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16 Reviews
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43 of 44 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best I have found,
By Econ PhD Student (Cornell University) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Lonely Planet Western Europe (Lonley Planet on a Shoestring) (Paperback)
The Lonely Planet guide book series is by far the best set of books I have found for travel. Let's Go, Rough Guide, Frommer's, etc do not live up to these books. LP offers a great blend of interesting facts (history, etc) with the travel information that we all really want. I am a student who spent the summer of 1999 traveling through Europe - poor, but free. I did read a number of other books before and durring the trip, and will always buy Lonely Planet as they have impressed me as being the best, hands down. If you want to go on a drunken tour, buy Let's Go and end up in the same run down American hostels and American bars as the rest of the American students, but take my word, you will have enough ability to do that with LP, but you will not be forced to either. LP will help you to actually experience the culture, and take in a more European version of Europe than Let's Go, and still give you the opportunity to party like a rock star when you want - its up to you. It is the most complete and most versitile book I have found. It will cater to budget and intermediate travelers of all ages and groups. I will buy the same series even when I can afford nice resturants and hotels, because LP tells it all. The same experience is true for my trip this last spring to Ireland. Lonely Planet Ireland is as good as Western Europe, but more detailed.
20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good overview, but make sure it's what you need,
By Debra L Cerda (Austin, Texas USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Lonely Planet Western Europe (Lonley Planet on a Shoestring) (Paperback)
It is definitely a good overview, but I think it's understandable why you might wind up wishing you'd bought the individual countries instead. My previous experience with Lonely Planet publications has been excellent; therefore, I may have set my expectations a little too high. There were a lot of major cities of interest and note missing from the France section and corresponding maps. This book is best for anyone who tries the "21 countries in 30 days or less" style of travelling. Personally, I depend on the Lonely Planet guides to help me stay a little off the beaten track at a leisurely pace and within my budget. I certainly credit their Costa Rica guide with keeping me safe, well-fed, and satisfied for a month! Do note, that I've come across accomodations listed which are no longer in existence or closed for longterm renovations, so phone ahead!
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent, but a victim of its success,
By
This review is from: Lonely Planet Western Europe (Lonley Planet on a Shoestring) (Paperback)
Lonely Planet is definitely the guidebook to beat, and I wouldn't hesitate to recommend it ahead of the others.However, buyers should be aware of a few problems. The first is the popularity of the Lonely Planet guides...since they're so popular, following the guides too closely steers you entirely to the same well-recommended hostels, restaurants, and so forth, that every other LP reader goes to. These institutions start specifically aiming themselves at the LP crowd. Definitely loses some of the cultural experience, and well-reviewed hostels are something like an American/Australian frat party. I'd view the Lonely Planet guide as a necessary evil. It's very convenient, but their recommendations are self-defeating, especially in the more heavily-touristed areas. Secondly, most people visiting Europe seem to be doing massive every-big-city-in-three-week tours. This guide is suited for that, but for those spending more time in the indivisual countries, definitely buy the single-country guide.
20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Not as good as Lets Go Europe 2000,
By A Customer
This review is from: Lonely Planet Western Europe (Lonley Planet on a Shoestring) (Paperback)
This summer (2000) a friend and I traveled across Western Europe - Belgium, Germany, Czech Republic, Austria, Italy, Span and France. We only visited capital or major cities. I used Lonely Planet's Western Europe Guide and my friend used Lets Go Europe 2000. I assumed that since my book was exclusively on Western Europe it would have much more detailed information on the places we were visiting. However this was completely incorrect. Lonely Planet's Western Europe Guide was useless on the descriptions and information about tourist attractions in these cities whereas Lets Go was much better. Plus Lets Go had entries on many attractions that Lonely Planet did not even contained. Most importantly, Lonely Planet was hopelessly outdated. All the prices it suggested were incorrect and many restaurants recommended were closed. I got the feeling that they had not updated information recently. In contrast, Lets Go was much more up-to-date with accurate prices generally across the board. In short this reader recommends using Lets Go Europe 2000 over Lonely Planet's Western Europe Guide if a fellow traveler intends to visit the big cities of Western Europe.
