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SPAIN BOOKS
Posted in Spain (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by Sue Bryant. By Globetrotter.
The regular list price is $14.95.
Sells new for $8.73.
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No comments about Costa Del Sol Travel Pack (Globetrotter Travel Packs).
Posted in Spain (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by Ben Cole and Bethan Davies. By Pili Pala Press.
The regular list price is $22.00.
Sells new for $17.60.
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5 comments about Walking the Via de la Plata: The Camino de Santiago from Sevilla to Santiago de Compostela.
- This "review" is posted mostly to correct the strange one-star rating of the first reviewer whose positive comments really don't justify it. My remarks about "Walking the Camino de Santiago" by the same authors fully apply to this publication as well. The Via de la Plata is longer and more strenuous, but also much less crowded, than the traditional Camino Frances.
- The first reviewer seems somewhat confused; this is actually a very good guide to the Via de la Plata route of the Camino de Santiago. The book is quite thorough and has proven very useful to us as we plan our trip. Certainly worth purchasing.
- I carried this book on my walk from Seville to Santiago de Compostela. Both historical notes and route directions are inaccurate. Give it one star for pleasant writing style.
- I used this book almost exclusively for my pilgrimage. The Via Plata is an incredible route. This book was wonderful and was VERY helpful. It has daily route maps and descriptions. It also gives suggestions on what you should eat in each region that you walk through. It is very easy to follow and is really all you will need to walk the Via Plata.
- I used this guide on my trip from Seville to Merida and was most of the time annoyed by it. The format of the book is to big to put it into your pocket to pull it out when you need a quick look. It was too heavy to really take the entire book with me, so I ripped out the part I was hiking and folded it it to pocket size. I guess making copies would have been the better option. The guides that my German speaking travelers used were much more conveniently sized. Also, the hostals and hotels that were described were a bit pricey and not really where you want to stay as an average pilgrim. I liked the background information though, for example the announcement of a little box with a note book in the middle of nowhere on the path, were you could write a few lines for the hikers behind you.
Over all I think the guide is reasonably good and has good descriptions of the path, but for the actual hiking the format is not convenient.
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Posted in Spain (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by Hema Maps. By Hema Maps Pty Ltd.
The regular list price is $12.95.
Sells new for $12.30.
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No comments about Spain & Portugal Travel Map by Hema.
Posted in Spain (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by Norman Lewis. By Da Capo Press.
The regular list price is $14.95.
Sells new for $5.98.
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5 comments about The Tomb in Seville: Crossing Spain on the Brink of Civil War.
- With several trips through Spain and Portugal in the 1990's behind me, I found this 150-page book just the right piece for turning the clock back seventy years. The previous reviewer has done a great job of summarizing the book. The two young men certainly encountered risks and took their chances in Spain as the sporadic actions of the terrible Civil War were beginning. I am most grateful to Norman Lewis for sharing his experiences with readers.
- "The Tomb in Seville," is a real literary treat. Norman Lewis has the precise eye, the kind that reminds you of Hemingway's very effective "In Our Time" vignettes. Like Hemingway, Lewis couples finely drawn (and pregnant) images and events to a clear and understated prose. Such a combination recalls the best efforts of Rebecca West, Graham Greene and, going back, Turgenyev. To some extent I found "The Tomb in Seville" superior to Orwell's "Homage to Catalonia," though the comparison is somewhat uneven. I think, looking back, we now view Orwell's effort as part of his indictment of Communism. Lewis' effort, which precedes the events of Orwell's book, is more limited in scope (and better written).
Mention is made here of this being Lewis' final book. Perhaps so, but in the Introduction mention is made of an earlier Spanish effort. Considering the slightness of the book, I tend this think "Seville" is more or less notes and outtakes of that previous effort. If so, these are quality notes and outtakes, and further testament of a fine writer.
