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AUSTRALIA BOOKS

Posted in Australia (Friday, July 4, 2008)

New Zealand (Rough Guide 25s) Written by Rough Guides. By Rough Guides. The regular list price is $5.99. Sells new for $1.84. There are some available for $3.84.
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1 comments about New Zealand (Rough Guide 25s).
  1. I wouldn't buy it again. Okay to own if you know very little about New Zealand and need some ideas on what to do if you go there. However, if you have done a fair amount of research on a trip there, this book is pretty uneventful.


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Posted in Australia (Friday, July 4, 2008)

~ PREMIUM PORTABLE BACKUP CHARGER RE-CHARGER FOR LG PHONE (AA Battery - International - Universal - Wireless - Car - Emergency/Anywhere Use - Uses AA Battery to power your phone anywhere!)! ~ For: New VX8550 VX-8550 Black Marroon Style Chocolate VX8500 VX-8500 Cherry Mint Strawberry Red Black Green AX8600 AX-8600 Blue VX8600 VX-8600 VX8700 VX-8700 Shine Flip VX9400 VX-9400 VX9900 VX-9900 enV Orange KG810 KG-810 KG800 KG-800 KE790 KE-790 Prada LX570 LX-570 MUSIQ MUSI Q AX565 AX-565 Hot Pink Silver AX380 AX-380 The Wave U310 U-310 AX275 AX-275 AX260 AX-260 SCOOP LX150 LX-150 KG90 KG-90 Verizon, Alltel, Sprint, Cingular, AT&T, Bell, Helio, Vodafone, Telstra, Virgin, Yes Optus, Singtel Optus Limited, Canada, & Australia phones providers. By Mobile Excess. Sells new for $6.99.
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1 comments about ~ PREMIUM PORTABLE BACKUP CHARGER RE-CHARGER FOR LG PHONE (AA Battery - International - Universal - Wireless - Car - Emergency/Anywhere Use - Uses AA Battery to power your phone anywhere!)! ~ For: New VX8550 VX-8550 Black Marroon Style Chocolate VX8500 VX-8500 Cherry Mint Strawberry Red Black Green AX8600 AX-8600 Blue VX8600 VX-8600 VX8700 VX-8700 Shine Flip VX9400 VX-9400 VX9900 VX-9900 enV Orange KG810 KG-810 KG800 KG-800 KE790 KE-790 Prada LX570 LX-570 MUSIQ MUSI Q AX565 AX-565 Hot Pink Silver AX380 AX-380 The Wave U310 U-310 AX275 AX-275 AX260 AX-260 SCOOP LX150 LX-150 KG90 KG-90 Verizon, Alltel, Sprint, Cingular, AT&T, Bell, Helio, Vodafone, Telstra, Virgin, Yes Optus, Singtel Optus Limited, Canada, & Australia phones providers..
  1. I've had an adventure finding a portable recharger for my Verizon Chocolate phone. This one is perfect! A word of warning: this little thing gets really hot, and completely drains the life out of the battery used for power. But, it beats having a dead cellphone.


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Posted in Australia (Friday, July 4, 2008)

Frommer's Australia 2007 (Frommer's Complete) Written by Marc Llewellyn and Lee Mylne. By Frommer's. The regular list price is $23.99. Sells new for $2.30. There are some available for $4.00.
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1 comments about Frommer's Australia 2007 (Frommer's Complete).
  1. I purchased book a week before my trip and read on flight to Sydney. Soon determined there were a number of inaccuracies in the attraction pricing and other minor specifics (e.g., per Frommer there were 30 Explorer bus stops in Blue Mountain...there were actually 27, which Lonely Planet had right). The organization layout could be more simplistic (i.e., one attraction was discussed in various areas of the same section - used labeled flags to facilitate use). The book is bulky to carry around in backpack - editions should be available for specific regions (e.g., Sydney and surrounding). Worship service times and places could be added. Sydney is home to one of the most popular, largest non-denominational churches (Hillsong) and there was no mention of this (or other churches, other than the architecturally impressive cathedrals). Lastly, it would be great if Frommers would add local sites and activities. For instance, there is mention of the Sydney fish market but I found out through a local that cooking classes are offered. That would have been a fun "local" activity to have known about. I will buy the competitor book on my next trip and will then place my loyalty on one.


