The Thinking Fan's Guide to Walt Disney World: Magic Kingdom
by Aaron Wallace
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Art. Travel. Nonfiction. A different kind of guidebook for a different kind of theme park experience. "The Thinking Fan's Guide To Walt Disney World: Magic Kingdom" explores the history, lore, and literature that inform the designs and storylines of every ride and attraction in the Magic Kingdom. For the first time, Walt Disney World Resort is appreciated for what Walt Disney always intended it to be — a work of art. This new edition adds coverage of the Fantasyland attractions that have show more opened since 2013, among them Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, Enchanted Tales with Belle, and Under the Sea - Journey of The Little Mermaid, . This new edition adds coverage of the Fantasyland attractions that have opened since 2013, among them Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, Enchanted Tales with Belle, and Under the Sea - Journey of The Little Mermaid, and offers new insights into some older attractions. show lessTags
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This will be the last in the trio of books about Disney theme parks I've read recently, but it's also the best of the bunch. The author takes us on a tour of the Magic Kingdom and fills us in on the history, artistry, and hidden features of each attraction. Wallace knows a lot about the thinking that went behind creating the attractions and offers insight into how people respond to them. He also pairs each attraction with a movie to watch, and not always the most obvious one. Some of the films aren't even by Disney! This is a great book on how Disney theme parks work as cultural artifacts.
As advertised, The Thinking Fan's Guide is not your typical guidebook, but then again, Walt Disney World is not your typical theme park. You get some of the "typical" information about attractions like wait times, best time to visit, and "fear factor", but there is so much more as well. Playing on the fact that Disney is more about the story than the spectacle and thrill, Wallace gives you more of the back story and notes on the theme and development of the attractions in Walt Disney World as well as some of the hidden meanings behind them. The result is a guide that allows new visitors and veterans alike to Walt Disney World to see the park in a totally new light and hopefully gets them to slow down on their race to the next show more ride.
Broken into chapters based on the themes lands of Walt Disney World (Adventureland, Frontierland, Liberty Square, Fantasyland, Tomorrowland, and Main Street, USA), The Thinking Fan's Guide serves as a vitrtual tourbook of the park, taking guests on a morning ride on Jungle Cruise straight through to a spectacular view of Wishes at the end of the day. Wallace's easy to read writing style also adds to this relaxing tour as well. He is able to introduce attractions in a way that doesn't make old WDW vets feel as though they are being talked down to, but also allows the uninitiated to understand what they are looking for without even having seen the actual attraction itself.
Learning about the history, subtle differences between the Walt Disney World and Disneyland attractions, and discovering some of the hidden secrets and meanings to these attractions helps you to understand why the Disney properties have been so successful over time. More time is spent in the details, making it so that each time you visit you will see something new that you may have missed or overlooked before. Books like The Thinking Fan's Guide only help to remind us of these subtleties and gives a new incentive to look during the next visit -- I know I will be when I am in WDW in August!
My only criticism (and this is almost unfair) of The Thinking Fan's Guide is that there is very little on the attractions in the New Fantasyland expansion that took place in the Magic Kingdom recently. The two attractions I was looking forward to reading about, Enchanted Tales with Belle, and Journey of the Little Mermaid are missing here, apparently a victim of time constraints for publication as they only opened in December, 2012. Hopefully there will be a new edition with these new attractions (as well as the Seven Dwarfs Mine Train) will come in the future.
I highly recommend The Thinking Fan's Guide to Walt Disney World: Magic Kingdom to old and new fans alike. Make sure this book is either a pre-visit read, or take it along with you so you can fully appreciate all that the Magic Kingdom has to offer. I sincerely hope that with the success of this edition, we'll soon see similar guides for the other three parks that make up the Walt Disney World Resort. show less
Broken into chapters based on the themes lands of Walt Disney World (Adventureland, Frontierland, Liberty Square, Fantasyland, Tomorrowland, and Main Street, USA), The Thinking Fan's Guide serves as a vitrtual tourbook of the park, taking guests on a morning ride on Jungle Cruise straight through to a spectacular view of Wishes at the end of the day. Wallace's easy to read writing style also adds to this relaxing tour as well. He is able to introduce attractions in a way that doesn't make old WDW vets feel as though they are being talked down to, but also allows the uninitiated to understand what they are looking for without even having seen the actual attraction itself.
Learning about the history, subtle differences between the Walt Disney World and Disneyland attractions, and discovering some of the hidden secrets and meanings to these attractions helps you to understand why the Disney properties have been so successful over time. More time is spent in the details, making it so that each time you visit you will see something new that you may have missed or overlooked before. Books like The Thinking Fan's Guide only help to remind us of these subtleties and gives a new incentive to look during the next visit -- I know I will be when I am in WDW in August!
My only criticism (and this is almost unfair) of The Thinking Fan's Guide is that there is very little on the attractions in the New Fantasyland expansion that took place in the Magic Kingdom recently. The two attractions I was looking forward to reading about, Enchanted Tales with Belle, and Journey of the Little Mermaid are missing here, apparently a victim of time constraints for publication as they only opened in December, 2012. Hopefully there will be a new edition with these new attractions (as well as the Seven Dwarfs Mine Train) will come in the future.
I highly recommend The Thinking Fan's Guide to Walt Disney World: Magic Kingdom to old and new fans alike. Make sure this book is either a pre-visit read, or take it along with you so you can fully appreciate all that the Magic Kingdom has to offer. I sincerely hope that with the success of this edition, we'll soon see similar guides for the other three parks that make up the Walt Disney World Resort. show less
An interesting guide book that shows a different side of the Magic Kingdom.
This book is part "standard" guide book in that it provides basic information about many of the attractions in the Magic Kingdom (location, typical wait time, brief description of the attraction, etc.), but it also includes information that you will not find in many other guide books.
Beyond the basic information, this book also provides other sorts of information about each attraction, such as the history of the attraction and how each attraction relates to other Disney properties. In addition, for each attraction, the book provides "Watch This" sidebars that suggest movies and TV shows that relate to the attraction.
I recommend this book to any and all fans of show more Disney parks in general, and fans of the Magic Kingdom in particular. show less
This book is part "standard" guide book in that it provides basic information about many of the attractions in the Magic Kingdom (location, typical wait time, brief description of the attraction, etc.), but it also includes information that you will not find in many other guide books.
Beyond the basic information, this book also provides other sorts of information about each attraction, such as the history of the attraction and how each attraction relates to other Disney properties. In addition, for each attraction, the book provides "Watch This" sidebars that suggest movies and TV shows that relate to the attraction.
I recommend this book to any and all fans of show more Disney parks in general, and fans of the Magic Kingdom in particular. show less
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- Genres
- Travel, Nonfiction, Art & Design, Sociology
- DDC/MDS
- 917.5942 — History & geography Geography & travel Geography of and travel in North America Southeastern U.S. Florida
- LCC
- GV1853.3 .F62 .W355 — Geography, Anthropology and Recreation Recreation. Leisure Recreation. Leisure Circuses, spectacles, etc.
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