- A good way to be exposed to the work of the now deceased Norman Lewis. While I question if the vivid quotes and descriptions could have been so readily and clearly called to mind by the author, even if aided by contemporaneous notes, over sixty years after the events, it is wonderful writing.
"...we had come to the end of Portugal. Its colour, its mystery and its splendid wilderness were no more. Forests had become managed woodlands, rivers were bridged, villages were encircled by cabbage patches and advertisements for coffee were stenciled on walls."
- There's no agenda in this book, but the observations are so keen and the prose is so clear that you will find yourself connecting the episodes with themes of your own. The author's character is non-existant and you can substitute yourself easily enough. Never boring, I easily could have read a hundred pages more.
- For his last book, written in his mid-eighties, Norman Lewis recounts experiences from a trip he took sixty years earlier with his brother-in-law to Spain, ostensibly to search for information on his in-laws' family history in Seville. As things happened, the trip occurred in late 1934, in the midst of civil unrest that was one of the precursors of the Spanish Civil War that broke out in full force less than two years later. Lewis was present during the five-day "Battle of Madrid" and was forced to crawl across streets while gunfire whistled overhead.
To me, the more interesting incidents are not those relating to political turmoil but rather to everyday life in the Iberian peninsula (his trip also took him through Portugal) -- such things as a daily promenade in a public garden of wet nurses clutching their infant charges to their bosoms, women queuing up at a slaughterhouse to drink fresh blood from the severed veins of animals for a boost of vitality, and the communal burning of a young woman thought to be possessed by an evil spirit. And there are numerous vivid verbal snapshots, such as the one of the Portuguese village of Villa Real de Santo Antonio: "Despite the grandiose name it appeared more as an untidy village with dogs disputing the rubbish in its streets, and most of the inhabitants looked like criminal suspects temporarily free while awaiting imprisonment in chains or deportation."
But in the end THE TOMB IN SEVILLE is on the thin side, both too short and too impressionistic (not so surprising after sixty years). It does not measure up to "Voices of the Old Sea", the only other book by Norman Lewis I have read. While THE TOMB IN SEVILLE is worth reading, no one need regret not getting around to it.
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Posted in Spain (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
By Time Out.
The regular list price is $11.95.
Sells new for $5.99.
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1 comments about Time Out Shortlist Barcelona 2008 (Time Out Shortlist).
- The Shortlist series are merely a physically smaller, more concise, version of the incredibly useful and informative TimeOut series. It has many of the same references for lodging, bars/clubs, getting around and the like just in a more truncated package. I would not buy both, as most listings are the same word-for-word.
I would make the assessment of how much time you have in a particular city and get the short version based on a more limited amount of time. As with all Shortlists, it has key info on addresses, websites, whether credit cards are allowed, hours of operation, and costs. I would like to see better and easier to follow maps, however.
TimeOut travel guides are still the most comprehensive, helpful, colorful and informative guides out there. They FAR surpass Fodors, Frommers, Lonely Planet, Berlitz, or Wallpaper guides.
If you find yourself making a quick trip through an unexpected city, get a Shortlist. If you are planning in advance and want a single guide that can assist your entire trip, get a regular TimeOut.
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Posted in Spain (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by DK Publishing. By DK Travel.
The regular list price is $12.00.
Sells new for $6.83.
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1 comments about Top 10 Andalusia (EYEWITNESS TOP 10 TRAVEL GUIDE).
- Contains some good information, but the format makes it difficult to use when you're actually in a particular place. Sights, restaurants, markets, etc. for any one location are scattered through the book. Few helpful maps or walking tours. The straightforward Eyewitness Travel Guides are much more useful and comprehensive.
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Posted in Spain (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by Jane Wightwick. By McGraw-Hill.
The regular list price is $19.95.
Sells new for $10.71.
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No comments about iSpeak Spanish Beginner's Course (MP3 CD+ Guide) (iSpeak).
Posted in Spain (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
By Rough Guides.
The regular list price is $9.99.
