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CHIANG MAI
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The Northern city of Chiang Mai, is a city of diverse cultural complexity and natural beauty. The north is the home to the hill tribes, whose cultures are disappearing daily while modernization steps into place. It's also known for its magnificent national parks, elephant conservation centers, butterfly farms and some of the highest mountain peaks in Thailand along with an excess of 300 temples. Traveling to Chiang Mai is considered the keystone journey to make when one visits Thailand. In 2005, the magazine TRAVEL & LEASURE ranted Chiang Mai as the 5th best cities in the world to visit.
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Authors and agents who are currently scheduled to attend: Authors currently scheduled to attend: JOAN SILBER, REBECCA WALKER and others to be added along with literary agents KIRSTEN MANGES. We will also have other leading authors from the Mekong Delta-Laos, Cambodia, Vietnan.
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Centered in a valley about 700 kilometres
northwest of Bangkok, Chiang Mai is often
referred to as Thailand's second largest city,
even though its municipal population of
around 250,000 ranks it fifth nationwide.
In terms of the cultural role it plays in
today's Thailand, Chiang Mai is easily the
nation's "second city" after the capital,
especially in the fields of art, architecture
and design.
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Chiang Mai has long been a simmering
pot of multiple cultural influences
which forms the basis of its unique and
interesting style. Enriched as a trade
entrepot along the mule caravan routes
from China to Myanmar, the city expanded
its status and influence after an alliance of
three Thai princes consolidated power over
the region in the 13th century. Following
this time, as capital of the Lanna kingdom,
the walled and moat-encircled trading city
initiated a fusion of regional arts that is
still metamorphosing today.
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Over the centuries, influences have been
absorbed from near and far--from hill
tribes coming down from their highland
homes to trade in the city to Thai tribes
migrating across the Mekong River from
southern China and northern Vietnam,
as well as from the artisans of Thailand's
neighbouring lands.
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Post-modern, functionalist and
industrial styles imported from the West
also add to the current blend within a
design ethos that encourages their fusion
with traditional northern Thai design
elements. This approach means that the
essence of "Chiang Mai style" will remain
forever in flux as it continues to borrow
inspiration from old and new sources.
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What has not changed, though, is the
dynamism of the Chiang Mai society,
which guarantees the city's continued
reputation as a crucible for design.
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Where we'll be staying
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We'll be staying at a small Boutique hotel that's know for their hospitality and wonderful food, Golden Cupid. The Golden Cupid hotel has been ranked in 6th place out of 120 hotel in Trip Advisor. This same intimate hotel offers faultless service and wonderful dinners. The Golden Cupid hotel is not only a hotel it's a cultural experience. Pepe the chef is known for her fantastic cuisine. For those who are interested, Pepe offers wonderful cooking classes, plus an outdoor adventure of purchasing ingredients in the local market.
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NOT TO BE MISSED
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With over 30 Buddhist temples within the
city's thick brick ramparts, you can hardly
walk 100 yards without bumping into one
historic wat or another.
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The gilded 14th-century stupas at Wat
Phra That Doi Suthep, seated atop a hill
looming over the town's western flank,
never fail to impress. Plan to arrive just
before sunset, when most tour groups
have left and the resident monks have
begun their evening chants--the perfect
soundtrack for watching the sunset.
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No journey to Chiang Mai is truly
complete without a visit to Wat Phra
Sing, a 14th-century monastery renowned
for its ancient temple murals, exemplary
Lanna architecture and exquisite Phra
Singh Buddha.
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For an evening out, head to the cluster
of pubs and restaurants clinging to the
east bank of the Ping River; Riverside
Pub, Chang Jazz Pub and The Brasserie
host the city's best live bands.
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HANDICRAFTS
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As Thailand's main handicraft centre,
Chiang Mai is ringed by small cottage
factories and workshops. Photograph of different handmade flower soaps.
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The world-famous Night Bazaar,
consisting giant-wheeled carts parked
nightly along Chang Khlan Road, near the
Ping River, presents a mind-boggling array
of total junk to one-of-a-kind treasures.
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Stretching for several blocks along The
Ratchadamnoen every Sunday, the Sunday
Walking Street (Ratchadamnoen Road,
old city; 2-10pm) offers a better collection
of handicraft vendors and boasts the
advantage of vehicle-free streets.
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If Chiang Mai has a "national dish", it must be khao sawy--squiggly yellow noodles drenched in a curry-based chicken broth
and served with lime wedges, pickled cabbage and an incendiary
chilli paste. Originally a Yunnanese dish introduced to Chiang
Mai by Chinese Muslim pony caravans passing through in the
18th and 19th centuries, you will find the best bowls in open-air
shophouses along Soi 1, Charoen Prathet Road--the spot where
the old caravans used to tie up and trade with locals.
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SEASONS
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The best time of year to visit Chiang Mai is
between July and March, when the weather
is relatively pleasant, the air is clearest and
the surrounding hills are green.
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