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Posted in Australia (Friday, July 4, 2008)

Lonely Planet Diving and Snorkeling Fiji (Diving & Snorkeling) Written by Casey Mahaney and Astrid Witte Mahaney. By Pisces Books. There are some available for $48.88.
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5 comments about Lonely Planet Diving and Snorkeling Fiji (Diving & Snorkeling).
  1. "Ni sa bula vinaka", as it is said in Fiji. As a master diver who has dived since 1956, and has visited many of Fiji's dive sites, I can heartily recommend this book to anyone contemplating diving Fiji. The Mahaney - Witte team- authors, photographers and dive tour guides well-known and respected in the diving community- are knowledgeable and credible. Mind you, NO book can ever catalogue ALL of Fiji's diverse and innumerable dive sites... but this book is well planned, has a very good selection of sites- rated for conditions and experience levels- and information for the would-be Fiji diver. The book has some maps, and a visual feast of photos. In summary- going to Fiji to dive? Be prepared for stiff currents, and a kaleidoscope of colorful fishes and soft corals... and BUY THIS BOOK! Dive well and safely.


  2. Simple no-nonsense guide to diving in Fiji


  3. This book is seemingly a compilation of dive locations frequented by dive resorts, with little independent research or reviews of specific dive outfitters. The book lacks basic information on water temperatures, currents, winds and seasonal influences. The independent traveller primarily interested in snorkeling will also be disappointed in the lack of practical information on the best sections of the main islands for shoreline snorkeling.


  4. This is an attractive book which the scuba diver will want to order. It maps and describes 74 of Fiji's top dive sites and the color photography is excellent. Despite the title, however, those interested in beach-based snorkeling will find little of use here as almost all of the sites included are accessible by boat only. Even the new Waitabu Marine Park off Taveuni is mentioned only in passing. There's virtually no practical resort or restaurant information, and the first quarter of the book is devoted to brochure-style hype you can read on almost any Fiji website. Critical reviews of dive facilities are strikingly absent, so this book is of no help in selecting a specific scuba operator. Five pages of listings in the back of the book provide basic contact information, but even this is out of date as all Fiji telephone numbers have increased from six to seven digits since the book was published. Most of the email addresses are also wrong, so substitute @connect.com.fj whenever you see @is.com.fj. Nevertheless, when one considers the cost of a scuba tour to the South Pacific and the lack of any alternative Fiji dive guide, all of the above criticisms are mute and serious divers will click this title straight into their shopping carts.


  5. I bought this book primarily because I am going to Fiji in two months and wanted info on snorkeling. Boy was I surprised to find only half a page devoted to snorkeling. The rest of the book is a brief description of various dive sites.

    The book does have nice pictures and basic information regarding the more popular dive sites in Fiji. But as a snorkeling reference, it is worthless.



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Posted in Australia (Friday, July 4, 2008)

The Falklands & South Georgia Island (Regional Guide) Written by Tony Wheeler. By Lonely Planet. The regular list price is $27.99. Sells new for $17.20. There are some available for $15.50.
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4 comments about The Falklands & South Georgia Island (Regional Guide).
  1. I'm a fan of the Lonely Planet (LP) series, both for armchair travel and for actual travel. This is one of the most obscure destinations covered by LP, and has the added distinction of being written by LP founder Tony Wheeler. However, it is a mystery to me why a successful entrepreneur would want to go back to the drudgery of collecting information for this book.

