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42 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Essential - but always be sure to get the latest edition.
I don't know if or when any of you is going to find himself / herself in this particular area, but anyway here it is...

This is the latest edition (8th) that was released only about a year ago. Things really changed in this edition compared to its predecessor; more authors are involved and new and updated information is added (though many sections remain).

Important...

Published on March 16, 2003 by Eran Cohen

versus
19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Hopelessly outdated and frequently just wrong
I'm currently on a round the world trip. So I've read a lot of guidebooks. And this is the most outdated and frequently simply wrong guidebook I've come accross (I visited Myanmar in January 2004). Of course I realize that e.g. prices go up, service might go down, owners change etc.. But this guidebooks has almost been more miss then hit. I've been to guesthouses where...
Published on March 25, 2004 by Timo


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42 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Essential - but always be sure to get the latest edition., March 16, 2003
This review is from: Lonely Planet Myanmar (Burma) (Lonely Planet Myanmar Burma: Travel Survival Kit) (Paperback)
I don't know if or when any of you is going to find himself / herself in this particular area, but anyway here it is...

This is the latest edition (8th) that was released only about a year ago. Things really changed in this edition compared to its predecessor; more authors are involved and new and updated information is added (though many sections remain).

Important note: When it comes to Myanmar, things can change for better or worse overnight due to the nature of the ruling government, while some other things tend to stay the same. Especially here, pay close attention to all the small details given in the chapters "Facts for the visitor", "Getting there and away" and "Getting around" - they matter greatly.

=============================================================

As a whole, the guide will be a valuable asset for you if you're planning on traveling there, and there is absolutely no doubt whether to buy it or not - it's an essential purchase. To a great extent it will help you plan your budget, your destinations, how to get there and when, what to bring and so forth.

You should know that there are some beautiful places to visit in the country. One of them, the Shwedagon Paya in Yangon, strikes me as one of the most beautiful man made structures in the world. Imagine a 100 meters high Stupa (Buddhist religious monument), all covered with golden leaves, set on top of a hill, in the center of smaller golden temples and Buddha statues. The sight was breathtaking and alone was worth coming. Another famous place, yet less astounding, is Bagan, the city of Stupas in the north. There you can find numerous Stupas some of which were built more than 1000 ago. And yes, almost in every city and town you will see at least one golden Stupa (that immensely contradict the poverty of the people) that give Myanmar the name "The Golden Land".

The tagline on the cover of this book is "should you go?" It is misleading due to the fact that the answer they give inside is "yes". If you want to go - go, the political status is not of your concern, you're a traveler not a world freedom fighter. You wouldn't help the local people by avoiding the country - they benefit from your staying there - and that is all that you should care about.

Nevertheless, the authors don't really prepare you for the level of poverty you're going to meet there (the same way another author hasn't done in the Cambodia book yet); this is one of the poorest countries in the world and that's why you should always be careful and never trust anybody - they're there for your money (mostly). I really don't like, after being around, the attitude of "the locals are so nice and we can learn so much from them"; some of them are really nice and helpful, but others are nice because you spend your money there and it's downright blatant. Expect it; don't fall for it and BE CAREFUL of forced and immediate friendliness. Remember that as a tourist you're regarded as very rich and compared to them you are.

I want to mention the fact that as a traveler and a guest you will receive the best services even in budget hotels - they treated my friend and me like royalty in each and every hotel, and that was something we really enjoyed and appreciated. It's the best service all over South East Asia, and it does say something about the people as a nation.

I hope their days of freedom will come soon. ...

