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Old Nov 10, 2009 | 4:57 am
  #20  
beckoa
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Originally Posted by scruffy
Sometimes the best travel book for me has not been the product of a big travel publisher. For example, on my first trip to Japan in the late 1980s, Japan Solo saved me a lot of time. It had far more maps than any other guidebook I've seen. Some of the maps showed individual establishments on a particular block. Since I was traveling pre-World Wide Web, that book was exactly what I needed in Japan! An Amazon search will often show whether there is a good guidebook for a destination that is not from a big travel publisher.

If I have to choose a guidebook from one of the big travel publishers, I never automatically buy the LP or Moon or Rough Guide. I go to the library or the brick-and-mortar bookstore and look through the index of each candidate to see which books ignore or give short shrift to particular things I am interested in for that particular trip, and which cover them more fully. This takes just a few minutes, and, although it's not foolproof, it at least gives me a shot at getting something that will be useful rather than dead weight in my luggage. If it's a coin-flip decision, I may pick the one that was updated most recently.

Once I used a Rick Steves book to find a place to stay, then I returned it to the library before I departed.
You bring up an interesting point here... that one can borrow a book from a library and take it on the trip too I've done this more then once

It all depends if its in stock, how long your trip is, and if you can renew it if you need to...
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