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enlarge | Authors: Sarah Johnstone, Tom Masters Publisher: Lonely Planet Publications Category: Book
List Price: $19.99 Buy Used: $0.01 You Save: $19.98 (100%)
Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 249975
Media: Paperback Edition: 5 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 466 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.1 x 0.9
ISBN: 1740598318 Dewey Decimal Number: 914.210486 EAN: 9781740598316 ASIN: 1740598318
Publication Date: January 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Ex-Library. Millions of satisfied customers and climbing. Thriftbooks is the name you can trust, guaranteed. Spend Less. Read More.
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One Of The Top Guides To London July 20, 2006 12 out of 14 found this review helpful
There are many guides to London. From what I can see there are two good general guidebooks. These are the Eyewitness Travel (DK) guide which is the one that I personally prefer or Lonely Planet (the present book). These two books are both just around 500 pages and both are tremendous efforts. They are well balanced guides with lots of photos, maps, history, etc. Both are clearly 5 star guides.
I would rate both (and DK Eyewitness Travel and Lonely Planet) head and shoulders ahead of Frommers or similar books that are less well balanced, i.e.; fewer photos. Overall, the DK guide has better photos and visuals. In fact I am amazed every time I pick up and read that DK guide with the quality of the photos and technical detail. Those graphics make for a better souvenir so it gets the nod as the better book, but it is a close call.
The city has lots of fun things to see and do but time is usually limited and it is expensive - so these guides are good investments. This book is well balanced and like the DK guide it pulls a lot of things together such as history and culture, food, towns and lots of interesting information on London. The book brings it all to life with just magnificent photos and maps, including subway maps.
I have one suggestion, and that is to buy the guide before planning your trip. The guide has lots of information and tips on places to see.
Either case this is an excellent buy. 5 stars.
Average London travel guide May 7, 2006 It seems like the Lonely Planet guides are really hit and miss. Some are outstanding, but others are quite lacking. Unfortunately the London guide is not very impressive. For starters, the entire book is poorly organized and confusing. London is an enormous city, with several distinct areas, but this book does a very poor job of helping the reader understand where things are. There is almost no cross referencing to help the reader find things that are described in it. I was also disappointed with the maps, which have decent detail in some parts, but no detail whatsoever in many other parts. Finally, this book lacks the detail that I was able to find in some other guides. Overall, I was quite disappointed with this book.
If you want really good London tavel guides, the Rough Gude to London and the Eyewitness London guide are far, far better.
The perfect London tour guide, for the budget traveller or the crazy spender. March 4, 2006 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
Lonely Planet always publishes up-to-date issues of your city of choice. They cover the board and general to the minute and often times over looked hidden treasures. The 2006 London edition follows exactly with that tradition. I went to London for 4 days and there wasn't a day that passed that I didn't have something to do or experience (aside from the typical major tourist attractions). LP provides ideas for walking tours, mesuem tours, bus tours, shopping tours, and even rainy day tours. What I appreciate the most about LP are the maps and train routes that are provided in the back. London can be a tough place to navigate on foot, since a lot of roads just suddenly end or turn into something else, so a good map is key to keeping your sanity. The only limitation that I found with this book was its excerpts on other cities outside the city limits. It only offered a few agendas for day trips outside of the city. But then again, I guess if I really wanted to leave London and go somewhere else, I'd just have to buy that city's LP guide. Also, if you are looking for a hotel, London is SO incredibly large, there is no way that the LP can list each one, so do your homework online, becuase there might be better deals that aren't listed in the book. Overall, this book is an imformative read and a great travel companion.
Good travel guide, unnecessary political commentary January 28, 2006 22 out of 58 found this review helpful
I'll be going to London for about 5 weeks in the Spring 2006 so I bought a few London travel guides on Amazon. The Lonely Planet London city guide has nice glossy pages, good photographs and helpful tips. It's decent as a travel guide. However, there are unnecessary political jabs. For example, the History section paints an extremely unfavorable picture of Margaret Thatcher. The section on one of the war museums also takes jabs at George W. Bush suggesting he should have visited in order to understand the consequences of war...then goes off on a rant on the evils of the Iraq War.
I don't expect travel guides to be dry and boring, without personal reflections or some bias coming through in the text (I don't even mind ones that I disagree with), but the political commentary in this guide is blatant, excessive, disrespectful and unreasonable.
Lonely Planet, please get your writers to stick to writing travel guides, not political opinion pieces. Until then, you've lost a formerly loyal customer; I've switched over to the Time Out series (which I've come to prefer anyways).
One Of The Top Guides For London December 19, 2005 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
There are many guides to London. From what I can see there are two good general guidebooks. These are the Eyewitness Travel (DK) guide which is the one that I personally prefer or Lonely Planet (the present book). These two books are both just around 500 pages and both are tremendous efforts. They are well balanced guides with lots of photos, maps, history, etc. Both are clearly 5 star guides.
I would rate both (and DK Eyewitness Travel and Lonely Planet) head and shoulders ahead of Frommers or similar books that are less well balanced, i.e.; fewer photos. Overall, the DK guide has better photos and visuals. In fact I am amazed every time I pick up and read that DK guide with the quality of the photos and technical detail. Those graphics make for a better souvenir so it gets the nod as the better book, but it is a close call.
The city has lots of fun things to see and do but time is usually limited and it is expensive - so these guides are good investments. This book is well balanced and like the DK guide it pulls a lot of things together such as history and culture, food, towns and lots of interesting information on London. The book brings it all to life with just magnificent photos and maps, including subway maps.
I have one suggestion, and that is to buy the guide before planning your trip. The guide has lots of information and tips on places to see.
Either case this is an excellent buy. 5 stars.
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