Lonely Planet Tuscany & Umbria

Lonely Planet Tuscany & Umbria
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Lonely Planet Tuscany & Umbria, 4th Edition, 2006
Lonely Planet Tuscany & Umbria
Alex Leviton , and Miles Roddis
Manufacturer: Lonely Planet Publications
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

San Marino & UmbriaSan Marino & Umbria | Europe | Travel | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Italy | Europe | Travel | Subjects | Books
TuscanyTuscany | Italy | Europe | Travel | Subjects | Books
UmbriaUmbria | Italy | Europe | Travel | Subjects | Books
GuidebooksGuidebooks | Reference & Tips | Travel | Subjects | Books
Lonely PlanetLonely Planet | Guidebook Series | Travel | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Travel | Subjects | Books
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ASIN: 1740599195

Book Description

Beyond the magnificent Renaissance cities is a rolling landscape crying out for exploration, whether it's bustling markets and medieval hill towns, drowsy piazzas and ancient vineyards, or frenetic festivals and thermal springs. With detailed regional coverage, this definitive guide to Tuscany and Umbria is the key to your perfect getaway.<BR> <BR> TREASURE HUNT - tracking down fine art or hunting great espresso, our in-depth descriptions ensure you find the region's hidden gems<BR> <BR> ESCAPE - leave the crowds behind with detours to local haunts and insider tips for getting off the beaten track<BR> <BR> WINE & DINE - from family-run trattorie to truffle festivals, seek out the regions' outstanding cuisine with over 250 refined restaurant reviews<BR> <BR> KNOW YOUR WAY - inspirational itineraries and comprehensive maps help you plan ahead and get the most from your holiday

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Lonely Planet Tuscany & Umbria, 4th Edition, 2006.......2007-03-02


My partner and I used this guide for our trip to Tuscany (Toscana) in June 2006, and we found it very serviceable. The places we visited were Siena, Florence (Firenze), Assisi, Perugia, Orvieto, and Volterra, among others.

Lonely Planet's guide gave us all the options available for getting to and from each city and town in the region. Whether by train, car, bicycle, or foot, it provides enough information to help you get there and back without too much trouble. This is in contrast to the Let's Go guidebooks which provide more information about staying in the towns themselves than about how to get there. This guide helped us with taking the train from Rome (Roma), and renting a car in Siena and making daytrips to Assisi, Perugia, and Orvieto.

The information on hotels is sufficient but I'd recommend doing a little research online about places to stay BEFORE you leave. LP guides give you a sampling of hotels and inns and a little blurb about each, but don't expect too much information on them. The quoted price ranges can be a little off, but LP assumes one is travelling during the peak season (July-August).

The information on restaurants is okay, and LP provides a decent listing of places to eat in whatever town you may be. It was either hit or miss for us. A few of the places LP recommended turned out to be duds but a few were spot on. One of the hits was a little taverna in Assisi that served linguini with black truffle sauce--yum!

As far as sites and attractions go, don't expect a wealth of information. LP gives a brief history/description for all the major sites but a lot of minor ones are either only touched upon or passed over altogether. One would be better off using the Michelin Green Guides for more detailed information about specific sites and attractions, as those provide a plethora of names, dates, and events that make them more akin to history books than travel guides.

The maps in the book are really good; they are accurate and easy to read. For all the major cities and towns covered in the guide, LP plots out the locations of all the hotels, restaurants, and attractions they mention. In this regard they are exactly like Let's Go (and all other guides, I imagine).

In my opinion this Lonely Planet guide is not the definitive book on Tuscany, but when used with other guides it can be an invaluable resource for your trip to this wonderful region of Italy. Pack it with you when you go--and don't forget the sunscreen!
Lonely Planet Tuscany (Lonely Planet Tuscany and Umbria)
Average customer rating: 2 out of 5 stars
  • Major disappointment - even Lonely Planet can do better!
  • Not up to Lonely Planet Standards
Lonely Planet Tuscany (Lonely Planet Tuscany and Umbria)
Neal Bedford , Damien Simonis , and Imogen Franks
Manufacturer: Lonely Planet Publications
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

GeneralGeneral | Europe | Travel | Subjects | Books
San Marino & UmbriaSan Marino & Umbria | Europe | Travel | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Italy | Europe | Travel | Subjects | Books
TuscanyTuscany | Italy | Europe | Travel | Subjects | Books
UmbriaUmbria | Italy | Europe | Travel | Subjects | Books
GuidebooksGuidebooks | Reference & Tips | Travel | Subjects | Books
Lonely PlanetLonely Planet | Guidebook Series | Travel | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Travel | Subjects | Books
Look Inside Travel BooksLook Inside Travel Books | Trip | Specialty Stores | Books
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ASIN: 1864503572