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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Hopelessly outdated and frequently just wrong, March 25, 2004
By 
Timo (Arlington, MA, United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Lonely Planet Myanmar (Burma) (Lonely Planet Myanmar Burma: Travel Survival Kit) (Paperback)
I'm currently on a round the world trip. So I've read a lot of guidebooks. And this is the most outdated and frequently simply wrong guidebook I've come accross (I visited Myanmar in January 2004). Of course I realize that e.g. prices go up, service might go down, owners change etc.. But this guidebooks has almost been more miss then hit. I've been to guesthouses where the architecture of the place was so completely different from what the LP described that it's simply impossible that the author was there! On top of that there are tons of things where the LP is simply outdated to the point of being useless: In Yangon and Mandalay busses leave from different places then described, all of the country markets are open at different days etc. etc..
Btw: You can NOT cash travellers cheques or use your visa card in Myanmar and you do not have to change money into FEC any longer.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars As good as it gets (under the circumstances), February 23, 2005
This review is from: Lonely Planet Myanmar (Burma) (Lonely Planet Myanmar Burma: Travel Survival Kit) (Paperback)
I toured Myanmar in January of 2005 using the 2002 edition. I discovered the new edition of 2004 too late. Still, the older version was quite serviceable--so good one hotel proprietor offered a substantial discount if I would leave the book with him when I left the country; he had never read so much information about his homeland before, and the book is unavailable in Burma(and a little seditious). I think some of the negative reviews above are a bit finicky. Any experienced tourist knows to check the internet just before his trip to get the latest on hotels, exchange rates and the like. No book can keep up with those protean details. You get a guidebook to guide you through the basics. Most of us go to places like Burma to see what has been there for 100s of years and not to find the latest in accomodations. Any hotel will have the information you need on further transportation. I would, however, like to see what Eyewitness does, one day, with Myanmar, but until then, any recent edition of LP is indispensible for touring the Golden Land.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Outdated but still useful, January 7, 2005
This review is from: Lonely Planet Myanmar (Burma) (Lonely Planet Myanmar Burma: Travel Survival Kit) (Paperback)
First and foremost, it is important to know that Myanmar is an extremely unpredictable place. Things do happen overnight. Laws can change suddenly. Exchange rates fluctuate daily (esp. unauthorized money exchange rate) With the promotion of tourism in Yangon and Mandalay in the late 1990s early 2000 (Visit Myanmar Year), new hotels were being built and home owners converted their houses to "guest houses" to accomodate tourists. Sadly, Myanmar did not receive as many tourists they would have liked or even predicted. Hence, guest houses shut down. Hotels are now typically empty. The Burmese economy is very volatile. Small (private) buinesses can go out of business, and can be shut down by the government w/o notice. I guess my point is that it would be really hard to write a tourist guide book for Myanmar that would seem up-to-date. I am glad that lonely planet has continued to write Myanmar travel book while others like Fodors have stopped. Best (if you could afford) is to hire a guide while in Yangon. The book is still an excellent resource for figuring out where to go and what to see, as well as what you are seeing. Just don't rely on things like train schedule, rates, hotels to find, etc. I still admire Lonely Planet for trying.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Update not realy update, September 28, 2003
By 
P. C. Eenhoorn (Amsterdam Netherlands) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Lonely Planet Myanmar (Burma) (Lonely Planet Myanmar Burma: Travel Survival Kit) (Paperback)
Lonely Planet published this updated version in September 2002. I have visited Myanmar in August 2003 (a very good experience!), and found the guidebook only usefull for the descriptions of places to visit (although even there some interesting places are not mentioned in the guide), and the maps. For places to stay and eat, the guide is completely outdated. For instance, new hotels have started business long before 2002, that are not mentioned in the guide. It looks like the 2002 "update" mainly concerned the (important) political situation.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Not helpful, March 5, 2005
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This review is from: Lonely Planet Myanmar (Burma) (Lonely Planet Myanmar Burma: Travel Survival Kit) (Paperback)
I just came back from Myanmar. This guidebook is hopelessly outdated in regard to practical information. It is at least 10 years behind on current conditions which are constantly changing. The only useful information is concerning sightseeing but even that is inaccurate. The problem is that there is no other current guidebook in print.For hotels use the internet directrooms.com, asiarooms.com or asiahotels.com.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Window on a Strange Land, April 2, 2006
This review is from: Lonely Planet Myanmar (Burma) (Lonely Planet Myanmar Burma: Travel Survival Kit) (Paperback)
This is the best handbook I found while preparing for my trip to Burma, although it must be noted that there is not a lot of competition. Burma's political isolation renders it attractive in many ways, not the least of which is that it has what seems to be a hundredth of the tourists that Thailand has. That in turn makes this handbook all the more valuable, since one doesn't have fellow tourists on every corner to turn to for help. Those who complain that the prices are out of date are being a little absurd, since even a doubling of the rate on a twelve dollar hotel (which is about average) still leaves it on the extreme cheap end of international standards.