    These 200 pages cover the Falklands in infinite detail. Every remote sheep farm that has a room for rent is described in detail, most of which are accessible only by non-scheduled plane. Keep in mind that the Falklands have only 3500 people, and only one place that could be described as a town or village, which means that this guide has a greater pages-per-capita ratio than any other LP guide (except perhaps Antarctica). There is a large emphasis on wildlife, with 17 pages describing varieties of birds. Also, 18 pages are dedicated to the even more remote South Georgia Island (pop. 10), accessible only by ship. As in all LP guides, there is background on the history and economy, excellent maps, and (in these more recent guides) many color photos.


  2. An interesting, if brief, guided tour of what has to be one of the most remote tourist destinations on the planet. The Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas)are a British Colony in the South Atlantic, a few hundred miles off the South American coast, that are also claimed by Argentina---in 1982 the two countries fought a war over the islands. Points of interest are noted, and an overview of the land, the people (population only 2500, with about 80% living in the capital city of Port Stanley), the history, and the wildlife is provided. Included are about 30 pages on South Georgia, a remarkably picturesque, but largely uninhabited island even further out in the Atlantic. My only complaint was the lack of photographs of the Falkland countryside. It would have been nice to get a feel for the terrain---m.p.


  3. We are planning a trip to the Falklands soon, and I have searched every available publication for information. Suffice to say, such information is in short supply. I was ecstatic when I found this book. If you are planning a trip to the Falklands and/or South Georgia, this is the only book you need. Its information is both varied and comprehensive. Of special interest to us was the section detailing every location to view each type of penguin found in the Falklands.


  4. The Lonely Planet guidebook series is known for combining travel tips with cultural and historical education, and the Falkland Islands guide is no exception. The detail of this book is outstanding, and the stories it describes are very interesting as well - these little islands have played a larger role in world affairs than the uninformed would ever expect.

    If you are buying this in conjunction with the Antarctica book, please note that this book is much smaller - but given the relative size of each landmass, the difference makes sense.


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Posted in Australia (Friday, July 4, 2008)

Wallpaper City Guide: Sydney (Wallpaper City Guide Sydney) Written by Editors of Wallpaper Magazine. By Phaidon Press. The regular list price is $8.95. Sells new for $4.62. There are some available for $4.95.
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Posted in Australia (Friday, July 4, 2008)

Samoan Islands & Tonga (Multi Country Guide) Written by Paul Smitz. By Lonely Planet. The regular list price is $21.99. Sells new for $12.09. There are some available for $13.99.
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2 comments about Samoan Islands & Tonga (Multi Country Guide).
  1. I have never liked how LP guides are arranged but have found them to consistantly have the best information [not perfect but better than other guides.] I wish they had not included Tonga as I am not going there and always travel as light at possible. The binding is not condusive to removing unwanted pages but I will remove the Tonga section anyway. I say, 'buy it!' but don't get bent out of shape should some info not prove to be correct.


  2. We found this book to be very helpful and especially appreciated the Conversation/ Essentials in the rear of the book.
    We only visited 'Upolu, and the guide gave us important insights about the Samoan culture and etiquette which served us well.
    We stayed at Sinalei Reef Resort which we would highly recommend if you are traveling without children, and the restaurant at Coconut's Beach Club was excellent.
    This guide is a must if you're going to Samoa and really want to enjoy it to it's fullest.


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Posted in Australia (Friday, July 4, 2008)

The Manchus (Peoples of Asia) Written by Pamela Kyle Crossley. By Wiley-Blackwell. The regular list price is $40.95. Sells new for $27.90. There are some available for $17.61.
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5 comments about The Manchus (Peoples of Asia).
  1. It's funny to note that at many times the Qing dynasty faced many of the same problems that we see today: overpopulation, government corruption, war against drugs. So much of what we think of as Chinese is also Manchu and was introduced rather recently. Well writen and clear all the way through.


  2. I have read a more recent book Evelyn Rawski's "The Last Emperors: A Social History of Qing Imperial Institutions " in which she discusses the context between her book and "The Manchus". The two books are probably quite similar but I think that Rawski's book would contain much more undisclosed material.
    I have decided not to change the rating on this book in the interest of fair play.


