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| Nantucket: Island Living | 
enlarge | Author: Leslie Linsley Creator: Terry Pommett Publisher: Stewart, Tabori & Chang Category: Book
List Price: $40.00 Buy New: $19.99 You Save: $20.01 (50%)
New (39) Used (7) from $18.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 162517
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 224 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.4 Dimensions (in): 11.2 x 10.3 x 1
ISBN: 1584797231 Dewey Decimal Number: 728.370974497 EAN: 9781584797234 ASIN: 1584797231
Publication Date: October 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Imagine a place of unspoiled beaches, windswept dunes, and dramatic natural beauty. A place free of traffic lights and blaring commercial come-ons. A place whose rich historical heritage is visible everywhere—from the antiques-shop windows filled with handmade baskets and scrimshawed ivories to the spare, shingle-clad houses that coexist harmoniously with the surrounding land- and seascapes. Imagine a place designed, by man and nature, to relax and restore you. Nantucket Island is that place. Thirty miles off Cape Cod, Nantucket is both geographically isolated and—as an internationally regarded vacation resort—culturally sophisticated. Nantucketers are rightly proud of a manner of living that couples the casual comforts of small-town life with an urbane sense of glamour, taste, and style. In this handsomely illustrated book, longtime Nantucket residents Leslie Linsley and Terry Pommett give you an insider’s look at the on-island lifestyle: the restored historic homes of Nantucket town and ’Sconset village, the appealingly humble beachfront cottages that dot the island’s shoreline, and the beautifully tended gardens—formal and informal—that grace Nantucket’s private houses and public buildings. More than 200 color photos document the other attractions—panoramic views, home-grown handicrafts, seasonal celebrations —that make Nantucket such a rewarding place to spend a day, a summer, or a lifetim
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| Customer Reviews:
A treat January 1, 2009 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I gave this book to my wife for Christmas and borrowed it back the next day. Eventually I was forced to return it and I'm pleased to say she is now enjoying it as much as I did.
Nantucket Island Living is a sumptuous portrait of a special and highly individual place. Nantucket lies thirty miles off Cape Cod, and according to the author it is the island's isolation that accounts for its charm, in two particular ways: its distinctive weathered shingle homes reflect the simple, functional demands of it's early influences - a solid Quaker outlook and the self-reliance of a population that accommodated itself to the elements and made a living from the sea; but after the demise of the whaling industry Nantucket managed to reinvent itself as the ultimate island getaway for affluent second-homers and holiday makers, who recognised that it's history and traditions were its greatest assets and should not be subsumed, as so often happens elsewhere, by the trappings of commercialism. The resulting balance of the quaint with the sophisticated is beautifully captured here in both words and images.
What struck me most, though, is that wherever it might appear on the map, and whether fashionably cosmopolitan or untouched and untamed, an island is an island. 3,500 miles from Nantucket, on the other side of the Atlantic, my wife and I happen to live on an otherwise uninhabited island, and the two could not be more different; but reading of the author's love of her adopted home, and seeing through the photographs how completely the islanders' experience is shaped by the water, I can see that we have much in common.
This is a highly successful collaboration between writer and photographer. I recommend it.
Nantucket Book December 26, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book is BEAUTIFUL. I purchased it as a gift for a long time Nantucket visitor. She is thrilled. The pictures are wonderful and crisp and the writing is very descriptive. I'd say this is an excellent purchase.
Dined at Uncle Charles' on Blackberry Pudding December 4, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Who did?
Captain Gardner's niece (hence the reference to Uncle Charles) as recorded in her diary in July of 1846. The entry reads, "They live in a little cottage place on a little rise of ground". Then comes the part about the blackberry pudding.
The "little cottage place" today is one of the exceptional residences profiled in Nantucket Island Living. Each one is lovingly described with an attentiveness that drills down to the level of blackberry pudding when necessary to establish the context, atmosphere, and ultimately the essence of the place.
This is fitting; as the author writes in the introduction, "Nantucket is more than a place - it is a state of mind".
And so it is.
Gorgeous photography by Terry Pommett complements the text. It's an absolute feast for the eyes.
The exploration of the island takes us from the elegance and history of Town (that's what the locals call it) to windswept beach cottages, from stately seaside mansions to the gardens and the quaint village of Siasconset.
Intertwined with it all is an overview of the island's history, traditions, natural life, and culture.
This is a book that will be enjoyed over and over again.
The Best November 30, 2008 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
This beautifully illustrated book depicts Nantucket Island as it is - full of character, charm, and simply beautiful. The photographs are incredible - each is a gem, a beautiful picture. Congrats to the Poms and all who made this possible!
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