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London

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London (EYEWITNESS TRAVEL GUIDE)

Review

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3 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Anonymous // Nov 4, 2009 at 7:55 am

    After looking through many other travel guides, mostly copy-dense volumes with only a section or two of color photos, I admit to having been skeptical of the utility of this large, colorful, profusely-illustrated book. Would it really have the in-depth info I wanted? I shouldn’t have worried. When my wife and I took a vacation to London this spring, this (along with one or two more specialized guides) was the book we ended up taking with us.

    This guide handily divides London up into several sections, and covers each in generous depth. The suggested walks and tourist highlights in each chapter came in handy, even if we never chose to follow them verbatim. The collection of maps in the back, as well as the more narrowly-focused illustrated maps in each section, was easy to read and pretty comprehensive. And because the illustrations are large and lavish, it was no problem finding the information we needed quickly (keeping us from having to stand on street corners thumbing frantically through guidebooks like, well, like tourists).

    The general travel information at the back of the book also came in handy, although we found it odd that according to the authors, “travelers checks are the safest alternative to carrying large amounts of cash.” In fact, we had absolutely no problem accessing our American bank accounts via British ATMs, which struck us as a far safer and more convenient process.

    Many travel guides become obsolete very quickly. But the many illustrations in an “Eyewitness Travel Guide” make it a best-of photo album as much as a guidebook. I think this volume is one of the very few that may be worth hanging on to now that we’re back home.

  • 2 Anonymous // Nov 4, 2009 at 7:56 am

    I like DK Books. Their wonderful pictures and diagrams are real strengths and I would buy this particular London book again.

    However it was written so long ago and has been so poorly patched its practical text is not suitable for the people I bought it for. The advice about traveler’s checks with the patch about using your credit card to get a cash advance from an ATM is quite a bit off. Digital camera owners need to be told to look at their charger and see if it works at 240; that tells them whether to get a voltage transformer or only a plug adapter. Oyster cards are a confusing convenience that can save real money and time if you stay more than a few days. These practical things need to be written up properly.

    A brief reference to vibrant Canary Wharf and the superb Dockland’s museum was not added very well. The photo on page 236 must have been taken before the first American edition in 1993. For perhaps 5 years you have been able take a tour that walks across the top of Tower Bridge; do readers want to be told that is a change from what the book used to say? Goddard’s pie shop, which gets as much coverage as Docklands – Canary Wharf, is closed. Have the editors heard of Ben Franklin’s house?

    “Annually Revised” it says. There is evidence of many revisions and repairs; that is true. However this 2007 edition is not good enough to be your main guide book. Read it with some skepticism.

  • 3 Anonymous // Nov 4, 2009 at 9:27 am

    The new (2006) Eyewitness Guide for London maintains the beautifully-photographed, competently-written, and *brilliantly designed* full-color format–with heavy use of informational sidebars–that the DK Eyewitness series has become famous for. It’s a combination of a guide for practical use and–primarily–a whirlwind, photographically-intensive overview of London as a tourist is likely to encounter it…and as a tourist is likely to enjoy remembering it when looking through the book upon return from London.

    The book is nicely arranged by sections of the city. All major tourist attractions are covered, in part through the use of attractive cutaway museum floor plans and street plans for neighborhoods commonly visited by tourists, including a few removed from the center of London, such as Greenwich.

    The Eyewitness Guides do not provide in-depth or specialist information; but, overall, they are no less detail-oriented than any other of the many *basic overview* guidebooks. A helpful contrasting example might be the Blue Guide for London: which is also an overview guide book but which cannot fairly be called a “basic” guide. While the Blue Guide is as broad in scope as the Eyewitness Guide in terms of the number of attractions covered, it is generally more detail-oriented, especially regarding architecture and history.

    Since the Eyewitness Guide for London is not a specialist guide book, it is also largely free from editorializing, for better or worse. (I.e., no entry in an Eyewitness guide is going to include a suggestion to avoid a particular attraction, or a warning that some aspect of an attraction can prove frustrating. Other guides–such as a TimeOut, Blue Guide, or a Lonely Planet guide–are better for that.)

    As is the case with most guide books, the Eyewitness Guide also offers sections of practical tips and information. This includes how to operate most London phones, what British currency looks like, what the emergency numbers are (e.g., in London one dials “999″ not “911″), where to buy stamps, how “zebra” crosswalks work, etc. It should be stressed that other guide books offer the same information, and some more comprehensively. But the Eyewitness series’ handling of such information is noteworthy once again because of the photographically-intensive style. While another guide book might inform the reader that in London phone booths are red, the Eyewitness Guide states the same thing *and shows a photograph* of a typical red phone booth. Is such a photograph really necessary? No. But, the photograph becomes one more aspect of the London tourist experience graphically captured by the publisher.

    In short, the book is a must-have if you’re traveling for the first time to London. I never tire of thumbing through my Eyewitness Guide for London. So rich, colorful, and dense are the layers of photographic and graphic elements in the Eyewitness Guide for London that it can provide hours of enjoyment both before and after your trip.

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