  3. I visited to pick up the paperback of this book, and saw this perplexing comment below. This book and The Last Emperor are apples and oranges. This is a popular book (I got my original copy from History Book Club) and intended for reader's with a general interest, or maybe beginning historians. The book by Evelyn S. Rawski is an academic title, very thorough and erudite. But also the books are not on the same subject. Rawski is about the Manchu emperors, their courts and palaces. The Manchus is much more general. Please do not get confused into thinking that these two books are on the same subject.


  4. I read this book after Evelyn Rawski's "The Last Emperors" and it did answer & clarified a lot questions I had with regards to the Manchus and how they were like before entering China proper. The chapter on Nurhachi was good as was the section on the inevitable power struggle between Cixi and Guangxu (my only wish that this was elaborated further).
    Crossley's book is highly recommended for both casual & serious historians alike. My suggestion is to read this first before Rawski's "The Last Emperors"


  5. Read your typical history book covering Chinese history and you'll get a very distinct picture of the Jurchens and Manchus--about their conquest of china, the corruption of the Qing government (as if no other dynasty had corruption), of the power-hungry Aisio-gioro Nurgaci, founder of the Qing dynasty, and their alien, steppe-nomadic ways. Most Chinese history books have little good or substantive to say about this north-east Asian culture whose term for their religious priesthood was adopted by the West, "Shaman" (Chinese, "saman").

    This book takes all that mythology and anti-Manchu rehtoric and blasts it to pieces with a compelling story of a people who have rarely been studied objectively and as a culture separate from the Mongols and Chinese. Nurgaci was not the man of the myths we've heard and never called himself Emperor. In fact for most of his life his title was "beile of the Jianzhou Jurchens". He was a great lord and chieftain of his lineage, but not even an autocrat in his authority, ruling jointly with his brother, Surgaci, for many years.

    Besides the myths about Nuragi, many cultural myths are also dispelled. One major one is the assumption that the Manchus were nomads with a steppe culture analogous to the Mongol culture. This book explains how and why this assumption is wrong and is essential to anyone who wants to know the real Manchu people.

    I'm only 3 chapters into the book and already know I need to reread it. there's a lot of information for the student of Jurchen and Manchu history!

    WELL DONE!!


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Posted in Australia (Friday, July 4, 2008)

Moon Handbooks Tahiti: Including the Cook Islands Written by David Stanley. By Avalon Travel Publishing. The regular list price is $17.95. Sells new for $3.97. There are some available for $0.05.
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5 comments about Moon Handbooks Tahiti: Including the Cook Islands.
  1. Comparing this guide with other guides for Tahiti, it's just great!!.. It's far more accurate then the others, but those others it's often plain bad.

    Most guides are correct about weather, currency, number of inhabittants etc. But when it comes to accomendations, guiding companies etc. it's a completely different story.

    I went to Nuku Hiva in the Marquesas Islands 3 years ago. I stayed at a pension which Stanely recomended. The pension was a joke and the owner was the sleaziest guy I come across my 5 weeks in the South Pacific.

    I asked Stanley after the trip if he had been at the pension which was not the case. This pension is still recommended in the last edition.

    Lucky for Stanley that very few tourists travel to Nuku Hiva..

    It's just incredibil, that's not possible to trust the correctnes of infor- mation from a guy who has been travelling in the South Pacific for 20-30 years.

    I will use Stanley's guide this year too, but only as a basic tool. Getting an honest and accurate answer, I use the web-forums.



  2. As a producer researching filming locations throughout the Pacific Basin, I have found David Stanley's Moon Handbooks guide to Tahiti and the Cook Islands to be of tremendous value. Having travelled extensively throughout the world, I've often had trouble finding guides that are thorough and accurate. In Stanley's book, I've found just that. Rich with historic, cultural and practical information, along with numerous illustrations and maps, Stanley provides his readers with all of the necessary and critical information required in order to get the most out of a travel experience. To anyone planning a trip to this region, I would highly recommend this book.


