Bahrain Complete Residents' Guide
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Average customer review:Product Description
A guide for visitors and residents, this book begins with an overview of Bahrain. It discusses the economy, demographics, environment, culture, and necessary facts for travelers. It describes places to stay and methods to get around. A detailed section follows, which focuses on everything one needs to know for life in Bahrain. It includes licences, finding work, housing, utilities and services, health, education and transportation. The section titled Exploring Bahrain features museums, heritage and culture, parks and beaches, tours, sightseeing, racing and amusement parks. Many activities are described, such as most sports, health spas, leisure facilities and clubs and classes. Extensive suggestions for shopping and dining complete the guide.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #792846 in Books
- Published on: 2006-09-01
- Released on: 2006-09-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 330 pages
Editorial Reviews
From the Publisher
The Bahrain Explorer is the definitive guidebook on Bahrain, whether you're here to live, work, or are just visiting for business or pleasure. Packed with all the information you need from the moment you step off the plane to the moment you leave, this book is set to become the most trusted companion for both newcomers to the country and long-term residents alike. Although the island nation of Bahrain is the smallest of the Gulf states, it is one of the most established destinations for expats coming to work in the Middle East. And while the island itself is quite small, settling into life here can be a big job. Armed with this trusty guide by your side, you'll cut through all the red tape and paperwork in a flash. With all its insider tips, you'll get settled into your new life in Bahrain before you know it!
Customer Reviews
Good...for what it is.
The Explorer series books ( Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Qatar, Kuwait, and Bahrain) are pretty useful for their intended purpose. But this is what you must understand--these are NOT travel guides like Lonely Planet books. These books are made for primarily British and U.S. expats that are living in these locations. Having lived in a couple of the Gulf states, my family made frequent use of these books for everything from finding restaurants to dentists and vets. Essentially these books are a really nice versions of the yellow pages--helping you find what you want, organized by category.
avoid it
The "Lonely Planet" series doesn't have a stand-alone guide for Bahrain. Instead, the closest they offer is one called "Lonely Planet Bahrain, Kuwait & Qatar" (ISBN-13: 978-1864501322).
Nevertheless, I would recommend that you get that one. The thing is, you'd better do it before you go to Bahrain, because -- a little shockingly -- that triptych Lonely Planet guide is evidently banned in Bahrain (it's never carried in any of the island's handful of bookshops). This might be because that version clarifies certain unsavory details about the royal family, but who knows.
Which leaves us with the one you see on this page, the "Complete Explorer's Guide to Bahrain."
I should warn you that this book was evidently made with cooperation from the government of Bahrain (the precise extent of official assistance is murky), so it contains not a single negative statement about Bahrain or Bahraini culture. And as for sections such as, "What to do if you're caught with drugs," or "Gay Bahrain," you can totally forget it.
In other words, we learn that everything is great in Bahrain, according to this guide. There are millions of things to do, everybody's friendly, nothing untoward ever happens, and the rulers are munificient and benign. The only thing left is to give you -- on slick, colorful pages -- the phone numbers of and directions to the many hotels and restaurants on the island.
For this latter purpose, however, even I must admit the guide is quite serviceable.
Something else which is sure to annoy you: the book's self-references seem all slightly off. It'll refer you to page 185, say, and you'll find that the information you're looking for is two or three pages either side of that. Same thing with the index: the references are mispaginated in slight but irregular ways. The whole thing smells of having been rushed to press.
As a final irritant, the entire volume is interlarded with advertisements from various restaurants, hotels, car dealerships, etc.



