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PORTUGAL BOOKS

Posted in Portugal (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

Cool Shops Barcelona (Cool Shops) By Te Neues Publishing Company. The regular list price is $16.95. Sells new for $17.42. There are some available for $29.81.
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1 comments about Cool Shops Barcelona (Cool Shops).
  1. Great looking stores, but wish the shops could be more 'Barcelona' or 'Spanish' in flavour. Otherwise what's there to differentiate it from all other books in the series?


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Posted in Portugal (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

The Wine and Food Lover's Guide to Portugal Written by Charles Metcalfe and Kathryn McWhirter. By Wine Appreciation Guild. The regular list price is $31.66. Sells new for $21.36.
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Posted in Portugal (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

The White Island: The Extraordinary History of the Mediterranean's Capital of Hedonism Written by Stephen Armstrong. By Transworld Publishers. The regular list price is $15.00. Sells new for $11.70. There are some available for $4.05.
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Posted in Portugal (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

AAA Spiral Spain, 3rd Edition (Aaa Spiral Guides) Written by Sally Roy. By AAA. The regular list price is $17.95. Sells new for $10.72. There are some available for $12.00.
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Posted in Portugal (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

Knopf City Guide: Madrid (Knopf City Guides Madrid) Written by Knopf Guides. By Knopf. There are some available for $0.93.
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2 comments about Knopf City Guide: Madrid (Knopf City Guides Madrid).
  1. This is not a very practical guide book. The descriptions of hotels/places to see are very brief and the guide does not suggest good itinaries to tour Madrid. Pages on the right are random photo samplings of tourist spots/hotels which give the reader a good overview of the place. The description of hotels does not include specific prices only price ranges. First time visitors to Madrid are better off getting the "Eyewitness Travel Guides".


  2. Don't confuse the Knopf city guide with the Knopf Guide. The Knopf Guides are quite good. The city guide, of which I have mistakenly bought several, is very short, and devotes at least 80% to where to eat, where to stay, where to shop, where to find night life...20% or less useful info of what to visit if your'e a tourist. And the maps are pretty useless too.


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Posted in Portugal (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

Lonely Planet Valencia and the Costa Blanca Written by Miles Roddis. By Lonely Planet Publications. There are some available for $10.71.
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Posted in Portugal (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

Portugues Dinamico Seculo 21: Uma Maneira Facil de Aprender Portugues, Conhecendo o Brazil, seus Costumes e sua Gente Written by Teresa Resende Leiserowitz. By BookSurge Publishing. Sells new for $31.99. There are some available for $68.07.
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2 comments about Portugues Dinamico Seculo 21: Uma Maneira Facil de Aprender Portugues, Conhecendo o Brazil, seus Costumes e sua Gente.
  1. I am a student of Brazilian Portuguese. I have loved the language for years and it was not until about four years ago that I had the opportunity of taking my first lesson. In class, I learned from two or three different text books. They were all right but I always felt something was lacking. I stopped taking lessons for a couple of years and started again a little over a year ago. It was then that I was introduced to Portugues Dinamico Seculo 21. What a difference this book makes. Using this text book made it much easier for me to learn certain words and verbs that had completely eluded me the first time around. The book is very well organized, light and fun to use. As it tells the story of a U.S. family that is moving temporarily to Brazil due the father's business, it takes you by the hand and teaches not only the language, but the customs, a little bit of the history of Brazil, and it gives you a glimpse of Brazilian life. At the beginning, it starts with very easy words in Portuguese and pictures to depict their meaning--instead of the translation to English. The book has very few translations to English, which forces you to learn faster. It gently takes you through the articles and verbs without overwhelming you as it teaches you vocabulary used in every day life such as introductions, small conversation, foods, clothing, parts of the body, days of the week, months of the year, numbers, all in small doses. It even has two or three recipes for some delicious-sounding Brazilian dishes. There are several exercises in each lesson to practice what you learned. Almost at the end it has Brazilian business vocabulary and tips on how to write a business letter. Pretty soon, you are speaking in long sentences. I would highly recommend this book to teachers of the Portuguese language and their students that, like me, just love the language or those students that are planning on going to Brazil or even Portugal on a vacation or on business.


  2. This publication is just what I needed to begin learning the language. The illustrations, along with the topic Q&A, are better learning tool than listining to repetitive phrases on a CD. Rather than just speaking it, using this book will also help me learn to read and write the language.

    Lee in Houston


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Posted in Portugal (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

Seville, Cordoba, and Granada: A Cultural History (Cityscapes) Written by Elizabeth Nash. By Oxford University Press, USA. The regular list price is $16.95. Sells new for $7.34. There are some available for $1.00.
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Posted in Portugal (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

Culture Shock! Spain: A Survival Guide to Customs and Etiquette (Culture Shock! Guides) Written by Marie Louise Graff. By Graphic Arts Center Publishing Company. The regular list price is $14.95. Sells new for $11.96. There are some available for $4.75.
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5 comments about Culture Shock! Spain: A Survival Guide to Customs and Etiquette (Culture Shock! Guides).
  1. As a college student preparing to study abroad in Spain, I found this book...perfect. This guide in its unique series tells of all the customs and proper etiquette you never learned in school. If more American tourists read these culture shock books before traveling abroad, the American stereotype would be lessened.


