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CHINA BOOKS
Posted in China (Monday, September 8, 2008)
Written by Claude Étienne Savary. By Adamant Media Corporation.
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No comments about Lettres sur l\'Égypte: Tome 3.
Posted in China (Monday, September 8, 2008)
Written by Finetta Madelina Julia (Campbell) Bruce. By Adamant Media Corporation.
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No comments about Kashmir.
Posted in China (Monday, September 8, 2008)
Written by Patrick Witton. By Lonely Planet Publications.
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1 comments about Lonely Planet Hong Kong: Condensed (Lonely Planet Hong Kong Condensed).
- My wife and I spent one week in Hong Kong during March, 2004. We found the 2nd edition (published March, 2003) Lonely Planet Hong Kong Condense pocket guide to be a great reference source.
Because the guide is pocket-sized, it fit conveniently in my jacket and looked inconspicuous when I carried it in my hand. I found the fold-out maps on the covers to be handy and easy to use when I navigated the streets of Kowloon and HK Island. The guide is well organized and broken into categories such as "Highlights," "Sights and Activities" in addition to the obvious ones such as "Shopping, "Places to Eat," and "Places to Stay." We found the places to visit recommended under "Highlights" and "Sight & Activities" to be worthwhile. For instance, our son, who is spending his junior year of college studying at the University of Hong Kong, suggested we visit two obscure sights: the Chi Lin Nunnery (which has a beautiful Japanese-style garden) and the Wong Tai Sin Temple (a large colorful Taoist temple and garden bustling with activity). Both sites were listed in the guide. The huge shopping malls such as Pacific Place (on HK island in Admiralty) and Harbour City (in Tsim Sha Tsui) were fun to wlak through. If I had a single complaint, it would be that some of the recommended restaurants under "Places to Eat" were duds [such as Luk Yu Tea House (past its prime and overrated) in Central and Peking Restaurant(overrated) in Tsim Sha Tsui]. In other words, take the recommended eating establishments with a grain of salt. On the other hand, some of the eateries such as the "Happy Garden Noodle & Congee Kitchen" (located across from the Harbour City shopping mall in Tsim Sha Tsui) and "Yung Kee" (a famous roast geese restauant located in Central)were great. It should be noted that restaurant meals are quite expensive in Hong Kong. My wife and I found the food courts in shopping centers (where the locals dine) to be good places for inexpensive and delicious Chinese food).
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Posted in China (Monday, September 8, 2008)
Written by David Leffman and Simon Lewis and Jeremy Atiyah. By Rough Guides.
The regular list price is $25.95.
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5 comments about The Rough Guide to China.
- I am just back from a week in China. Unlike my normal travels this time I stayed in luxury hotels and had arranged transport. Therefore I did not depend on the guide to tell me which bus to take from which museum etc ( at any rate a painful thing to do with most guides and something to be explored much more easily locally).
The guide was superb in giving condensed information on the places we have visited ( Beijing, Xi'An and Shanghai) and enabled us to do all the planning of what we wanted to do and wanted to see whilst travelling. I found the information on markets and shopping to be very accurate and, most enjoyable, for all the markets, places of interest, restaurants, hotels etc. the guide had the names in Cihinese characters as well, so that we could tell our driver or the taxidriver where to go. Also the general information on history and culture where quite interesting and gave another dimension to our short and unplanned trip. All in all well worth the value. One tip; the guide has for all the hotels the listed prices. Through the Internet or with frequent flyer cards you can get up to 60% discounts even in the big hotels like Sheraton and Hilton.
- The question is not how do you cover the world's largest and most populated country (as big as all the countries of Europe combined), but rather, how do you visit such a vast, multi cultured world as China? The first step is to arm oneself with the best travel guides on the market. "China: The Rough Guide" is one such guide.
