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124 of 127 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Italy with Kids, December 18, 2000
By A Customer
Using this guidebook, I think you'll have a trip memorable not only for the tips that allowed you to enjoy your own travel, but also as a journey that became that much more interesting because you had the little ones along. Enough of the poetic antipasto, let's tuck in.The book was written by two obvious parents; they refer to their children throughout the book and include their kids' comments and suggestions. A couple of parenting examples: whilst Mom and Dad gazed upward at the Sistine Chapel ceiling, it was their daughter who pointed out the work of art in itself that was inlaid in the floor (intarsia). Suggestions on places to stay include the needed price ranges and contact info, but also note which hotels are near noisy piazzas, which have laundry service (the three coins in the coin washer joke will get old fast), which offer a non-smoking room (rare) and which seemed to welcome children instead of merely tolerating them along with the pets and soccer louts. The book includes the usual and useful staples of suggested web sites, lists of Italian foods with their real names and a brief description (helpful to plan ahead for picky eaters), Italian travel promotion office addresses, the entire history of Rome in eight pages and couple of pages of Italian phrases. Bless the authors for their phrase section, for instead of the usual junky words ("Benito, your swift motorcycle has crushed my foot"), you get stuff like "Do you sell diapers?", "We need a babysitter", "My child is allergic to penicillin" and other things of use to us parents. The suggested reading lists include one just for kids, singling out some picture books for the youngest travelers. My favorite travel tips in the book relate to helping kids weather art galleries: for older children, bring a pencil and sketchbook, and have your heirs join the art students sitting on the floor drawing "notes" while gazing at the best thing oil and paper can do outside of a super-sized McFries. For younger children, buy postcards or an exhibition catalog on the way into the museum, and task the tykes with finding in the book the art you happen to be gazing at. We tried this with our five year old and it actually worked, though we did have to improvise a bit when she got bored and offer the promise of extra dessert if she could keep finding the stuff until 4 PM. The book not surprisingly places great emphasis on Rome, but you also get individual chapters titled Venice with Kids, Verona with Kids, Florence and Tuscany with Kids, Naples and the Amalfi Coast with Kids and Milan and the Lake Region with Kids. Each of these chapters include sections on how to get there, where to stay (with price ranges), places to eat (annotated to note places especially nice to kids), a splash of history and of course, pages of things to see and do. Each of these chapters can stand alone as its own mini-guide book. Ah, but then there is Rome. With a nod toward at least getting you close to the romance and magic we all die for from a thousand movies, the focus is squarely on enjoying the city with your kids. You get advice on transport (subway: YES, with details on navigating the ticketing system, walking: YES, buses: SORT OF, driving: NO). There are many references to gelato, as well as tips (order inside at a café, cheaper than ordering outside at a table). Suggested tours are narrated in a way that makes both good armchair reading as well as useful prose to read aloud as you visit places. Little touches-look out for cats at the Coliseum, mail postcards home from the efficient Vatican post office instead of the creaky Italian one-enliven the whole text. One suggested itinerary in Venice begins "sip cappuccino at one of the cafes while the kids entertain themselves by feeding the pigeons." The moment of truth here is that this is a great guidebook, witty, useful and, best of all, written by parents who walked the same streets as did the Caesars and soon, maybe you. If you aren't willing to take me along with you to Italy, go ahead and take this book instead.
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