helping of resonance. In short, I can't believe that this book had an editor.
This is clearly a book that was written on his veranda, for people who already take him for an intellectual/empathetic figure of note. Not having ever read anything else of his, I found nothing here to justify that standing, which makes it only the more irritating that he is so "up himself", as the Kiwis would say.
New Zealand is indeed a wonderful, wonderful places, for some of the reasons Masson describes, and for many others as well that he never notices. Even when he says something I sort of agree with, I start mentally arguing with him. GAHH!
This book is not paradise.......2005-12-31
It's not that it's a terribly _bad_ book, just hopelessly mislabeled. A better title would be "A Dull Exposition of the Flora, Fauna, and Native Peoples of New Zealand". It's not a total loss, the author gives some insight on the pros and cons of other places (e.g.: Hawaii - too confining, London - too expensive and dirty). He also gives a nice itinerary at the end of the book, even giving directions to his beach-side house.
Several times he points out the tendency of Kiwi's to cut pretentious people down to size, which is especially ironic since the author appears to be pretentious in the extreme.
If you're looking for a book to give solid information about emigrating to New Zealand, this isn't it. If you're looking for practical day-to-day advice from someone who has done it, this isn't it. If you want a heavy dose of whining and pontification - this is the book for you.
My recommendation: "Browse" the book at a local bookstore (you can read the 1-2 worthwhile chapters very quickly) then save your money and put it back on the shelf.
Waste of Time.......2005-12-19
This book isn't about New Zealand, it's about the author and his laundry list of intellectual and professional accomplishments. It's self-important drivel disguised as a travel book and his pretentious rhetoric is anything but New Zealand.
Wonderful book!!.......2005-11-27
I bought this book a couple of weeks ago. I love it. Jeffrey describes it sooo beautiful and give you soo many information. About the people, language, history....
It is beautifully written.
Average customer rating:
- Inside look at Polynesian philosophy of life
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To Live in Paradise
Renee Roosevelt Denis
Manufacturer: Lost Coast Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 1882897072 |
Customer Reviews:
Inside look at Polynesian philosophy of life.......1998-10-23
Renee Denis came from a fascinatingand unusual family, which no doubt explains her choice of a lifestyle for herself. Her book helps one to understand why the Polynesian extended family overcomes the problems you might think would exist with so many single mothers (including the author). An amazingingly interesting life!
Average customer rating:
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ROADS TO PARADISE: Reading the Lives of the Early Saints
Alison Goddard Elliott
Manufacturer: Brown
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Library Binding
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ASIN: 0874513898 |
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A Split Second of Paradise: Live Art, Installation and Performance
Manufacturer: Rivers Oram Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 1854890999 |
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- interesting and informative
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The Price of Paradise : Lucky We Live Hawaii?
Manufacturer: Mutual Publishing
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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The Price of Paradise, Vol. 2
ASIN: 1566470161 |
Customer Reviews:
interesting and informative.......2000-06-29
I had to write an economics paper, and one particular chapter was very helpful for me. The chapters were all editorials on different aspects of the finances of living in Hawaii. They are very throughough and appear to be accurate. The dialog is easy to read, and there are amusing cartoons. It is a fun and easy book to explore if you want this sort of information. The topics are interesting, which I didn't think was possible since the overall subject is economics. Overall, interesting and informative.
Average customer rating:
- The Meek Shall Inherit the Earth!!!!
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You Can Live Forever in Paradise on Earth
Manufacturer: Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
ASIN: B000E1VTFU |
Customer Reviews:
The Meek Shall Inherit the Earth!!!! .......2007-07-25
This book directs people to the bible and wow, the bible actually says that man was meant to live in paradise and that paradise was to be on earth, hence Jesus' words, "The meeks shall inherit the earth". You gotta love it!
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