"China: The Rough Guide" is designed for those that have more than a week or two in China. It is NOT a pocket guide (almost 2 lbs.) and more than 1100 pages. In this tome, Leffman, Lewis & Atiyah captures the best of China and give you the low down on what you must see while in China Straight off the introduction in this guide is one of the most engaging I have ever read, "China is not so much another country as another world; chopsticks, tea, slippers, massed bicycles, shadow boxing, exotic pop music, karakoe, teeming crowds, Dickensian train stations . . . one of the world's largest economies." The maps (a critical element in any guide) are among the best found in a guide to date. Each restaurant and accommodation that is listed in the guide is marked on the maps (ya gotta love it). The terse 3000-year history is as well written as objective as history can be, and thorough enough for most visitors. There is an outstanding appendix section, titled: "Context," covering, besides history, architecture, art, film, music and an excellent book list. The recommendations for accommodations and restaurants are reliable and up to date. However, this is not a perfect guide (5 stars). One of the weak areas of the guide is the omission of an accommodation or a restaurant index. Thus, if you have a recommended restaurant you want to look up, you have to go through all the restaurant pages 'til you stumble across the name you seek or miss seeing it completely. Another significant shortcoming is the lack of website and email addresses for hotels. Phone and fax numbers are provided but, considering the cost, nothing beats email. This is a significant omission, especially considering that the guide has a 2000 publishing date and most major Chinese hotels are now Internet connected, Though the 'Basic Section' is up to guide books' standards, and has a few interesting sections (i.e., recommended tours, China Online Etc.) I found some of the information needed updating. Northwest Airlines is NOT the only airline that flies non-stop from mainland US to China, United Airlines also does (though the service is sub-par and the seats very cramped, I would not-recommended you flying UAL). Also, there is NO website information for any of the airlines. I am disappointed that the 'boxed' vignettes are few and far between in this guide. There is no mention of Falun Gong and only a scant mention of the Three River Gorge Dam. Usually Rough Guides are much better in this area. Finally, an ongoing peeve that I have about Rough Guides, is the use of a number system to quote the price range of a hotel, i.e., the `Friendship Hotel' is listed to cost a '6'. For a `6' you have to flip back to the numeric legion where you find out that `6' = 600 to 800 yuans, which you then divide by the current rate of exchange. As other guides simply demonstrate, there are better ways to help your reader gage approximate cost. If you are going to just be in and around Beijing or Shanghai then this guide at 1100 pages may be an over kill. You would be better off with Rough Guide: Beijing, Cadogan's Beijing or Lonely Planet Shanghai (all highly recommended guides, see my reviews). However if you are going to explore this great country then 'China: The Rough Guide' will be a welcome companion. Recommended
- The Rough Guides are considered among the "cream of the crop" in the guidebook world, and this book is no exception. I used it extensively in the planning phase of my recent month-long trip to China, and it was very helpful.
The background sections of the book are outstanding, giving the reader a solid overview of Chinese history and culture. The primary sites of interest to travelers are adequately covered as well, and so the book is very helpful in planning one's itinerary. The main drawback of the volume is it's weight. If you are backpacking in China, as I was, this book is pretty heavy to be lugging around. Therefore, unless you are staying in China more than a couple of weeks, you might consider looking at the smaller city guides.....or ripping the necessary sections out of this book and packing only those in your rucksack. Highly recommended for pre-trip planning at home. Recommended for packing and taking to China *if* you are going on an extended trip to the country.
- This book presents itself as a revised edition, but it is very
little more than a prettied-up reprint of the text from three years ago, and some of that was a bit long in the tooth then.The first and second editions carried great promise, worthy competitors for the boys from LP. To represent the third as having been "updated" is merely a deception. It would have been better not done at all. The book is a curiosity. The title-page has it "written and researched" by the same three authors as the previous edition more than three years ago, but "this edition updated" by two others. It's not clear that the original three have contributed any "research" at all that was not reflected in the previous edition. Nor is it even quite clear that the two "updaters" have actually been on the ground in China. The "updating" is in fact so slight that it could almost have been done by a desk-bound clerk on the strength of readers' reports, with perhaps the odd nod in the direction of the Lonely Planet Thorn Tree. The new edition has more pages, but that's explained by a slightly larger type-face; finer paper; unchanged net weight. A second colour introduced throughout, with improved visual presentation, a bit prettier. And not many other changes. Chinese names and words still without tone-marks in the main body of the text - a shortcoming that was never really excusable and which has been merely unacceptable since Lonely Planet bit that particular bullet. There is scarcely a town or locality mentioned that is not included in the previous edition. No one who is on the ball in the matter of China travel could fail to discover many more places worthy of attention than he knew about three years before. And circumstances change as well: more than a year before the last edition, all of western Sichuan was opened