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| Lonely Planet : Thailand | 
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| Author: Joe Cummings Publisher: Lonely Planet Publications Category: Book
List Price: £13.99 Buy Used: £0.02 You Save: £13.97 (100%)
New (1) from £21.95
Avg. Customer Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 564389
Media: Paperback Edition: 8Rev Ed Pages: 1032 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6 Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 5.3 x 1.5
ISBN: 0864426364 Dewey Decimal Number: 915.930444 EAN: 9780864426369 ASIN: 0864426364
Publication Date: July 30, 1999 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: SUPER FAST SHIPPING, DISPATCHED SAME DAY FROM UK WAREHOUSE. NO NEED TO WAIT FOR BOOKS FROM USA. GREAT BOOK IN GOOD OR BETTER CONDITION. MORE GREAT BARGAINS IN OUR ZSHOP. amazon.co.uk/shops/awesome_books_001
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.co.uk Review Many backpackers refer to the various Lonely Planet guides as South East Asia bibles, and indeed treat them as such. Taking just a glimpse at Lonely Planet: Thailand, it's not difficult to understand why. Crammed into over 1000 pages is everything you could want to know about pretty much every region of Thailand. From the southern provinces bordering on Malaysia, to the main coastal destinations such as Phuket and Koh Samui, from the intense heat of Bangkok to the amazing architecture around Ayutthaya and the contrasting tranquillity of the north, the people at Lonely Planet give you as much practical information on places to stay, eat and visit as possible. Updated regularly, the guides try to keep abreast of the rapid development in Thailand and give you the latest, vital information on how much you can expect to pay--particularly useful for that first trip in a Songthaew or Tuk-tuk. As always there is detailed information about the culture and history of Thailand. However, for many the focus is on the practicalities of finding accommodation and getting where you're going (once you have used the handy maps to figure out where you are). Particularly useful are the suggested itineraries which give an idea of what you can fit in whether you are staying for a couple of weeks or several months. For those wanting to concentrate their stay on the main attractions of Bangkok and Thailand's coastal regions, Lonely Planet: Thailand's Islands and Beaches is perhaps a better bet. However, if you fancy being a little more adventurous and seeing more of Thailand, Lonely Planet: Thailand is certainly a good place to start. --Caroline Butler
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| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
Useful but flawed January 4, 2005 12 out of 14 found this review helpful
I usually go with Lonely Planet rather than the Rough Guide since I tend to feel it has the edge on accuracy. But the Thailand guide is a little disappointing. The Bangkok and Chiang Mai chapters are fine and full of useful and correct information. But chapters covering the smaller provincial towns - Phrae, Nan, Lampang - are less reliable. Particularly, the maps just don't look like the towns, sometimes I've ended up walking for the best part of an hour to cover a distance that looked like a kilometre according to the scale on the map. Also, lots of important streets are merely drawn, not named on the maps. The combination of these two failings means you can get lost very easily.I'm not going to complain, like a previous reviewer, that the book assumes you can speak and read Thai. The authors always warn you if a particular restaurant has no English menu or sign, for instance, so if you can't read the language, you know to choose another restaurant. I do think, though, that the authors should take into account that prices tend to be much higher for lots of commodities - taxis and tuk-tuks, above all - if you happen to be a non-Thai-speaking foreigner. I've set out a couple of times on a journey which Lonely Planet has assured me will cost 30 baht by public sawngthaew (pick-up truck), only to arrive at the bus stop as the only customer and find drivers insisting that I charter the vehicle for 500 baht. You would need good spoken Thai and good haggling skills to avoid these sort of situations. Of course if you travel to a country where you don't know the language things are bound to be difficult at times, but I think Lonely Planet should take those difficulties into account. Of course the chapters on Southern Thailand will now have to be updated in the light of the recent tsunami tragedy, not to mention continuing unrest in the Muslim-majority provinces in the far south. But no guide book can keep pace with events such as those.
Excellent account of the whole picture October 9, 2002 19 out of 28 found this review helpful
This is an excellent guide book for those interested in all aspects of Thailand, not just for tourists looking to have a fun fortnight on the beach. It is written by someone who clearly understands and loves the country. Those who complain that he refers to places where no English is spoken should take into account that English is not spoken in most of the country. However, I believe English is spoken widely in Blackpool and Benidorm.
New LP Thailand a mixed bag February 9, 2002 10 out of 18 found this review helpful
LP's latest edition of its Thailand guide is useful in its maps, info on transport infrastructure, and in some places its accomodation suggestions, apart from that it bears all the hallmarks of a book compiled by Joe Cummings from an office in Bangkok: much of the information has not changed since the last edition and some is inaccurate.......As with most LP's though, its worth [it] just for its back up potential while you're on the road
Great Book! Vital for the Traveller! January 15, 2002 16 out of 17 found this review helpful
The book is great in terms of getting about, interesting things to see and places to go....... Never use the book to heavily plan a trip - it won't happen. In Thailand, as in all SE Asia, transport is unreliable and departure times, as with prices, regularly change... but relax and you'll get there eventually. It is a must for the traveller and is a lot better than any of the competition (in my experience)
Absolutely Horrendous April 16, 2001 This has to be the worst guidebook I have ever used in any of the countries I have visited. Mr. Cummings, the author, can read and write fluent Thai (Kudos to him) but does not appreciate that most of those using his book neither have the time or inclination to study the language effectively. A number of places he recommends for either shopping or eating are only of use if one can speak Thai, as he mentions that there is no English spoken, nor any English menus etc. Furthermore he will recommend places that do not have English signs, yet fails to put the Thai name in the book, making even finding some of these places extremely difficult. One might try to argue that the phrasebook part of the book would make up for this inadequacy, but far from it. It adds to the confusion. Mr. Cummings decided to use the most bizarre method of transliteration known to man. It requires a doctorate in cryptoanalysis to try and work out how he has used those characters in the Latin script to resemble the sound in question. For example a hundred in Thai would be transliterated Loy or Loi by most people, yet somehow Mr. Cummings thinks Rawy is the easiest way to write it, where did he learn English? The maps in this guidebook are also absolutely horrendous. Their inaccuracies are so bad that one must wonder whether Mr. Cummings even visited the places. The scales are often so wildly out that six kilometres appears as one kilometre on the map for a small town that maybe only measures about six kilometres from one end to another. The only good thing about this book is that its inadequacies prompted me to learn basic spoken and written Thai. The paper in this book is not even very absorbent, so it missed its true calling.
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