| Selected Product: | India (Lonely Planet Country Guide) Paperback Edition: 12th Revised edition Author: Joe Bindloss, Sarina Singh, Rafael Wlodarski, Amy Karafin, Paul Harding, Lindsay Brown, Mark Elliott, Simon Richmond, Virginia Jealous, Tom Spurling Publisher: Lonely Planet Publications Release Date: September 2007 ISBN-10: 1741043085 ISBN-13: 9781741043082 List Price: £18.99 Average Customer Rating: | | | To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for India (Lonely Planet Country Guide) by Joe Bindloss, Sarina Singh, Rafael Wlodarski, Amy Karafin, Paul Harding, Lindsay Brown, Mark Elliott, Simon Richmond, Virginia Jealous, Tom Spurling (ISBN-10: 1741043085, ISBN-13: 9781741043082). At this time we have not yet written a review for India (Lonely Planet Country Guide) by Joe Bindloss, Sarina Singh, Rafael Wlodarski, Amy Karafin, Paul Harding, Lindsay Brown, Mark Elliott, Simon Richmond, Virginia Jealous, Tom Spurling (ISBN-10: 1741043085, ISBN-13: 9781741043082). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Firmly ensconced in the budget travel canon, Lonely Planet: Indiahas become as essential to sub-continental backpacker culture as the Himalayan hill stations, Arabian sea beaches and crafty rickshaw drivers it describes. Beyond the frank, thorough coverage of the country's highlights and pitfalls, indispensable maps and a snazzy full-colour guide to India's religions make this sturdy tome an endlessly useful one-stop reference. Though the emphasis is on "budget" travel, there are hotel and restaurant picks to accommodate you whether your budget is US$10 or US$500 a day. The book's only problem is that to some degree, it's a victim of its own success--it can be difficult to get off the beaten path when every English-speaking backpacker in South Asia is carrying the same guide. Fortunately, given India's (and the book's) seemingly endless charms, there's still enough to go around. --Andrew Nieland Buy the Rough Guide | Customer Rating: | | A decent enough book. But my Rough Guide (1996 edition) is better ! More details and better accuracy. | the best LP guide | Customer Rating: | and the best guide I've come across for India. Packed with detail and a reasonable cultural/ historical introduction. Maps are great, the timetables are pretty accurate, the opening times and prices are correct...
There are some very bad LP guides out there. Vietnam springs to mind. But LP India has been consistently good throughout the years. I think I've used 4 versions of the guidebook and have been pleased with the improvements everytime.
Obviously the negativities are that it is pretty big but how else are you supposed to cram in all that information. | A Must Have | Customer Rating: | | An absolute must for India! Not exactly space saving, but dont go to India without it. | Lonley Planet India | Customer Rating: | This book is very thick and heavy. Not the most practical of travel books. But makes a good pillow!! The information is not so bad if you want to stay within the LP community. But the maps are invaluable when you turn up in a new town at 6am in the morning without a clue. | Best guide for India | Customer Rating: | | This book is not only by far the best guide to India that you will ever find. It is also the best Lonely Planet guide I have ever read (I have 6 other LP guides). Everything you will ever need in your traveling through India is written in this guide, and every aspect seem covered. There is a reason why every single traveler in India has this book, and this might be the only weakness: if you follow this guide, you will follow an already taken path in a country, that provides plenty of possibilities for the opposite. But that will be the case with any guide, so go ahead and get the best one available, this one! |
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