for the first time, but the vast treasure of the previously forbidden region is still undiscovered by the new edition of this (very) rough guide. The wonderfully scenic Muli and Yanyuan counties in southern Sichuan have been open for years but (apart from one passing reference to Yanyuan) rate no mention. Yushu Prefecture in southern Qinghai, with all counties open at least since mid-2001, is not mentioned; indeed apart from Xining district and Golmud (Geermo) there's hardly a mention of any part of Qinghai province at all. Of course I can't expect even the best guidebook to discover all the places I may have discovered and found worthwhile - the Mekong in north-west Yunnan, Yulin in northern Shaanxi, Shibaoshan in western Yunnan, Daocheng and the Yading Reserve, not to mention secret places in Tibet that I'd perhaps rather keep to myself, nor the phenomenal valley of the Salween in western Yunnan. The trouble is that this book has found very few new places (though there's a tantalising addition of almost impossibly remote Loulan and a couple of extra morsels on the "southern Silk Road" - a reader's letter perhaps?) Then there are the occasions when I've found the previous edition mistaken or misleading - Chishui, Matang, Tiger-Leaping Gorge, Ruili district, Sanying hotel open to foreigners (well, it is if you threaten the PSB with an international incident failing their acquiescence), Pingliang hotel; and so on. Any corrections? Not one that I can find. Some details of hotel tariffs, telephone numbers, admission charges and so on have been changed, but they are generally far too few to lend any confidence in the reliability of what has not been changed; a number I've been able to check are just wrong. The maps are now far too few, the provincial (or multi-provincial) maps just too simplified; the largest scale for some provinces is one to twenty million. Even so, how revealing for the text to say that "Weixi marks the end of the road" (from the east)! Tell that to the mini-bus drivers who drive another 220km north to Deqin, from where the road continues all the way to Lhasa and beyond! The railway line between Changsha and north-western Hunan (which cut the journey from Zhangjiajie to Changsha to about six hours when it had already been commissioned three years ago) is not shown. Good points? There's a new "food and drink glossary", which is to say phrase-list. The paper is excellent - strong and light, perhaps better than the heavier paper of the Lonely Planet, so that there are about 30% more pages but 10% less overall weight. There must be more words in the Rough Guide, but I doubt there is more information, regardless of its accuracy.
- I can't fully agree with negative review of this book. I'm living in China for three years now. I got many guides to China I use them quite a lot during my traveling in here. Sure there is maybe a few thing missing and there are some mistakes in this book but it is still the best. I find it much more accurate and detailed than last edition of Lonely Planet.
It's best all around travel guide for China. If you want to get and bring just one get this one.
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Posted in China (Monday, September 8, 2008)
Written by Claude Étienne Savary. By Adamant Media Corporation.
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No comments about Lettres sur l\'Égypte: Tome 2.
Posted in China (Monday, September 8, 2008)
Written by Alexander Michie. By BookSurge Publishing.
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No comments about The Siberian Overland Route from Peking to Petersburg, through the Deserts and Steppes of Mongolia, Tartary, etc..
Posted in China (Monday, September 8, 2008)
Written by Shu-hsiung Wu and Ulrich Hoss. By Barron''s Educational Series.
The regular list price is $12.99.
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1 comments about Barron's Traveler's Language Guide -- Mandarin (Barron's Traveler's Language Guides).
- I highly recommend this book for anyone who's interested in learning day-to-day, practical Chinese vocabulary. The book spans 11 chapters, with each chapter representing a likely environment or scenario you would encounter every day (e.g., Health, Eating & Drinking, On the Road, Services, etc.). I would say that each chapter is comprised of 90% vocabulary/phrases and 10% cultural education (etiquette, situational background, & advice). Be forewarned, however: this book is written entirely in English and Pinyin, so people expecting Chinese characters should steer clear!
Overall, this is a fantastic book for Chinese vocabulary immersion. And the best part is, all the vocabulary is practical in nature. Great for "every day" situations, and great for learners of Chinese (like myself).
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Posted in China (Monday, September 8, 2008)
Written by Reader's Digest editors. By Readers Digest.
The regular list price is $30.00.
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No comments about Beautiful Xiangxi.
Posted in China (Monday, September 8, 2008)
By Dewi Lewis Publishing.
The regular list price is $40.00.
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No comments about Shanghai Odyssey.
Posted in China (Monday, September 8, 2008)
Written by Charles Allen. By David & Charles.
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No comments about Tales from the South China Seas: Images of the British in South-East Asia in the 20th Century.
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Lettres sur l\'Égypte: Tome 3
Kashmir
Lonely Planet Hong Kong: Condensed (Lonely Planet Hong Kong Condensed)
The Rough Guide to China
Lettres sur l\'Égypte: Tome 2
The Siberian Overland Route from Peking to Petersburg, through the Deserts and Steppes of Mongolia, Tartary, etc.
Barron's Traveler's Language Guide -- Mandarin (Barron's Traveler's Language Guides)
Beautiful Xiangxi
Shanghai Odyssey
Tales from the South China Seas: Images of the British in South-East Asia in the 20th Century
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