Whet your appetite for Italy's fabulous cuisine and incomparable monuments with the Rough Guide. The past comes alive in the vivid accounts of Roman ruins, the Sistine Chapel, Pompeii and other sights. The Rough Guide is also packed with insiders' tips on the popular cities - such as Rome and Venice - and delves into the South's Mediterranean charm, covering Sorrento, Sicily and the smaller islands. The authors track down the best bargains on pasta, pizza, seafood and Soave, and give their opinions on hostels, hotels and mountaintop villas. 77 maps.
This was useful for historical previews while on the train to each city. Most of the food/drink recommendations were great if we were stuck for somewhere to go, the guide was good at pointing out which places were going to be too busy and where we might need to book/avoid. V handy scanning the QR code and having this on our phones. A little heavy on old churches, but that’s Italy!
I checked this one out for research not having particularly high expectations. I was pleasantly surprised. It seems pretty obviously geared toward travelers. This books is little bigger than a palm and somehow manages to pack in quite a bit of historical background for this very interesting country. True, it was not very deep and offered little analysis, but for what it was, something that pretty much gives you highlights for a given year dating back to Roman times, I thought it pretty impressive.
There's a ton of information here, but this is like a college text book - zero pictures & dense text. I prefer having at least some pictures/maps in my guide books.
I'd recommend this if you are planning a trip a year from now, are prepared to look up things on your phone/computer while you're reading, and are going to buy another "easier" guide book to take on your actual trip (lugging this thing around in Italy seems like a non-starter).
In early February I finished the Rough Guide to Sicily. This book follows a similar format but encompasses the whole of Italy, including Sicily. Some of the Sicily information is obviously repeated, and some is left out in this guide, which clearly needed to pare back the detail so as to keep the guide manageable. It still ran to 1065 pages, so it is pretty massive, covering everything you need to know for a visit to any part of Italy.
The most interesting parts for me were the sites the writer thought as the most outstanding in the country, as well as notes on food, culture and history. There is even a language guide in this book, although it is not the best place to go if you want to learn Italian.
All in all it was too detailed for one reading and I confess I skipped through as many as 300 pages or so of detailed notes about individual towns. That, no doubt, is what the writer expected though. If visiting those locations you need that information, and if not, then the overviews are better.
There is certainly nothing wrong with this excellent guide to Italy.
Fundamentally, don't buy this in Kindle as it is too much abridged to be of any use.
The print edition is excellent although aimed at a younger generation than me in terms of accommodation, drinking houses and restaurants. Its descriptions of cities towns and the country are unbeatable in a single volume; you might not necessarily always agree but that is one of the joys of the Rough Guide series.
Translated bits of this one. It's really well-researched and useful, plus it's accesible and has a lot of cultural info available. Useful tool. Hopefully, out this winter sometimes at the Niculescu Publishing House.
My copy of this book has crinkly pages from being used out in the rain, falls open spontaneously at the maps of Florence and Rome, and is full of annotations next to the names of ice cream shops. I can't imagine my trip to Italy in 2002 without it. Rough Guides are the bomb.
The Rough Guides are usually my favorite - I've used them for Europe, Costa Rica, Italy, Greece, Toronto, among others. I like their mix of culture, history, and touristy stuff, and find their maps much easier to follow than many others.
Very briefly as noted before on other Rough Guides this is the one for me - few pics (why buy a book filled with pics of things you're going to see in the flesh?) lots of history, info well-written - I used these along with Rick Steves, both on kindle, and my trip becomes much easier.
My reading has been really boring lately, but exciting to me - guidebooks like this one, snippets of books that take place or are about Italy, etc.... Can't wait!