Home Home Theater Systems TVs & HDTVs DVD Players & Recorders Satellite Radio GPS Units  
  What are you shopping for?  


 

A Trip to the Beach: Living on Island Time in the Caribbean

A Trip to the Beach: Living on Island Time in the Caribbean
MSRP: $13.95
Your Price: $10.04
Savings: $ 3.91 ( 28% )
Shipping: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Three Rivers Press
Buy A Trip to the Beach: Living on Island Time in the Caribbean

Prices subject to change. Please verify price during checkout.
 

A Trip to the Beach: Living on Island Time in the Caribbean Features

ISBN13: 9780609807484
Condition: NEW
Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Click here to view our Condition Guide and Shipping Prices
 

Related A Trip to the Beach: Living on Island Time in the Caribbean Products

A the on Time Trip Island Caribbean in Living to the Beach:
the in Trip Beach: on to Caribbean A the Living Time Island
Caribbean on Island Beach: in to the the Living Time Trip A
on A the Caribbean in Living to Island the Trip Beach: Time
the Island Time A to the in on Beach: Trip Caribbean Living
 

Additional A Trip to the Beach: Living on Island Time in the Caribbean Information

This is the true story of a trip to the beach that never ends. It's about a husband and wife who escape civilization to build a small restaurant on an island paradise -- and discover that even paradise has its pitfalls. It's a story filled with calamities and comedy, culinary disasters and triumphs, and indelible portraits of people who live and work on a sliver of beauty set in the Caribbean Sea. It's about the maddening, exhausting, outlandish complications of trying to live the simple life -- and the joy that comes when you somehow pull it off.

The story begins when Bob and Melinda Blanchard sell their successful Vermont food business and decide, perhaps impulsively, to get away from it all. Why not open a beach bar and grill on Anguilla, their favorite Caribbean island? One thing leads to another and the little grill turns into an enchanting restaurant that quickly draws four-star reviews and a celebrity-studded clientele eager for Melinda's delectable cooking. Amid the frenetic pace of the Christmas "high season," the Blanchards and their kitchen staff -- Clinton and Ozzie, the dancing sous-chefs; Shabby, the master lobster-wrangler; Bug, the dish-washing comedian -- come together like a crack drill team. And even in the midst of hilarious pandemonium, there are moments of bliss.

As the Blanchards learn to adapt to island time, they become ever more deeply attached to the quirky rhythms and customs of their new home. Until disaster strikes: Hurricane Luis, a category-4 storm with two-hundred-mile-an-hour gusts, devastates Anguilla. Bob and Melinda survey the wreckage of their beloved restaurant and wonder whether leaving Anguilla, with its innumerable challenges, would be any easier than walking out on each other. Affectionate, seductive, and very funny, A Trip to the Beach is a love letter to a place that becomes both home and escape.



 

What Customers Say About A Trip to the Beach: Living on Island Time in the Caribbean:

I can't wait to go back now and hopefully meet some of the people in the book. I loved this book. I love Anguilla, and this book made me feel like I was back there again.

After reading this book I also enjoyed Live what you Love and would really love it if they would write a sequel to A Trip to the Beach. John and Tortola and now Dominica. I am always looking for good reads about life stories of those settling in the Caribbean as I have attempted several times. The Blanchards love of Anguilla matches my love of St.

Highly recommend. I only wish I had half of the determination they have. THis book was a joy to read. I love the trials and tribulations of the Blanchards in Paradise.

If I were a writing a book about "my Island" I would certainly change the characters names to protect their identity, I would probably change the Island's name to protect It but then I am not the owner of a restaurant. I too agree, they may have worked hard at the restaurant but there is no mention of owning other restaurants before, "Blanchards".Melinda Blanchard has the reader believe that she is a complete novice in the restaurant business and reads cook books and magazines to help her cooking, I also believe they now have "self help" books out there, all fine and dandy but the money they had to start has all to do with the opening of a restaurant.I too followed my dream and moved to a tiny Island, (which I will not mention as this island is truly paradise and we like to keep it this way) the only way I could "follow my dream" was by working very hard at my business and being lucky enough that my business can support me.Island life is very laid back but can also be very expensive, living on an Island requires hard work or hard cash or both.What I did like about the book was overshadowed by the references on the large amounts of cash they spent and the true details they chose to omit.

I especially enjoyed the sailboat race story. Did it occur to them to negotiate or look for a cheaper place. The people of Anguilla seem to have accepted the Blanchards as citizens and friends. It has to be a fancy restaurant.

So, they start designing and planning. "How much". he asks. They tell him $2,400 and he says, "OK".The Blanchards worry about their son in college in Washington state, but there are no long winded boring phone conversations with him as someone else reported.This book is not at all a "cure for insomnia" in fact, I found the opposite to be true. The bitter reviews are totally undeserved and off-base. I felt like I was reading about some other book.The Blanchards, who were probably the worst business people in the western world decide to open a little beach bar restaurant on the island of Anguilla. They soon learn that most everything has to be imported from elsewhere. Luckily, they had sold their former business which provided them with the dollars they needed--although, they came perilously close to running out of money.The Blanchards respect and care for the people of Anguilla is obvious.

Just the customs duty on everything was staggering. Bob was asked to help build and crew a boat for some locals. I stayed up too late reading it.While I'm not sure I would like the Blanchards if I knew them and I'm a little disappointed that their newest venture means they can't spend much time on the island they wanted to spend the rest of their lives on--I still loved the book. When he asked about how they were going to get a sail the group told him they hoped he would pay for it. Melinda flies home to Vermont to pack everything and put the house on the market and then to Florida to buy EVERYTHING they'll need to build and furnish the restaurant. He was thrilled to be asked.

Things change when they find the perfect place, but the rent is thousands per month--way too much to build a beach bar. In fact, they still have most of the staff they originally hired when they started the restaurant. This is all Very Expensive. They didn't say it did. Bob is back in Anguilla supervising the construction.

Buy A Trip to the Beach: Living on Island Time in the Caribbean
© 2006 - 2010 TopRankProducts.com - Home Theater Store : Privacy Policy