| | |  | Books | Home » » » Europe on a Shoestring (Lonely Planet Shoestring Guides) | | | | | | | Description: | | Party in Tallinn or pose in Cannes; hike the Curonian Spit; be seduced by the Aya Sofia in Istanbul or simply learn the art of the Spanish siesta. Your European Adventure starts here with the most detailed guide available, featuring more than 40 countries, 200 maps and insider tips to help you to go further, stay longer and pay less for the ultimate European grand tour.
Grand Turismo - Itineraries to aid your planning and splurge features to help you decide where to splash out, whether it be a night in an ice hotel or haute cuisine in Paris.
Be In The Know - with a detailed Directory and dedicated language chapter, plus look out for our author picks highlighting the best of the best. Time Is Of The Essence - A Year in Europe helps you find out what's happening when, from the best music and sporting events to where to chase the northern lights. Do The Right Thing - travel ethically and lightly with advice from our unique Responsible Travel section and make a positive difference along the way. | | | Product Details: | | | Author:
| Sarah Johnstone | | Paperback:
| 1284 pages | | Publisher:
| Lonely Planet | | Publication Date:
| March 01, 2007 | | Language:
| English | | ISBN:
| 1741045916 | | Product Width:
| 128.0 centimeters | | Product Height:
| 197.0 centimeters | | Product Weight:
| 2.05 pounds | | Package Length:
| 7.7 inches | | Package Width:
| 5.1 inches | | Package Height:
| 2.0 inches | | Package Weight:
| 2.0 pounds | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 23 reviews |
| | | | Customer Reviews: | |
Average Customer Review:
( 23 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
37 of 38 found the following review helpful:
2007 Edition: More Complete, Great for PlanningMay 05, 2007
By Laszlo Wagner So the latest edition of Lonely Planet's Europe guide is out. Note that most of the earlier reviews posted here refer to the previous edition(s), and there have been improvements in this new one! Most importantly, this book now covers ALL European countries, including little-visited Belarus and Ukraine. It has basic coverage of European Russia, too.
The prices and other practical details really seem to have been updated specifically for this book - unlike in certain earlier shoestring guides, which simply seem to have been compiled by picking info from the already published (few years old) individual country guides. So the info in this one is pretty correct as of 2006 state of affairs - that's when it was researched. Be prepared for some changes, of course, especially in some of the still rapidly-changing Eastern European countries.
The contents include the usual practical details all LP guides provide: not just an overview of sights and history, but practical matters like accomodation and transport details, all with actual prices (remember, these do change!), as well as useful info on things like getting visas and crossing borders. Coverage of individual countries definitely varies though. You will still find that the most popular Western European countries are covered in pretty good detail, certainly enough for an "All-Europe-Trip", while coverage of Eastern European countries is much more brief, in case of less visited ones really sketchy - hence the 4 stars only. For more obscure countries like Belarus or Ukraine, this guide only provides detailed info on the capital and at best one or two other towns/cities, or perhaps just a brief overview of the rest of the country.
So this book is great value if you are still in the planning stages of your trip, and simply want to have an overview of the entire continent, prices, visa matters and all, to help you decide where to go. It will also be an adequate guide to take along if you are planning a whirlwind tour of the continent, concentrating on the more established tourist destinations, with only brief forays to less visited countries. However if you are planning to spend any length of time in Eastern Europe, I definitely recommend getting LP's separate Eastern Europe guide - it covers it in maybe three times as much detail as this book. If you have a specific interest in a few countries rather than the whole continent, get the individual country guides to those ones. But if you have only a summer holiday to tour our continent, you will probably find this book has enough information for you.
Have a good trip!
10 of 10 found the following review helpful:
The BibleApr 01, 2007
By Brett G. Landau Well for starters ive traveled for years now breaking the 40 country mark and this book may be the best ive ever used. i do carry others that are area specific(i.e. cities etc. NK Top 10) but over all when doing multi country trips. This book is a must, it will assist you in transportation from locations to the next. And from my experience rather up todate on places to stay, currency hot spots, food vendures. The book is a backpackers bible.
8 of 8 found the following review helpful:
EncyclopedicApr 29, 2007
By J.J. Hopscotch I have lived in Europe and traveled just about everywhere over there. Even though I know it well I always carry guidebooks and maps when I travel. Normally I carry Michelin. I used this book for my 2006 EurailPass and Eurolines bus tour of 17 countries. "Europe on a Shoestring" is amazing. It covers more and in greater detail than any other "Europe" book. I have all of the well-known books from the well-known authors and publishers and none of them comes close.
Highlights:
Hostel DJH recommendation in Dresden.
Hotel G9 recommendation in Tallinn.
Excellent country and city maps.
The other big "Europe" books selectively cover some or most of western Europe but none do eastern Europe like this one.
If there is one book to pack this is the one.
5 of 5 found the following review helpful:
Great overall guideMay 16, 2007
By Michelle Meek Europe on a Shoe String is a great guide for ALL of Europe if you are traveling on a budget. It has great hostel and cheap hotel recommendations which I have used to make reservations. It covers every city from London to Moscow. The only bad thing I would note about this book is that is covers so many places, that it is brief on some cities (but obviously, it can't have everything). Overall, the best guide for traveling Europe without spending a fortune!
4 of 4 found the following review helpful:
You can't have it both ways...Nov 20, 2008
By Mary Ann Miller ...but if you really must see all of Europe in one vast, hurried trip, this book is for you. Using the sights-by-day, Eurail-pass-by-night method, this book got me from Sweden to Romania. It was invaluable for getting my bearings as soon as I walked out of a train station in a new country, and gave me a good idea of how to get around using public transportation and walking tours.
If you're planning to spend any significant amount of time in a country, you're much better off with an in-depth country guide. But for people planning to zip through countries, this guide does a decent job of highlighting the major attractions in the major cities, and is much more convenient than lugging a dozen country-specific guides around.
For backpackers, the book is a bit heavy. The binding is sturdy enough to allow for tearing out countries you don't plan to visit or have already finished. (Not that I'm condoning destroying books...) Unsurprisingly, western countries like France and Italy get far more attention (and pages) than the eastern European countries, but these still get fairly specific and very helpful descriptions.
The abbreviated language guide in the back is useful, if you can hold an entire conversation using only greetings, numbers, and days of the week. Often criticized, the maps in LP guides are small and inadequately labeled, but they still give you more than enough information to find the local tourist info, where you can usually get a real map for free.
Ironically, because such a large portion of budget travelers rely on Lonely Planet, any "off the beaten track" tips noted in little sidebars are guaranteed to be over-visited by the time you get there. When we found a small hole-in-wall cafe in Istanbul proudly displaying a replicated Lonely Planet logo on its illuminated sign, I wondered whether LP's influence reaches a bit too far...
Overall, this is a great guidebook for backpackers and budget travelers, if supplemented with a recent Thomas Cook rail timetable and local information from hostels and tourist info centers.
- Mary Ann Miller, author of CH is for Chocolate: Individually Wrapped Tastes of Switzerland
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