  3. David Stanley has a wealth of personal knowledge of the South Pacific, and it shows. This comprehensive guide to French Polynesia, Rapanui, and Cook Islands is a must for anyone planning to travel to these exotic tropical paradises. Covering everything from history to present day conditions, from the practicalities of getting there to getting around, he tells it like it is. No matter your preffered travelling style, there is a wealth of realistic information to please everyone, from backpackers to luxury seekers alike. You will find this book invaluable; don't leave home without it.


  4. During my two big trips through the South Pacific, I always had one of David Stanley's guidebooks in my backpack. Stanley has been writing guidebooks to these islands for almost 25 years. Like his other Pacific guides, this fifth edition of Tahiti Handbook (which includes the whole of French Polynesia, the Cook Islands and Easter Island) is completely packed with information for the traveller.

    Tips for travellers
    While planning, Tahiti Handbook will help you find out which islands will be more interesting, easier or cheaper to visit. Stanley gives a good idea of what to expect in the islands, while you can still have a great adventure and discover things on your own.
    In the Pacific, this guide will save you money and trouble. Following Stanley's advice to sleep at Tahiti's airport when arriving at night, to wait for the early morning bus instead of taking a taxi to your hotel, will already save you the cost of the book. Accommodations of all categories are described, often including critical commentary. The same applies for restaurants and organized activities. Stanley identifies with any kind of traveller. He answers almost any possible question to arise on other travel matters.

    Incognito
    I haven't used this edition of Tahiti Handbook in the field yet, so I can't say much about the accuracy of the travel information inside. However, during my trips through the islands, Stanley's information usually proved reasonably up-to-date. You can never expect everything to be correct, Stanley admits that. For every new edition of his guides, he makes a research trip to check the places listed in his book. On these trips Stanley arrives unannounced and tries to identify himself as little as possible. This way he is better able to experience a place like any other traveller. For this fifth edition of Tahiti Handbook, the Marquesas and Easter Island were visited in addition to more regular places. It would be nice to know what islands were exactly visited. If you feel some information is incorrect or missing from Stanley's guide, you can write him and he will seriously look at your comments.

    Lively and critically
    The chapters on history, people and places and the references in Tahiti Handbook are an excellent starting point to learn more about Eastern Polynesia. In my opinion, some more attention could have been given to the language section: an extension of the Tahitian and French section and adding Cook Islands Maori, Spanish and Rapanui.
    The biggest problem with this book, as with Stanley's other guides to the Pacific, is that you'll want to go to almost every island he so lively introduces. With every new edition, Stanley not only updates travel information, he also perfects his writings. Stanley won't bore you. It's obvious he loves the islands. Still, he does so without writing over-positive about it. Stanley will tell you about the French nuclear testing at Moruroa and Papeete traffic jams. As he puts it on page 3: `Through this book we've tried to show you the best of the region without ignoring the worst. Paradise it may not be, but it's still a remarkable part of our planet.'

    Three in one
    Since the previous edition of Tahiti Handbook, the Cook Islands and Easter Island are also included, without making the guide too thick or expensive. The only I only place I miss in Tahiti Handbook is Pitcairn. Since it lies between French Polynesia and Easter Island, you would expect it to be included. It does receive more visitors than islands like Puka Puka or Maiao these days. For information about Pitcairn, you need to get Stanley's South Pacific Handbook.

    Maps and photographs
    You can find 56 maps in Tahiti Handbook, including ones of more remote islands. Of the main islands; there are detailed maps of towns to show accommodations, restaurants, offices and more. The atolls of the Tuamotu Archipelago are a bit underrepresented. But since these are mostly thin necklaces of land, this is not really important. In general the maps in Tahiti Handbook are fine. Only the coloured map and the index map at the beginning of the book could be better: the lagoons of the coral atolls have all been coloured in like land.
    There are not many photographs in Tahiti Handbook: two coloured ones at the beginning of the book and a handful of black and white ones throughout the book. Without doubt this helps to keep the price of the book down. Also, you don't really need photographs here: Stanley's writing will bring Polynesia to life for you.

