Guatemala (Country Guide)
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Average customer review:Product Description
Discover Guatemala
Get up early to explore the kaleidoscope of colors and incense-clouded chaos of the Chichicastenango market, p. 150
Worship the sun - just like the ancients did - atop Tikal's towering Mayan pyramids, p.288
Pay reverence to a cigar-smoking, rum-swigging saint in the traditional village of Santiago Atitlan, p.137
Learn to roll your RRRRRRRs like a local in the world-famous language schools of Antigua, p.106
In This Guide:
Resident author brings you to the seldom-visited towns of the highlands, lowlands, rivers and coasts - 55 detailed maps will keep you on track.
Specialist-written Ancient Mayan Culture chapter explores the myths and mystery of this enigmatic people.
And - since you asked for it - we've incorporated more cultural coverage than any other guidebook.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #223005 in Books
- Published on: 2007-09-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 360 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9781741044720
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
- Click here to view our Condition Guide and Shipping Prices
Editorial Reviews
Review
For sheer global reach and dogged research, attention must be paid to Lonely Planet…' --Los Angeles Times, February 2, 2003
From the Publisher
Who We Are
At Lonely Planet, we see our job as inspiring and enabling travelers to connect with the world for their own benefit and for the benefit of the world at large.
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What We Believe
We believe that travel leads to a deeper cultural understanding and compassion and therefore a better world.
Customer Reviews
A Sad Day for Lonely Planet
I have been buying and recommending Lonely Planet guides on Latin America for 25 years. They have been indispensible for the budget traveler. I know I have saved probably thousands of dollars. I have pushed the books on many places on the internet including my own web sites and on Lonely Planet. Why? Love the layout. They are particularly good for someone arriving in new city who needs to get quickly and safely from their transport to hotel. The maps are generally accurate. LP editors have kept a consistency of design across the different books. The reader who is used to one will find using the others easy.
I also like the LP guarantee of integrity where LP authors do not accept free rooms, meals, etc. from places they review. I know the travel industry and this is not a universal practice.
Of all the countries in Latin America, Guatemala is my favorite. If you can only visit one, that's the place to go. I am saddened by what has happened to the latest volume. The other reviews here and on other sites point out omissions and places where the author has not updated widely known facts. That could be excused if taken in an isolated form. Anyone reading a guidebook must wonder how they check out all the places that are reviewed. But what concerns me the most is an apparent relaxing in Lonely Planet's standards of journalistic integrity. Until a short time ago, the author was the editor of a magazine and web site based in Xela, Guatemala called Xela Who. The magazine was a free publication that supported itself on the sale of advertisments, as did the web site. This is a direct conflict of interest. How can the author justify a review of an establishment that he sells advertising too? The author was directly involved in selling advertising. Any tourist related firm in Guatemala who receives a good LP review is bound to see it's business grow. How can they say no to someone trying to sell them ads in this situation? In a recent issue of Xela Who, the author, Lucas Vigden, was interviewed by a staff member as the author of the new Lonely Planet Guatemala. Never during this interview was it stated that Lucas was also the editor of the magazine. Numerous other readers and myself have contacted Lonely Planet and it's new corporate owner, the BBC about this situation. After several months there has still been no response.
Were this an isolated incident, in a vast publishing empire, one could expect Lonely Planet to reply and suggest a remedy. However, on a recent followup, the new LP Panama published a glowing review of a hostel. This place came in highly rated with the author proclaiming it their favorite. Reviews like that can double or triple an establishment's business. The problem: the hostel never opened. A Lonely Planet editor put it all off to an editing problem. One does not accidently write a glowing review of a non-existent at the time establishment unless some major conflict of interest is taking place. A concern amongst many long time LP readers is that now that the BBC, with it's well known journalistic bias, is in charge many LP authors will feel that since a concept such as integrity isn't maintained by BBC reporters, they won't have to either.
An average book for the average traveler
I bought this book and Moon Guatemala (Moon Handbooks) (they came out at the same time) and decided to write reviews for both. Unlike the Moon guide, I found Lonely Planet's Guatemala guide extremely disappointing. I expected much more from a resident author.
Where do I begin? For starters, you'll see the tourist hordes in Guatemala sporting this book and the previous edition of LP all over the place. It's like standard issue for people who haven't the ability to discern quality or think for themselves. You can be sure that if your hotel, restaurant or language school is in this guidebook it will be packed with the Lonely Planet sheep going along for the ride. Strangely, the author acknowledges this phenomenon in a sidebar and encourages travelers to seek out new places on their own. Speaking of sidebars, these are mostly a series of superficial interviews with local people; a nice idea in theory but not very well executed. I think the most helpful sidebars tend to expand upon material covered in the main text, which this book does not do very well.
The book also doesn't go into nearly as much depth as some of the other guides in terms of helpful background info, history and the like. Worthwhile destinations covered over several pages in some of the other guidebooks are often glossed over in a one-page summary here. It's like the abbreviated version of everything. In this regard, I think both Rough Guide and Moon do a much better job of giving travelers all the information they'll need. I also noticed that it seems very little updated from the previous edition. I'd say about 75% of the material already exists in the previous edition, sometimes verbatim, though they are different authors. Finally, the writing isn't the greatest. It might be nit-picking, but it was seriously hard to read the poor writing sometimes and you won't find yourself wanting to read this book from first page to last.
These are just a few issues off the top of my head. I know some well-heeled Guatemala travelers and residents who absolutely hate this guidebook and could probably do a much better job of pointing out its specific flaws. But if you're just along for the ride then by all means be my guest, though I'd at least consider a back-up plan. You'll thank me later.
Consider Moon Guatemala (Moon Handbooks), which I gave 5 stars. Rough Guide The Rough Guide to Guatemala 3 (Rough Guide Travel Guides) is also OK as a back-up.
Not much of an update for Petén
Note that Jared Cullison is among those whom the author of the Moon Guide to Guatemala thanks for help with his book at the end of it. I honestly didn't see that either guide was all that impressive.
I have been a Lonely Planet fan for ages, but I am disappointed with this long awaited update. Keep in mind that my main interest is with Peten, so maybe the rest of it is okay, but I would not bet on it.
The author must have not been paying attention at Tikal or he would have noticed that there are just THREE comedors there [note my subsequent correction, but two of the names are still wrong; he does not mention Ixim Kua] among the former four. The existing ones are Comedor Tikal, Ixim Kua and old faithful, Imperio Maya. Earlier I thought there were just TWO, but near the end of Marxh 2008, my group came froom the north through Tikal and I double checked. I was clearly wrong about only two being there. Comedor Tikal is separated from the other two by two residences, but it is surely still there.
The author also missed that that there are two buses daily to and from Uaxactun, so that it is simpler to go there, especially from Tikal. There is a good discussion of the El Mirador ruin, but no hint of how to arrange a trip there. For this, google --- Mirador logistics.
The description of how to get to the Piedras Negras ruins has thankfully gotten away from it taking days through bandit-infested lands, but does not cover the most economical way, one that can be an overnighter, hint google - Willy Fonseca Vallescondido - for that.
Unlike previously mentioned on my unedited version of this, I decided to NOT take the current LP with me and my wife for the Highlands only trip in December, so I can't compare that.