  2. Of all of the guidebooks to Spain I've read, this is the worst. It is a condescending anthropological study of Spaniards and the visitor to Spain.

    Just listen to this example of the "advice" given:

    "Nowadays there is a system of numbers at some of the supermarket counters, particularly the butcher's. You take a number from a roll fixed on the counter and wait for it to be called. If there are lots of numbers ahead of your own, this leaves you free to carry on with other shopping until your turn draws near. But make sure you are available when your number is called. Otherwise you will be made to draw a new number and made to wait over again."

    If this is the type of advice you need, you may need more than just this guidebook to help you through Spain.

    Besides being written for idiots, the book has another assumption which is purely annoying: Spaniards are good and all others are evil. For example when describing the recent increase in crime, the book implies that all crime is commited by either gypsies or foreigners.

    The simplicity of this book is only necessary if you are a stereotypical tourist who needs help understanding anything basic about a country other than the US. If you are actually curious about Spanish culture, however, a better choice is "Discovering Spain, An Uncommon Guide" by Penelope Casas.



  3. This is a book of advice for folks planning to settle in Spain, particularly in the foreign retirement enclaves along the Mediterranean coast. It is heavily oriented toward the British, as the Culture Shock books are a British series. For the rest of us, it has a lot of interesting and potentially useful information that you do not find in tourist guidebooks, written in a pleasant, chatty, though sort of repetitive English nanny style. It is fairly unorganized. But if you're even thinking of moving to Spain, it's good to read whatever good advice you can get your hands on, and this book has plenty of it. Somebody mentioned that Penelope Casas is better: Penelope Casas is a great read, but my impression is that she travels mostly with The Well To Do, which is definitely what I am not one of.


  4. If you know absolutely nothing about Spain, this could be a nice book to very lightly acquaint you with the Spainish culture. It definitely does not live up to it's description. It touches on (one paragraph) many different topics, many of which I would have liked to know more about but just read about what I already know. It's not horrible, just basic. It most definetly does not prepare one for a trip to Spain or if you plan to move there(as I am doing). For example, it tells you there are comprehensive bus and train systems...I need to know their names and how to use them.(of course they have them, anyone would assume that) For me this was a waste of time and money.


  5. After reading some of the other books in the Culture Shock series, I was quite disappointed by this installment. The author obviously has great reverence for Spain, but some of the things in the book were quite upsetting to me. For instance (and as also pointed out by another reviewer), the author has some obvious prejudice against gypsies:

    "They are avoided, and most Spaniards are reluctant to get involved with them." (18)

    "Traditionally a nomadic people, [gypsies] do not hold regular jobs and many of them turn to begging or petty thievery." (19)

    "A few years ago, mugging and bag-snatching were unusual but nowadays one hears of daring snatches in broad daylight, particularly in areas where gypsies abound." (69)

    Also, there were quite a few mistakes in her list of "useful words and phrases" (48-50). There were some errors involving spelling, accents, and capitalization. I was surprised that mistakes that could probably be caught by a student of Spanish 1 would not only be made by somebody who had retired to Spain but also go unnoticed by the editor.

    Finally, the author keeps stressing that Spaniards are a very proud and private people and stresses that foreigners will never be totally accepted by Spaniards. While this may be true to some point, her wording kind of bothered me, especially since she seems to generalize a LOT. Granted, the whole point of the Culture Shock series is to generalize as much as possible in order to give the foreigner a taste of the country, but I would take everything that the author says with a grain of salt. I get the feeling that her own endeavors to fully integrate herself into Spanish society have proved not as successful as she had hoped, which explains for much of what she says. She takes much of what has personally happened to her (and very often sprinkles these anecdotes into her writing) and uses it as a general representation for all of Spain.



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Posted in Portugal (Saturday, September 6, 2008)

Moon Spain (Moon Handbooks) Written by Candy Lee LaBalle. By Avalon Travel Publishing. The regular list price is $24.95. Sells new for $2.00. There are some available for $0.22.
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Page 24 of 224
10  14  15  16  17  18  19  20  21  22  23  24  25  26  27  28  29  30  31  32  33  34  40  50  60  70  80  90  100  110  120  130  140  150  160  170  180  190  200  210  220  
Cool Shops Barcelona (Cool Shops)
The Wine and Food Lover's Guide to Portugal
The White Island: The Extraordinary History of the Mediterranean's Capital of Hedonism
AAA Spiral Spain, 3rd Edition (Aaa Spiral Guides)
Knopf City Guide: Madrid (Knopf City Guides Madrid)
Lonely Planet Valencia and the Costa Blanca
Portugues Dinamico Seculo 21: Uma Maneira Facil de Aprender Portugues, Conhecendo o Brazil, seus Costumes e sua Gente
Seville, Cordoba, and Granada: A Cultural History (Cityscapes)
Culture Shock! Spain: A Survival Guide to Customs and Etiquette (Culture Shock! Guides)
Moon Spain (Moon Handbooks)

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Last updated: Sat Sep 6 01:40:16 EDT 2008