Sells new for $5.27.
There are some available for $6.28.
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3 comments about The Rough Guide to Northern Spain Country Map (Rough Guide Country/Region Map).
- Good map. Nice and detailed. Unfortunately the area I am most interested in is just south of the southern cut off. Don't buy this map if you are planning to visit Castille y Leon or Catalonia.
- I had the Michelin maps of Spain/Portugal and the big Michelin map of Galicia and the next area..........but the Rough Guide map was my #1 choice by far for our 10 days in Galicia and the one I used as family navigator. The map has a plastic coating, so it won't break as with paper maps when you try to fold it over into the section that you need.
The symbol for scenic overlooks or miradors was great........I managed to get our family to a bunch of obscure but beautiful sites, some of them on those narrow "white roads."
I found the printing and colors much easier to follow than the Michelin maps.
One caution about all the maps other than the one that we got from the Galician tourist bureau........the road numbers on the maps do not always match the road numbers on the roads!
- The map is easy to ready with great information, but it has already tore at one of the crease lines...
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Posted in Spain (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by Jules Brown. By Rough Guides.
The regular list price is $11.99.
Sells new for $6.95.
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1 comments about The Rough Guides' Barcelona Directions 2 (Rough Guide Directions).
- I travel alot and typically buy another brand of travel books. My boyfriend actually bought this book, and thank goodness he did since it is the greatest book I have ever used for recommendations on places to shop and eat. Every single place we ate in from this book (and we tried alot), was as described and very very good. I am looking forward to going to travel again using this brand of books!!!
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Posted in Spain (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by James A. Michener. By Random House.
The regular list price is $29.95.
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3 comments about Iberia: Spanish Travels and Reflections.
- I read (and looked at) Iberia while preparing to visit Spain in 1969. I had already read Hawaii and Caravans by Michener, which are 2 great stories, but this photo essay about Spain astounded me. Although I thought I was prepared, I knew how to speak Spanish, I had lived in Peru for about 3 years, I had seen bullfights, I knew about geography, etc, Michener's short but in depth reflections about places in Spain made me hungry for a trip there, to try to experience some of what he wrote about. The photos are an integral part of this book, I can't remember the name of the photographer.
This book should still be in print! I'll look in a library now.
- In the summer of 1976 I read this book shortly after Franco died and before I arrived for a years's study in Madrid. I found it a terrific read. I arrived in Spain with more knowledge than most of my American friends.
I have just finished re-reading it. My 17 year old daughter is going to summer school this year in Tarragona for a month, to work on her Spanish skills. I hope she enjoys this as much as I did.
My wife and I have returned to Spain on numerous occasions, to vacation, to visit friends, to just visit. We are never bored. This book was and is a large part of that.
- Published in 1968, 'Iberia' is James Michener's tribute to Spain, drawn from his travels there beginning in the 1930s through the late 60s. Not only does he describe the different regions of Spain, but as he does in his novels, he delves into Spain's culture, politics and history and even its ecology (there is a beautiful chapter written about Las Marismas, a large swampland in the south). This is a wonderfully written and fascinating book, and I would highly recommend it to anyone wanting to learn more about or travel to Spain.
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Costa Del Sol Travel Pack (Globetrotter Travel Packs)
Walking the Via de la Plata: The Camino de Santiago from Sevilla to Santiago de Compostela
Spain & Portugal Travel Map by Hema
The Tomb in Seville: Crossing Spain on the Brink of Civil War
Time Out Shortlist Barcelona 2008 (Time Out Shortlist)
Top 10 Andalusia (EYEWITNESS TOP 10 TRAVEL GUIDE)
iSpeak Spanish Beginner's Course (MP3 CD+ Guide) (iSpeak)
The Rough Guide to Northern Spain Country Map (Rough Guide Country/Region Map)
The Rough Guides' Barcelona Directions 2 (Rough Guide Directions)
Iberia: Spanish Travels and Reflections
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