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#1
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good guide book for Italy trip
I'm looking for opinions on the best travel guide books for Italy. It
will be a gift for the in-laws, and not being that "adventurous," they'll probably stick to the beaten path. Thanks for the help. Tim |
#2
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good guide book for Italy trip
Following up to Timothy J. Bain
I'm looking for opinions on the best travel guide books for Italy. It will be a gift for the in-laws, and not being that "adventurous," they'll probably stick to the beaten path. Thanks for the help. Have a look at the eyewitness series, you get street plans, cutaways, diagrams, photos rather than lots of text, also pictures of useful things like what a phone box/police car/bus etc look like. -- Mike Reid "Art is the lie that reveals the truth" P.Picasso UK walking & photos "http://www.fellwalk.co.uk" -- you can email us@ this site Spain,cuisines and walking "http://www.fell-walker.co.uk" -- dontuse@ all, it's a spamtrap |
#3
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good guide book for Italy trip
"Timothy J. Bain" wrote in message ...
I'm looking for opinions on the best travel guide books for Italy. It will be a gift for the in-laws, and not being that "adventurous," they'll probably stick to the beaten path. Thanks for the help. Tim I like most of the "daytrips" books. There may be a couple of different ones that cover different parts of Italy (for example one for hiking and one for the typical sightseeing tourist places). It helps if you can look at them before purchase--that way if you're looking for a place to stay or something else in particular, you can see if the guidebook has it. For example, the "Daytrips Switzerland" had places to stay but the "Daytrips London" didn't give any suggestions for places to stay. You can get a good idea of what Fodder's, Rick Steves and Frommer's offer by checking out their websites before buying the books. |
#4
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good guide book for Italy trip
there are plenty of books about Italy
In Italy there are 20 regions the Touring Club of Italy has different series of Guide books for each region. of course. the main towns deserve a guide book for themselves. I buy the guide books with less photos but a lot of informations. they are called the red guides of the TCI price about 15 to 25 eur each. "Timothy J. Bain" ha scritto nel messaggio . .. I'm looking for opinions on the best travel guide books for Italy. It will be a gift for the in-laws, and not being that "adventurous," they'll probably stick to the beaten path. Thanks for the help. Tim |
#5
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good guide book for Italy trip
"Reid" wrote in message ... Following up to Timothy J. Bain I'm looking for opinions on the best travel guide books for Italy. It will be a gift for the in-laws, and not being that "adventurous," they'll probably stick to the beaten path. Thanks for the help. Have a look at the eyewitness series, you get street plans, cutaways, diagrams, photos rather than lots of text, also pictures of useful things like what a phone box/police car/bus etc look like. are these things really so hard to tell? Tim (BTW, if you'd said post box I would agree that it is) -- Mike Reid "Art is the lie that reveals the truth" P.Picasso UK walking & photos "http://www.fellwalk.co.uk" -- you can email us@ this site Spain,cuisines and walking "http://www.fell-walker.co.uk" -- dontuse@ all, it's a spamtrap |
#6
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good guide book for Italy trip
In article ,
"tim" wrote: "Reid" wrote in message ... Following up to Timothy J. Bain I'm looking for opinions on the best travel guide books for Italy. It will be a gift for the in-laws, and not being that "adventurous," they'll probably stick to the beaten path. Thanks for the help. Have a look at the eyewitness series, you get street plans, cutaways, diagrams, photos rather than lots of text, also pictures of useful things like what a phone box/police car/bus etc look like. are these things really so hard to tell? No, but it is nice to see, as well as pictures of the money. These are by far my preferred guide, its not so good on hotel recommendations... but I pre-book those from other sources- like here. jay Sat, Nov 8, 2003 Tim (BTW, if you'd said post box I would agree that it is) -- Mike Reid "Art is the lie that reveals the truth" P.Picasso UK walking & photos "http://www.fellwalk.co.uk" -- you can email us@ this site Spain,cuisines and walking "http://www.fell-walker.co.uk" -- dontuse@ all, it's a spamtrap -- Legend insists that as he finished his abject... Galileo muttered under his breath: "Nevertheless, it does move." |
#7
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good guide book for Italy trip
Following up to tim
Have a look at the eyewitness series, you get street plans, cutaways, diagrams, photos rather than lots of text, also pictures of useful things like what a phone box/police car/bus etc look like. are these things really so hard to tell? Well....Letterboxes can be. Various police uniforms, local police, guarda civil (i'm in Spain now). I find it useful. -- Mike Reid "Art is the lie that reveals the truth" P.Picasso UK walking & photos "http://www.fellwalk.co.uk" -- you can email us@ this site Spain,cuisines and walking "http://www.fell-walker.co.uk" -- dontuse@ all, it's a spamtrap |
#8
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good guide book for Italy trip
"Timothy J. Bain" wrote in message ...
I'm looking for opinions on the best travel guide books for Italy. It will be a gift for the in-laws, and not being that "adventurous," they'll probably stick to the beaten path. Thanks for the help. Tim We've covered this many times before, and the best advice is for you to go to a bookstore or library and make comparisons. It's very much an individual decision. For a first-time visitor, Rick Steves had a good guide to Italy, and also separate guides for Rome and for Venice. Definitely beaten path stuff, with a "how-to" approach to currency exchange, packing, getting around. Some people here think he's too ga-ga, too simplistic, or leaves too much out, but for inexperienced travelers that can be a plus. I've started using Eyewitness Guides -- there is a general one for Italy, and also individual guides to Rome, Venice, Naples/Amalfi Coast, Sicily, etc. They are beautiful all-color books that will make excellent gifts. They do have a couple of drawbacks -- not too good for planning lodging, restaurants, or ground transportation, and heavy to carry around -- but their outstanding quality and usefulness for self-guided walking tours are without equal. |
#9
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good guide book for Italy trip
Try Fodor's Italy for Less tha $75 a day (or something like it) or the
Lonely Planet's Italy from Top to Bottom. Fodor's is very standard--LP tends to be more "nuts and bolts." Lil "Timothy J. Bain" wrote in message ... I'm looking for opinions on the best travel guide books for Italy. It will be a gift for the in-laws, and not being that "adventurous," they'll probably stick to the beaten path. Thanks for the help. Tim |
#10
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good guide book for Italy trip
Reid wrote:
Have a look at the eyewitness series, you get street plans, cutaways, diagrams, photos rather than lots of text, also pictures of useful things like what a phone box/police car/bus etc look like. I know that people seem to like these guides, but I feel they sort of "spoil" it for me. Part of the pleasure of travel is the adventure and discovery, the joy of seeing something for the first time. Having too many photos robs me of that pleasure. That's also why I usually bring more than one guide, so I don't feel I am following a well trod route - I am, but it doesn't feel like it :-) joan -- Joan McGalliard, UK http://www.mcgalliard.org |
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