Surf City native gives ‘Let’s Go’ tour of Alaska
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Coral Wilson
Jason Unger gets out and about. The Edison High School, UCLA and
Harvard University graduate has been to Europe, Africa, New Zealand
and the Caribbean. His next destination is Alaska.
But this time he is going as a researcher-writer for the popular
travel guide, “Let’s Go: Alaska.”
“[Alaska] was at the top of my list, I’m excited I got it,” Unger
said. “Everyone who comes back from Alaska says it is a
once-in-a-lifetime trip.”
A lover of kayaking and hiking, the 28-year-old said Alaska is a
place that has always intrigued him.
“It’s one of those places not a lot of people get to,” he said.
“I’m looking forward to seeing bears -- from a distance, not up
close.”
“Let’s Go” is a budget travel guidebook written entirely by
Harvard students. It started out in 1960 as a 20-page pamphlet handed
out on campus by students and offering budget travel tips to Europe,
said Nitin Shah, director of marketing and business development for
Let’s Go Publications. The series of books now cover six continents.
For Unger, research skills will be as important as good writing
since this is the first year an entire book will be dedicated to the
icy northern state. For two months this summer, Unger will be one of
a team of five writers and two editors. He will travel independently,
concentrating on Anchorage and south central Alaska, including many
of the national parks. He will return in August and the book will be
released in November.
Unger said he has no dreams of becoming a travel writer. Instead,
with a masters degree in administration and public policy, he plans
to work as a legislative assistant for a congressman or senator. But
Shah said writing for “Let’s Go” can be compelling work.
“Writing for a travel guide is cool and fulfilling work,” Shah
said. “It’s fun, it’s so completely different and it forces you to
talk to everyone.”
After seeing the world, Unger said that Huntington Beach still
ranks high on his list of beloved places.
“I’m a big fan of Huntington Beach,” the well-seasoned traveler
said. “It’s a great town, and it was a great place to be a kid.”
His home and family are here. And 10 years after graduation, he
still keeps in touch with a close group of friends from Edison High
School.
If he was writing a travel guide about his home town, Unger said
he would be sure to include his favorite hang outs -- the Mexican
restaurant Las Barcos, the Sugar Shack, the older homes and parks on
Main Street and, of course, the beach.
* CORAL WILSON is a news assistant who covers education. She can
be reached at (714) 965-7177 or by e-mail at
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