Lonely Planet Myanmar's real strength is its discussions of Burmese culture past and present, within the context of a travel guide. Thus, while having great beach time at Sittwe, I could track down the birthplace of Saki (the writer, not the wine), and muse that British merchant ships were just beginning to come into its harbor around the time their influence in Boston was beginning to wane. I tried but failed to get into one of Burma's nature preserves to see one of the world's remaining free tigers. Not that they want my advice, but it seems to me that the military government could burnish their reputation and bring in tons of foreign currency at the same time by arranging tours of the domains of these vanishing cats. By doing so, it seems to me they could far outstrip places like Costa Rica, which are raking in billions of eco-tourism dollars even without the benefit of so-called "charismatic megafauna". Say what you will about the tiger, but if there's one thing it's got over the rest of us faunae, it's charisma.

In the course of my travels I met a guide by the name of Aree. She was from the vicinity of Mandalay, and specialized in the ancient capitals of the north. I didn't know any way of verifying her claim to be descended from one of the last royal families of Burma, but she certainly looked every inch the princess, in spite of the Kia she drove. And I can thank this Lonely Planet guide for the privilege of her company, since without the warnings on pages 54 and 106 against public displays of affection, I would undoubtedly have alienated her and had to traipse through the ruins by myself. As it was, I learned an immense amount from her about Burma and its history, all delivered in intermediate English with the Southeast Asian accent that is so charming. I recall in particular her spiel on the ailing Kia, which needed "a blake job and a toom up and a hando for door... all these things vely expenshiv". I can only hope my halting Burmese sounds half so winsome.

On the subject of language and pronunciation, LP Myanmar could be improved by the addition of International Phonetic Alphabet pronunciation guides in the glossary and for the major place names. It would be nice, when buying tickets in Yangon to know how to pronounce Mrauk U and Shinbithalyaung and Wetkyi-in. Still and all, it is mainly the reader who may be improved by a thorough reading of this excellent volume prior to a trip to Burma.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Strangely Annoyed, September 22, 2008
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This review is from: Lonely Planet Myanmar (Burma) (Lonely Planet Myanmar Burma: Travel Survival Kit) (Paperback)
I have lots of guidebooks - and lots of Lonely Planets, for that matter. But despite the fact that they say they are for "independent travellers", I keep finding ridiculous reviews on restaurants and hotels, to the point where I've stopped using them.

The History, Snapshot, and similar sections are great, but if you have a brain of your own - use it. Forget their restaurant and hotel recommendations, as I'm not even sure they visit the places. Sometimes they have history or comments on places that is worthwhile to read, though. All tourbooks may have these drawbacks, to be fair.

Finally, I think I'm going to stop buying Lonely Planet's, though. First, they always act like driving is so scary everywhere, when it's actually quite easy to anyone with a brain. They also forget to give worthwhile tips on getting a car, etc. I imagine that this is their way of "saving the Earth". To a person who does care about the Earth, but doesn't believe that being a dirty hippie is going to save anything, this - and all their other BS trying to coerce their opinions onto you as fact - gets really freakin' old. Yes, yes, I know, LP is founded by some hippie freak from AUS or something - whooptie doo. That doesn't mean I have to pay some jerk who's going to push his politics on me, whether I agree with them or not.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Not worth it, October 22, 2010
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This review is from: Lonely Planet Myanmar (Burma) (Lonely Planet Myanmar Burma: Travel Survival Kit) (Paperback)
Simply inaccurate and when you travel to country like this you need accurate information. Be forewarn do not rely upon this work.
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8 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Totally surreal!, March 3, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Lonely Planet Myanmar (Burma) (Lonely Planet Myanmar Burma: Travel Survival Kit) (Paperback)
I have visited Burma with this book recently and I m pretty sure that this book can misguide a lot of people who wants to go to Burma like I m. As soon as you arrive to the airport you will be forced to change your money(i.e 300 USD) with goverment exchange counter whether you want to spend your cash or not. They are not unexchangeable so that means U will have to spend all your 300 usd before you leave Burma.
The authors of this book did not really show the reality of Burma as a matter of a fact, most of their topics are sugar coated! SO BEWARE AND MAKE SURE U DO ALOT OF RESEARCH BEFORE U GO!
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