Book Description

Glowing frescoes, patchwork blue-green landscapes, multihued Gothic cathedrals and cypress-dotted vineyards - from Florence's Renaissance riches to medieval hilltop villages, this guide will help you get the most out of Italy's most beguiling region. <ul>

  • 46 detailed maps, including full-colour regional map </li>
  • mouthwatering special section on the region's food and wine </li>
  • comprehensive coverage of Tuscan art and architecture </li>
  • in-depth walking section </li>
  • the finest accommodation options, from convents to castelli </li>
  • practical Italian language chapter with Tuscan pronunciation guide </li></ul>

    Customer Reviews:

    2 out of 5 stars Major disappointment - even Lonely Planet can do better!.......2003-06-10

    Previous edition (2000) was very poor, and now this one is no improvement at all.

    Lonely Planet has a long tradition for producing brilliant guides to less-explored destinations - and messing things up in a major way when they are dealing with places like Tuscany, or Venice, or New York.

    This time, the problem is not the trademark self-righteous attitude or a preachy tone. It's just the general feeling of the guide having been done on the cheap. It's difficult to justify this - the book costs the same as every other guide on the market, thank you very much.

    The other reviewer noted chaos and lack of focus - it is difficult to disagree. The guide boasts of "strict hierarchical structure" of its headlines - well, if you say so. It is very difficult to find anything, there are no visual "hooks" for easy navigation, and the only help in orientation can be offered by meaningless, heart-stoppingly ugly and amateurish drawings, placed here and there (they are worse than even chapter icons in Rough Guides that remind you of artwork adorning leaflets from a social security office or a community clinic).

    And the photos - yes, I understand that they are not the main selling point of this guide, but just how CHEAP you have to be to find something like that (especially when they seen perfectly capable of finding excellent pictures for their covers)? What are these - your aunt's holiday snaps made with a disposable camera?

    Maps are poor and confusing. How difficult it is to include a clear map - in color? How expensive would this make the guide?
    Information on tickets is so out-of-date and irrelevant that it beggars belief. People in Europe and America are finding cheap tickets on the Internet in ten minutes, low-cost airlines are all over the place, but somebody needs to tell Lonely Planet. The guide is like a senile grandfather who cannot stop talking garbage about his younger days: apex fares... super apex... courier fligts... Why waste paper on this?

    The same out-of-date irrelevance is true about Money section. Maybe Lonely Planet is on commission, but who uses travellers checks these days? (Probably same people who go to airline office ask for "apex fare ticket"). This is supposed to be a guide for shoestring travellers - yes, they will really appreciate the worst exchange rate imaginable and a commission of up to 10%. No wonder some people complain Europe is expensive - after guidance like that and leaving half of your money to banks and excange offices, there will not be much in your pocket to pay for lodging and meals.

    But the main reason why you should not bother to buy this book is its poor, uninspired and dull writing. No attraction, no treasure of art, no historic building is spared this indifferent and lazy treatment: it feels as if they didn't want to write about all these churches but they had to. This is strange: this guide often poses as a staunch critic of mass tourism and commercial crowds. Here, Lonely Planet adopts exactly the approach of box-ticking thoughtless crowd: "Been there, done that."

    To sum up - if you are planning to buy this, please think again. There are better guides for listings and practicalities (Rough Guide), there are better guides for signtseeing or culture (Blue Guide or Cadogan), and there are better all-rounders (DK Eyewitness). Even if Lonely Planet until now has been your favorite guide and you are a loyal follower, please think again. You will do yourself a favor.

    2 out of 5 stars Not up to Lonely Planet Standards.......2001-03-02

    I am reading this guide in preparation for an upcoming trip to Florence. I have found this guide confusing and badly organized. I still don't have a feel for the major sights in each area. I'm going to have to buy a few other guides. I usually have good luck with Lonely Planet guides - this one just isn't up to snuff.
    Lonely Planet Tuscany & Umbria (Lonely Planet Tuscany and Umbria)
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      Lonely Planet Tuscany & Umbria (Lonely Planet Tuscany and Umbria)
      Nicola Williams
      Manufacturer: Lonely Planet Publications
      ProductGroup: Book
      Binding: Paperback

      San Marino & UmbriaSan Marino & Umbria | Europe | Travel | Subjects | Books
      GeneralGeneral | Italy | Europe | Travel | Subjects | Books
      TuscanyTuscany | Italy | Europe | Travel | Subjects | Books
      UmbriaUmbria | Italy | Europe | Travel | Subjects | Books
      Lonely PlanetLonely Planet | Guidebook Series | Travel | Subjects | Books
      GeneralGeneral | Travel | Subjects | Books
      ASIN: 1741043131

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