Lonely Planet Tanzania
Home  |  About  |  View Cart  |  Contact Us

Search Books

Current Category
Books
   Travel
      Africa

All Categories

Narrow by Category
Ethiopia & Djibouti
General


Lonely Planet Tanzania

Lonely Planet Tanzania
(Larger Image)

Lonely Planet Tanzania

by Mary Fitzpatrick
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Lonely Planet Publications (2002-04)
ISBN: 1740590465
EAN: 9781740590464
Dewy Decimal #: 910
Paperback: 360 pages
Edition: 2nd
SKU: 08080265
Condition: Very Good As issued
Comments: Trade Paperback. Very Good condition with no markings. No highlights, underlines or notes in text. Small creases in front cover. Minor wear to cover. Tight binding and clean crisp text. Very Nice copy.


Editorial Reviews


Product Description

Fascinating cultures, spectacular scenery and environmental treasures – Tanzania and the legendary 'spice islands' mix Eastern mystique with Africa's vibrancy and rhythms. Whether you want to trek the peaks or relax on a beach, this is your essential guide.

  • more than 40 detailed maps, including a full-colour country map
  • new dedicated chapter on safaris, listing a range of tours and operators
  • detailed coverage of the exotic islands of the Zanzibar Archipelago
  • tips on the best places to stay and eat
  • full-colour wildlife guide


Customer Reviews


The book is full of errors
Rating (2)
Date: 2008-07-27

5 out of 5 customers found this reveiw helpful


This is one of the worst editions of Lonely Planet books I've ever read.

The book is full of factual errors which probably is a result of poor research. I doubt that the researcher actually have been at some of the places, and that he has copied information from the Internet instead.

I traveled this summer in Tanzania, and ran into errors in this guidebook time and again. The Rough Guide was far more accurate, even though that book is two years older.

I can accept that phone numbers are wrong, given the constantly expansion and changes in the Tanzanian mobile phone system, but addresses should be right most of the time.

Further more, I can accept that travel times can't be relied upon as accurate in Africa, but if the journalist had actually travelled the distanses himself, he would have noticed things like:

Travel times for bus companies are given to the region, not necessarily the city it self. That can mean a lot of difference given that the regions are huge.

The slow ferry to Zanzibar does not take 3 hours as stated in the guide - however if you ask at the ticket office they will tell you that. The slow ferrys are all old freight boats with an extra deck, and they take between 6 till 8 hours on the entire journey.

Several restaurants in this edition do not exist, or haven't opened yet. Given the lack of information on the food and service I doubt that the journalist actually bothered to sit down to eat at the places mentioned in the book.

Shopping districts mentioned in the Dar es Salaam chapter does not contain the type of shops mentioned. For instance, there are virtually no curio or souvenir shops along the Samora avenue, even though the book claims there's a whole lot of them.

The research behind this book is just so bad that it can't be relied upon. Get the Rough Guide instead - it's much better!

Torstein


bradt guide is better
Rating (4)
Date: 2008-05-29

1 out of 1 customers found this reveiw helpful


After having read both the Bradt and the Lonely Planet (LP) guide I can say that the Bradt guide, which is also available on amazon, is much better. Not that the LP guide is bad; in fact it provides a lot of information, which is why I give it 4 stars whereas I rated the Bradt guide 5 stars. The Bradt guide provides much more details about lodges/hotels it recommends and the presentation of information and maps are just much better


Lonely Planet vs. Rough Guide
Rating (4)
Date: 2007-06-29

3 out of 4 customers found this reveiw helpful


I was traveling with friends in Tanzania. I had the Lonely Planet and one of my friends had the Rough Guide. Lonely Planet is a good book but when it came down to the book that we REALLY found indespensible and would stay up at night reading -- the Rough Guide Tanzania won. Lonely planet is good, yes, but Rough Guide contained much more cultural information. It depends on what you are looking for. We are students and we were working in Tanzania. Rough Guide was better for the daily living and budget stuff. If you're just a tourist, Lonely Planet is perfectly acceptable.The Rough Guide to Tanzania, Edition Two (Rough Guide Travel Guides)


This was a great guide!!!
Rating (5)
Date: 2007-04-03


I just returned from Tanzania and this book provided all the information I needed on the different safaris, Masai tribe, Zanzibar/Stone Town, places to eat, etc. It was a great guide!


Great guide book
Rating (5)
Date: 2007-03-10


Lonely planet tops the genre. Really only good for if you are going or you want to understand what a friend or family member is likely to encounter there.

Retail Price: $19.99
Our Price:$5.79
That's 71% Off!