Selected Product: | South America on a Shoestring (10th Edition/March 2007) : Big Trips on Small Budgets (Lonely Planet Shoestring Guides) Paperback Edition: 10 Rev Ed Author: Danny Palmerlee, Jens Porup Publisher: Lonely Planet Publications Release Date: March 2007 ISBN-10: 174104443X ISBN-13: 9781741044430 List Price: £20.99 Average Customer Rating: | | Central America (Lonely Planet Shoestring Guides) ISBN-10: 1741045967 Latin American Spanish (Lonely Planet Phrasebook) ISBN-10: 1740591704 Southeast Asia on a Shoestring (Lonely Planet Shoestring Guides) ISBN-10: 1741047269 South America: 25 Ultimate Experiences (Rough Guide 25) ISBN-10: 1843538261 South American (Footprint Handbooks) (Footprint Handbooks) (Footprint Handbooks) ISBN-10: 1906098360 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for South America on a Shoestring (10th Edition/March 2007) : Big Trips on Small Budgets (Lonely Planet Shoestring Guides) by Danny Palmerlee, Jens Porup (ISBN-10: 174104443X, ISBN-13: 9781741044430). At this time we have not yet written a review for South America on a Shoestring (10th Edition/March 2007) : Big Trips on Small Budgets (Lonely Planet Shoestring Guides) by Danny Palmerlee, Jens Porup (ISBN-10: 174104443X, ISBN-13: 9781741044430). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Helpful book | Customer Rating: | I neded an overview on all South American countries and i got what i wanted - the directory at the back, a useful overview of S/A is just what i wanted.
Like all travel books they soon date and each author of each country writes from their opinion, which is not bad, but as in all L/P books there is so much repitition which could be covered in see appendix a, b , c etc. We all know that certain places are dangerious (the world over) and that you should not leave your bag lying around at the station - we hear these annoucments hourly at the airport! | Inaccurate, Out of date, but still useful! | Customer Rating: | Whilst travelling through Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Chile, Argentina, Paragruay and Brazil, I quickly realised that this book was not going to be much help 'in the field'. It is in urgent need of up dating; many of the hostels and hotels mentioned have either closed, renamed or vanished off the face of the earth. I used this guide to plan my trip, but upon arrival it did little more than fill up space in my rucksack. The maps are quite useful...to a point. Most of the restaurants, hostels etc are not in the right place on the map (which i found out to my cost when lugging my rucksack around Ascunsion). However, the layout is accurate and helps to orientate yourself around cities. The information regarding major tourist attractions is useful also. My main suggestion to anyone thinking of buying this book is: Buy it, but dont trust it... if you will arrive late at night in an obscure place, try to establish if the hostel you want exists before you set out! | poorly edited, out of date information | Customer Rating: | | I started travelling with the south america on a shoe string book around south america, and quickly found it to be out of date! Stick to FootPrints guide to SA, loads more info! and its published yearly unlike lonely planet guides! | Good enough | Customer Rating: | | This is a pretty good book. Not all consolidated LP books are of equal quality, but I was pleased with the accuracy and volume of detail for each country. The crucial thing like border crossing points, times, and rough costs were good. Not much else really matters. | Lonely Planet S.America on a Shoestring | Customer Rating: | I used this book for five months of backpacking in S.America and found it absolutely invaluable. Of course it doesn't contain as much specific info on the countries as the individual guides do, but when space and weight in your pack are important you don't want to be carrying around over a dozen books. It offers a great overview of the highlights of the country but I mostly used it to find cheap accomodation and routes/times/costs of the local buses. I can't comment on any of the itineries the author recomends, but I wouldn't use them anyway - decide what you want to see and go it alone! On a side note, this is a fascinating and varied continent, on which I will always want to return to and would highly recomend to travelers. |
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