Oxford Guide
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The
Oxford Guide - Oxford books and maps
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The
A-Z Little Map range is an innovative concept that utilises
the brochure format patented by the Little Book Company Ltd.
with large scale A-Z mapping to produce a pocket size city
centre map that is both informative and user friendly. This
coloured street map covers the city centre of Oxford at an
easy to read scale of approximately five and a half inches
to one mile. As the concept of the Little Map implies, the
map is presented as a book which measures 105mm X 65mm and
this can be opened up to a single A3 sheet. On the reverse
of the sheet is the index, which lists streets, selected flats,
walkways, and selected places of interest. Also on the reverse
is an enlarged section of the city centre, a separate index
to colleges and a road map of the Oxford area. |
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This
credit-card size street map with a z-fold pattern is a detailed
easy-to-read map of the city centre that clearly features:
NCP car parks and one-way streets; public toilets; pubs, hotels
and petrol station; and public buildings. An index of all
streets and places of interests is included. |
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Oxford:
The Photographic Atlas
Packed
with high-resolution aerial photography of Oxford and tourist
information, The Photographic Atlas of Oxford is the perfect
gift for anyone who lives or works in, or visits Oxford. If
you live or work in, or visit Oxford, you will already possess
a personal stake in this book -- within its pages you will
be able to find your house, perhaps locate your car parked
in the street, visit some of your favourite places, or simply
admire the stunning aerial views of the dreaming spires of
Oxford University. Even if you don't know Oxford well, you
will find this book fascinating. Packed, too, with tourist
information about things to see and do in the city, this is
the ideal visual companion to a day or a week in Oxford and
the perfect visual memento of your stay. The photographic
atlas is easy to use. The photography and the cartography
share the same standard grid system, meaning you can cross-reference
quickly between the two elements, allowing you to locate a
street or place of interest quickly and accurately. Finally,
all major streets have been indexed with two page numbers
-- one relating to the photography and the other relating
to the street mapping. |
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Inspector
Morse's name is as inextricably linked with Oxford as it is
with the Times crossword. The pubs, churches, university colleges,
stately homes, hotels and countryside in and around the city
form a real-life backdrop to Morse's investigations in Colin
Dexter's 13 novels. This illustrated guide to the places in
which Morse lived and worked is full of facts and trivia for
Morse addicts, whether you're an armchair fan or you're visiting
Oxford and wish to follow in the irascible detective's footsteps.
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