19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
LP is a guide, not an itinerary,
By voracious reader "hailnero" (Lawrence, KS) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Western Europe (Lonely Planet Western Europe) (Paperback)
I have taken several extensive (3+months) trips to Europe and, having used most of the major European travel guides in the past, I have always been impressed with the relative superiority of LP. I think what most unhappy reviews of these travel guides miss is that these books are all tailored to a very specific market, i.e. "Let's Go" is not for anyone over the age of 30 who wants a serious, non-party oriented European trip; Rick Steves' targets middle-aged and older travelers who need hand-holding because they have little or no experience planning and executing trips abroad; Fodor's is for older adults for whom money is not a real concern; and Lonely Planet is for budget-conscious backpackers of most ages who are looking to spend the least money possible and don't mind roughing it a bit to see the sights. Therefore, you are not going to find the best restaraunts/ hotels in LP, you are going to find the cheapest reasonable local resources that often have an unusual or quirky twist.
From my experience, the LP directions on traveling to/from places, finding train stations, airports, etc. are the most useful thing about the book and well worth the price. However, they don't publish train timetables and don't pretend to give that kind of info because it often changes. You can look that up online. That said, there are some flaws in the books as far as clarity in descriptions for a few point-to-point connections, which can be bit confusing. The book can only cover so much, though. All in all, I've had few hitches in using these guides and highly recommend them to other travelers.
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
everything you'd expect and then some,
By A Customer
This review is from: Lonely Planet Western Europe (Lonley Planet on a Shoestring) (Paperback)
i thought the authors provided a wonderfully comprehensive account of western europe. on those long train rides i found myself reading up on the political history of greece or the history of the plantaganets in great britain. i loved this book! there is so much to see in western europe, i'd like to ask those who don't like it exactly what they expect for a book which covers a couple dozen european countries. you buy a book about 20 different countries, and then don't like the fact that it covers them too quickly? what do you expect? anyway, lonely planet provided a good, concise guide to the most interesting countries in the world.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Buy the country guides instead,
By A Customer
This review is from: Lonely Planet Western Europe (Lonley Planet on a Shoestring) (Paperback)
This book provided at best a cursory overview of travelling in Western Europe. I ended up buying the individual Lonely Planet country guides for each country I travelled in. (These country guides were excellent.) The country guides provided the detail that I was looking for but was not available in the Western Europe Shoestring book.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Not Worth It,
By
This review is from: Western Europe (Lonely Planet Western Europe) (Paperback)
This guidebook covers the countries of western Europe. However, it seems that Lonely Planet tried to cover too much in this guidebook, so most of the descriptions of sights are barely more than a few sentences and a phone number. It's better to think of this as a giant checklist of places you could visit while in Europe, but don't rely on this for any amount of information. If you're looking for travel and sightseeing information, it's better to get the individual country books for the countries that you are going to travel to. To tell the truth, I bought this because I'm planning a multi-country trip in Europe, so I was hoping that this would contain exstensive information about getting between countries by train, but I was really disappointed to find that the information on this was severely lacking. If you your looking for something like that, Thomas Cook's Europe by rail books are better. Save your money and buy something else.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
great guide,
This review is from: Western Europe (Lonely Planet Western Europe) (Paperback)
For the price it's worth it. I only miss some full color maps.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
See Western Europe on Just One Book!,
By Karl Morton (eviper74@yahoo.com.au) (Kalamunda, W. Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Lonely Planet Western Europe (Lonley Planet on a Shoestring) (Paperback)
Despite its obvious leaning toward budget travel, LP's Western Europe guidebook is all you need to find your way about the continent. It's tips on restaurants and sights to see is near-on faultless, and the bit nobody should miss: The preamble to each chapter includes all of the most important things like dangers and annoyances, and transport options to reach all your favourite sights. Best of all are the maps - if you only take one guidebook/map, then save some room for LP's Western Europe.
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Lonely Planet Western Europe by Anthony Haywood (Paperback - Jan. 1994)
Used & New from: $0.25
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