Born and raised in California, Christopher Reynolds has written about travel, the outdoors, arts and culture for the Los Angeles Times since 1990. Since 2015, Reynolds has kayaked in Canada; surfed in San Diego; snorkeled in American Samoa; floated in Xochimilco; climbed the hills of Dingle; swallowed twitching seafood in Seoul; and found his family in the ledger book at Ellis Island. He takes no freebies or press discounts.
Latest From This Author
See a puppet show, watch a holiday boat parade and watch tree lightings — these are among many activities that will make you feel like you’ve been transported into a holiday film.
Scale a skyscraper! Jump into slime! Read to a dog! The city is filled with memorable activities to fit every age, interest and attention span.
When he published “Europe on 5 Dollars a Day” in 1957, the young lawyer kicked off a new era in travel, persuading middle-class Americans that London, Paris and Rome weren’t just for aristocrats.
From ziplining and a farm tour with alpacas to a candlelit orchestra show, here are gifts for the person who prefers adventure over objects this holiday season.
Our highly curated lists of gift ideas are perfect for Angelenos with specific identities: L.A. devotees, hikers and walkers, gardeners, food lovers, book fans, those wanting special self-care experiences and more.
When Melissa Strukel wound up in a silent Sonoran Desert town, standing outside a bedraggled old motel, she was smitten. Now it’s the dreamy, eclectic Jacumba Hot Springs Hotel.
Welcome to Los Angeles. Prepare for the glorious ease of LAX, the homespun beauty of Century Boulevard and the high-speed convenience of the 405.
Within three hours of L.A., there are locales to satisfy every type of autumn yearning, whether it’s for the desert, beach or mountains.
From Central Park to Katz’s Delicatessen, this unserious primer covers the Big Apple basics for any Angeleno considering a quick trip east for the NLCS.
There are ventures that celebrate fast food, Finnish folk art, Skid Row, skateboarding, historical glass, vertebrate zoology and more. Todd Lerew has written a book about all of them.