    Take it!
    Despite some small critical notes, I still give Tahiti Handbook five stars. There is nothing to match this guidebook. Take it when you go to French Polynesia, the Cook Islands and/or Easter Island no matter what your budget or style of travelling is.



  5. An excellent guide to the islands of French Polynesia. We used it during the planning stages to pick our resorts and research the activities we might be interested in in Tahiti, Moorea and Bora Bora. Each day we were there, the book helped us plan our activities and learn more about the islands and what they had to offer. The island and Papeete city maps were of great use finding our way around. The book covers all islands of French Polynesia and the Cook Islands. I enjoyed reading about all the others we didn't visit. Will definitely take this our next trip down. Highly recommended.


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Posted in Australia (Friday, July 4, 2008)

Lonely Planet Micronesia Written by Kate Galbraith and Glenda Bendure and Ned Friary. By Lonely Planet Publications. The regular list price is $16.99. Sells new for $48.43. There are some available for $3.19.
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4 comments about Lonely Planet Micronesia.
  1. As a merchant marine, "travel" comes with the job. I have long been a collector of maps and travel guides, always searching for items that are the most user friendly & seeingly written for my budget, not one of the Rockerfeller's. I will tip my hat to Lonely Planet here. They accomplish the impossible with every book. Never did I expect to open a single guide book, not to mention a series of them & find myself so mesmerized by what was written. Their guides are not the commonly found or should I say "forced" "stay at the $$$$ hotel, eat at the $$$$ restaurant"... They give you such a wide, realistic range of places to go, visit, stay & enjoy, that they change you from the prospective dreamer ho-hummingly flipping pages in a book to the traveler that sees his/her goals come to pass. After all, isn't that what we really want out of travel? As for this particular guide book... I have been in Guam 4 months on and 4 months off since February of 1996, visiting Saipan as part of work & Rota & Tinian on my own time... I have used & abused this book (Cover still intact) & I have had many co-workers borrow it, with everyone coming away a satisfied reader. So, whether it be Guam, Saipan or any part of Micronesia, this is one guide book that I strongly recommend & if you are doing an around the world trip with Japan as your next stop... Do the right thing... Get the Japan Guide book, but also shell out a few extra dollars and purchase the Japanese Audio Pack. It is hands down the easiest (& one of the most economical) basic language teachers out there & it even comes with a Phrase Book! My current Lonely Planet Guide library includes: Micronesia, Japan (Book & Audio pack), Korea, Singapore-Brunei-Malaysia, Tonga, Southwest USA (Arizona-New Mexico-Utah), & Maldives & Islands Of The East Indian Ocean. I look to expand as I am planing a trip to Argentina's Andes in 2000. A satisfied ! customer I shall remain... I hope you, the reader of my review, read this & come to realize what wonderful publications Lonely Planet offers us. If you do, step back an use AMAZON.COM for all your travel needs. You will be glad you listened. (You know, I always thought these reviews were written by paid personel somewhere, TRUST me this isn't the case at all Customer satisfaction is my reward!) Happy Travels to all!


