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Lonely Planet st Petersburg (Lonely Planet St Petersburg) (Paperback)

by Steve Kokker (Author), Nick Selby (Author) "Alexandr of Novgorod defeated the Swedes near the mouth of the Neva River in 1240, earning him the title Nevsky (literally, 'of the Neva')..." (more)
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4.2 out of 5 stars See all reviews (9 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Venture into the mystical and ever-changing St Petersburg and discover its vibrant city life, architectural splendour, beguiling history and world-class arts scene. This indispensable guide will show you the way.

  • 22-page room-by-room guide to the Hermitage
  • excursions to the grand palaces of the tsars
  • tips to find the city's hot spots or the Kirov Ballet in full flight
  • detailed language section with Cyrillic script
  • 16 pages of colour maps, including metro map


Excerpted from St. Petersburg City Guide by Nick Selby. Copyright (c) 1996 by Lonely Planet Publications. All rights reserved.
The following is a sidebar box beginning on page 152 in the Getting Around chapter of this practical information guide to the Russian city of St. Petersburg.

A Day With One Of Russia's Most Hated Public Servants

In the States, it's the I.R.S. In the Soviet Union, it was the KGB. In England it's Manchester United fans, but in the new Russia, motorists and passengers alike loathe, fear and despise the ubiquitous members of the Gosavtoinspektsiya: GAI.

GAI (`gah-yee') are traffic officers who stand at intersections throughout the country looking for signs of vehicular misbehavior. Actually, they can pull you over for anything they want. And they do. But what makes them really annoying is that they're entitled to impose on-the-spot fines. Oh, yeah, one more thing: if you don't stop when they wave you over, they can shoot at your vehicle.

I got pulled over twice on my last trip, while riding in two separate vehicles. The first driver was fined, the second let go. What makes these guys tick? How do they decide whom to pull over? And is it exciting to be an armed traffic cop? I mean, their New York City counterparts would give a limb for the opportunity. In the interest of fair play, I spent a rainy morning with some of the guys at St. Petersburg GAI Central.

7 am. Roll Call. No big surprise, kinda like Hill Street Blues with shabbier uniforms. Hot sheet covered, accidents discussed, criminal element lamented. I learn that GAI Guys work two days on, two days off, and they have regular beats.

9 am. Upstairs Office. Meeting with Sergei, a captain. Yes, we can shoot at your car. No, I can't tell you how many officers we have, but there are enough to keep control of the situation. I ask him what a foreigner does if he disagrees with an officer's charges against him. "Well, his documents will be confiscated and then he can go to the address on the ticket the officer gives him and get them back."

Oh. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 208 pages
  • Publisher: Lonely Planet Publications; 3rd edition (January 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1864503254
  • ISBN-13: 978-1864503258
  • Product Dimensions: 7.2 x 5.1 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.3 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: