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| Southeast Asia: On a Shoestring | 
enlarge | Author: China Williams Publisher: Lonely Planet Category: Book
List Price: $25.99 Buy New: $16.18 You Save: $9.81 (38%)
Buy New/Used from $16.18
Avg. Customer Rating:   (18 reviews) Sales Rank: 9856
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Paperback Edition: 14th Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 988 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6 Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5.1 x 1.7
ISBN: 1741047269 Dewey Decimal Number: 915.90454 EAN: 9781741047264 ASIN: 1741047269
Publication Date: March 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
  Great book April 18, 2008 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is a great book. Its helping me a lot on planing my trip to southeast asia.
  South East Asia February 15, 2008 Very good book, I was only interested in Thailand & Malasia but it gave lots of information. It did not give a lot on budget accomadation in some places.
  present February 15, 2008 Love to travel and a couple of friends were traveling and decided to give them this gift. Very good companion for traveling.
  The SE asia bible! November 29, 2006 11 out of 12 found this review helpful
Used this book to travel in Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Vietnam and Bali (though I finally ended up buying another book for Bali as Indonesia itself is huge). Don't know if there is a better book that covers so many countries this well. Other people on tour had the Rough guide to SE Asia book and we found this one to be more useful because it had better maps and more information.
Obviously a bit tailored towards backpackers but you can easily find more upscale places (hotels, restaurants etc) in the "splurge" section.
Wouldn't dare to say that it covers everything but certainly a must-have for people traveling in the area
  Lonely Planet- not with this many package tourists. February 17, 2006 55 out of 62 found this review helpful
"Nobody touches the Lonely Planet for budget travel advice," states the back cover of this book. I just finished travelling around Southeast Asia with this as my primary guidebook. It includes the basics for getting around, eating, etc... but it really is just the basics. I have used other books from the lonely planet series in the past, and have found them good enough to continue using, at least until this volume. It has been 5 years since I was in this region last, and things have changed. Especially the guidebook, which was once a rich trove of off-the-beaten-path hints and tips. Increasingly, however, it seems that the Lonely Planet authors seem less interested in helping you find a unique experience and more interested in serving up a cookie-cutter, package tourist rehash. I have a couple grievances with this book: -It insists on constantly pointing out little sidebars entitled "Splurge!" which indicate ways that the budget traveller can spend a great deal of money in one shot. Why this is in a travel guide called "shoestring" I couldn't tell you. Neither do the authors, but I suppose we can assume that backpackers are interested in spending $5 a night for a couple of months and then blowing $150 to stay in some posh hotel in Kuala Lumpur or racking up an additional $20 in credit card debt for an entirely forgettable dining experience in Bangkok. I just don't feel these are relevant to 99% of actual budget travellers, but they waste a lot of space that could be much better used on greater detail. But I will get to that in a minute. -Another issue I have is the lack of actual information about actually moving from one place to the next cheaply. Cheap local transport is available in many of the places covered in the book. For some reason though, the book usually offers helpful advice like 'just take a cab,' or 'buses are so cheap, so don't bother with local transport.' As an independent traveler that actually enjoys saving money AND spending time with the locals (what's the purpose of traveling again?!?!), I regret the lack of information about local transport. -The maps in the book, though better than some in past editions, leave much to be desired. Streets are incorrectly labeled or in the wrong place, intersections are vaguely marked, and occasionally they add a street that doesn't exist or remove a street that does. Worst of all, in a region that prides itself on an almost complete lack of road signage, not many good landmarks are given to orient oneself. There is little that is less fun on the road than standing in front of a train station, staring at one's new alien surroundings, being hassled by touts who are trying to steer you in the wrong direction while trying to find that cheap hostel you read about. Look, if you want a run-of-the-mill book to complete a run-of-the-mill trip, by all means, you will find this book quite helpful. But if you are looking for that individual experience that is the beauty of independent travel, you might be best going with a different guide for this region. By the way, the quote I wrote at the beginning should be viewed as a warning rather than an enticement
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