  2. I have been to Micronesia twice. The first time I lived there for a couple of years, and the second time I went as a tourist. I purchased this book before returning the second time. It had been seven years since I had been in Micronesia, and some of it had changed drastically while some parts hadn't changed at all. This book was a great guide, and helped me to find some of the better spots that I had somehow managed to miss while I lived there. Here is how the book stacked up. THE GOOD: 1) This book covers all of Micronesia, and that is no small task. It has information about all parts, ranging from Palau to the Marshall Islands. 2) This book gives a lot of information about each island. It explains the history, tells you what you should take, tells you about hotels and restaurants (from the five star establishments to the low end ones), tells you about how to travel to each island as well as how to travel around while on the island and many other bits of useful information to make your stay more enjoyable. 3) The maps are good. They aren't super detailed, but are nice maps of the islands and the villages on them. Quite good enough for any sight seeing or exploring that you might want to do. 4) This book tells you about the popular and good diving spots, hiking spots and historical points. So even though some of the book may be outdated (the nicest hotels in Guam) there are some things that will probably never change (how to hike to a nice hidden waterfall on Pohnpei.) THE BAD: Parts of Micronesia are changing quickly, and this book fails to capture those changes. For example, the list of popular places to stay, eat and shop on Guam wasn't very helpful since the island had changed so much in the past five years (since the book was published). To counteract this information lag, I just picked up tourist publications while I was on Guam, and that updated me enough to fill in all the gaps. OVERALL: It is like a computer that is a couple of years old: sure it is outdated some, but it still works nicely, and it is much better than having nothing at all!


  3. This is an OK guidebook for information about culture and hotels. I found that it covered all the basics. It covers all of the island nations in the Micronesia area. The section on Palau and Yap were particularly useful to me. However, I thought that there wasn't enough information about scuba diving. Most of the people visiting this region are interested in scuba diving. There isn't enough information on dive shops or dive sites. In fact, there aren't any maps of dive sites at all. If you're going to go diving, I would try another guidebook. If you're just going to go sightseeing, this is just fine. Also another thing I would like to see in the next edition is a few more photos. Sometimes photos can help you decide whether to go to a place or not. With more photos, I think this guidebook would attract more people to these lovely islands.


  4. This is a nice, concise guide, to micronesia, covering Palua, Kiribati, the Marianas, Nauro, The federated states of Micronesia, and other small islands that stretch between New Zealand and Hawaii. There are a number of recommendations for the best way to travel between islands and how to plan your journey. THis is not a book that is aimed for the specialist, for scuba-divers it needs to be supplimented and the same goes for those intending to travel by boat. However the book is excellent when it comes to history, restaurants hikes and hotels. It is a wonderful guide-book, indispensible for the island hopping traveller.

    Seth J. Frantzman


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New Zealand (Rough Guide 25s)
~ PREMIUM PORTABLE BACKUP CHARGER RE-CHARGER FOR LG PHONE (AA Battery - International - Universal - Wireless - Car - Emergency/Anywhere Use - Uses AA Battery to power your phone anywhere!)! ~ For: New VX8550 VX-8550 Black Marroon Style Chocolate VX8500 VX-8500 Cherry Mint Strawberry Red Black Green AX8600 AX-8600 Blue VX8600 VX-8600 VX8700 VX-8700 Shine Flip VX9400 VX-9400 VX9900 VX-9900 enV Orange KG810 KG-810 KG800 KG-800 KE790 KE-790 Prada LX570 LX-570 MUSIQ MUSI Q AX565 AX-565 Hot Pink Silver AX380 AX-380 The Wave U310 U-310 AX275 AX-275 AX260 AX-260 SCOOP LX150 LX-150 KG90 KG-90 Verizon, Alltel, Sprint, Cingular, AT&T, Bell, Helio, Vodafone, Telstra, Virgin, Yes Optus, Singtel Optus Limited, Canada, & Australia phones providers.
Frommer's Australia 2007 (Frommer's Complete)
Lonely Planet Diving and Snorkeling Fiji (Diving & Snorkeling)
The Falklands & South Georgia Island (Regional Guide)
Wallpaper City Guide: Sydney (Wallpaper City Guide Sydney)
Samoan Islands & Tonga (Multi Country Guide)
The Manchus (Peoples of Asia)
Moon Handbooks Tahiti: Including the Cook Islands
Lonely Planet Micronesia

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Last updated: Fri Jul 4 01:41:16 EDT 2008