Moleskine City Notebook San Francisco

 
4.0 based on 8 reviews.

Media:

Hardcover Book, 228 pages

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Product Description

As we pass through the metropolis, the very sights and acts of our daily lives constitute the fabric of the richest novelistic tale we can ever experience. Commit your travels and insights to paper, deepening that trove of memory and thought. In time, perhaps, your City Notebook will prove as resonant with recall as the celebrated madeleine of Proust. The future is unwritten. Take up your pen and shape it.

Product Details

  • Media: Hardcover Book, 228 pages
  • Publisher: Moleskine (January 01, 2008)
  • Edition: illustrated edition
  • ISBN-10: 8883708105
  • ISBN-13: 9788883708107
  • Dimensions: 3.6 x 5.6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.05 lbs
  • Note: Some of this information came from Amazon.com

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Customer Reviews

  • Rating A Do-It-Yourself Travel Notebook  Aug 11, 2007 (32 of 33 found this helpful)

    This is a very unusual product and I would strongly encourage anyone considering getting one to be completely aware of what it is before they purchase it. First, if you are looking for a single travel guide to prepare you for your trip to New York (or anywhere else there is a guide for), this is very close to worthless, if not entirely worthless. I would call one's attention to the title of the product. It is a "Notebook." That means that most of the pages are blank. This literally is a book for taking notes in.

    So what do you get when you buy this? Every book in the series follows the same format. First there is a personal information page with address, phone, allergies, family doctor, passport number, then map information with public transportation maps. Then follows information on the various forms of transportation with phone numbers and websites, including cabs, buses, other forms of public transportation, and airports. There are some blank itinerary pages, measurement and speed conversion charts, size conversion charts (for shoppers), then a long series of neighborhood maps, including an index. And that's it. The final two-thirds of the notebook are blank. The next 20 or so pages are completely blank and unlined for whatever use you want to put them to. Next come several pages intended for writing down names of restaurants, bars, museums, historical sites, hotels, or whatever. The book also comes with unlabeled tabs with stickers to use as desired (for theaters, concert halls, or whatever you desire) as well as tracing paper for, as the label says, "Itineraries or Whatever." Finally, there is the usual pocket at the back that is found in all Moleskine products.

    For some people this is going to be an absolutely useless product. But for many this will be remarkably useful. In fact, I can envision two uses for this notebook. First, those who are planning a trip to one of the places for which Moleskine has produced a book. Let's say one has consulted the Blue guide, the Eyewitness Guide (by DK), a Rough Guide, the Michelin guide, and the Let's Go guide. Maybe you've bought all of these, making for five guides. No way do you want to drag all of these on your trip or more than one on your flight. So what might you do? You might take the Moleskin Notebook, record into it all the places you want to see, restaurants you want to dine at, museums you want to stroll through, and anything else you want to do while in your destination of choice, and record it there. So the Moleskine City Notebook can serve as a distillation of all the various travel guides, web sites, and other resources you have consulted. And instead of hauling about a large Fodor's guide, you can carry about this small Notebook that can easily fit into a backpack, purse, should bag, or even pocket.

    The only downside is that the Moleskine City Notebook is only as good as you make it. If you do a good job of planning your trip, it will be filled to the brim with useful and helpful information. If not, it will be as unhelpful as you have made it.

    There is a second use to which the City Notebook can be put to use, though it is not one for which it was primarily designed. You could use it for the city in which you live, should you live in one of the cities for which one is made. I live, for instance, in Chicago. I have bought one of these so that I can over time use it to record every bit of helpful information that I might find useful or helpful. I can record what hours the Seminary Co-Op Bookstore (the real one, not the trade version on 57th Street) is open. The hours for the Chicago Public Library and the Newberry Library. Phone numbers of restaurants and addresses of bars. And so on and so forth. Granted, these books will only benefit those who live in one of those cities, but for the U.S. New York, Chicago, Boston, Washington D.C., Seattle, San Francisco, and Los Angeles are

  • Rating Street & Muni maps are disappointing  Mar 8, 2009 (5 of 5 found this helpful)

    I bought this notebook because I liked the idea of not having to spread out a map and have it flap in the breeze and thought it would be nice to have my map and journal together as a single unit.

    While the other components of the San Francisco City Notebook are as expected (Yes, the gray print is hard to read - what was the designer thinking?!), the maps are the worst I've seen for this city. Not only are they incomplete, the Muni routes aren't shown on the street maps which have only a few major stations and the cable car routes. This inconveniently requires one to flip from the Muni pages to the pages with the street maps. It isn't easy to go down the index and then locate the page with the right street map to find the nearest station which, in fact, while being the nearest station according to the map, may not be the nearest Muni stop in real life. Reading the fine print, I discovered that the street maps are copyrighted by Lonely Planet Publications in 2006 while the Muni Metro maps are copyrighted by the City and County of San Francisco in 2003. I don't take issue with the BART map; only with the street and Muni maps because the street maps should have the complete Muni routes on them to maximize convenience and usefulness like other maps for San Francisco that I've seen.

    As a result, the City Notebook for San Francisco leaves me still needing a separate map when I was expecting to be able to carry only a single unit.

  • Rating Great travel planner and journal  Sep 26, 2007 (3 of 3 found this helpful)

    Great for planning travel and journaling the adventure. I travel to San Francisco several times a year and there are always new places I want to go but never seem to have the time to fit them all in- so I record them in my little Moleskin book and I'm ready for the next visit. The maps are great too and I like the little clear plastic overlays so I can mark those for route planning instead of marking up the actual map. When I pull out my little journal to consult it, it doesn't look like I'm reviewing a tourist book at all :-) This book is what you make of it and I really like that about it. Happy traveling.

  • Rating Perfect for someone new to the city  Sep 10, 2008 (2 of 2 found this helpful)

    I purchased this before moving to San Francisco. While I only ended up living there for six months, this came in handy. I always made sure I had it in my purse.

    The BART, MUNI and city maps are super helpful. I'd give this five stars just based on these maps. It takes a while to get used to the small size of the city map, spread out over 10-12 spreads in the book. But because the book is so small, I was able to carry it with me everywhere, and not look like a silly tourist when I pulled it out to consult the maps.

    I used the rest of the book to record names and addresses of various places/businesses/events in the city, contact information for new people I met, and directions. I'd definitely recommend this to anyone new to the city. I just moved to Portland, OR and was disappointed when I found out there wasn't a City Notebook for Portland. Guess I'll just have to walk around with big ol' clunky maps and bus/train schedules again. I'm hoping Moleskine will expand the City Notebooks to include some smaller US cites.

  • Rating Very Handy  Nov 30, 2009 (1 of 1 found this helpful)

    I don't reside in San Francisco, but this City Notebook helped me through several visits to the SF Area. It helped me navigate the BART and MUNI system, find destinations in Union Square and Golden Gate Park. There are several ways provided to preserve notes, thoughts, and memories. Warning: This is strictly a San Francisco Notebook only, that means it does not cover the entire Bay Area.

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