Lonely Planet Brazil (Country Guide)

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Lonely Planet Brazil (Country Guide)
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  1. Paperback: 768 pages: 1 item
  2. Publisher: Lonely Planet; 2008-01-01
  3. Author: Regis St. Louis, Kevin Raub, Gregor Clark, John Noble, Gary Chandler, Robert Landon, Mara Vorhees
  4. ISBN: 1741042976
  5. Sales Rank in Books: #295842

Product Review

Discover Brazil

Wander the streets of bohemian Lapa, where samba spills from every doorway
Swim eyeball-to-eyeball with hundreds of exotic fish in crystalline waters
Brave near-vertical descents on a wind-whipped dune buggy ride
Sling a hammock and relax as your riverboat glides up the Amazon

In This Guide:

Seven authors, 375 days of in-country research, 33 types of transport (including water buffalo, mine car and canoe)
50% more coverage of chic, dynamic Sao Paulo
A samba musician, a wildlife tour guide and other locals introduce you to their Brazil
Content updated daily - visit lonelyplanet.com for up-to-the-minute reviews and traveler suggestions

Customer Reviews

Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (26 customer reviews)

40 of 41 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Restored my liking of LP, September 8, 2005
penton42 (NJ) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Brazil (Lonely Planet Brazil) (Paperback)
After a mixed experience with LP's new edition for Morocco earlier this year, I hesitantly agreed to purchase another LP for my trip this summer to Brazil's northeast, specifically Salvador, Recife, and Sao Luiz. I was not disappointed.

LP continues to give budget travelers a good feel for the communities they enter, and in this case, has relatively accurate lodging and restaurant descriptions. While at times I wished for a fuller description of places other than their simply being another "quaint" and "small" fishing village, I never found myself cursing the book for leading me to a place I did not want to be in.

I would definitely recommend this guide, although its prices are already out of date due to currency fluctuations. A better option for future editions, I believe, would be for prices to be listed in the local currency, reals, rather than in dollars.


23 of 23 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Couldn't have done Brazil without it, November 27, 2005
DCSenators (Washington, DC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Brazil (Lonely Planet Brazil) (Paperback)
My husband and I spent 3 weeks traveling around Brazil. Maceió, Salvador, Rio, Blumeneau, and Foz de IguaƧu (Iguazu Falls). We used a travel agent who was from Brazil to book our hotels and flights in advance, but as far as local travel (and in one case, arriving in an airport an hour from our destination city, Blumeneau), we found this book indispensable. For example, it clearly explains how the bus systems work and why you should take them. It also have info in Rio about an airport bus that saved us at least $25, if I remember correctly, in not taking a cab. Recapped the cost of the book right there. Most often, and in spite of my being able to converse in Portuguese, the book was more helpful even than the hotel staff of the hotels where we stayed.

As an earlier reviewer mentioned, prices are completely out of date, due to currency fluctuations, and I agree that listing them in the local currency would have been helpful. Still, since the exchange rate the...Read more


60 of 70 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Another edition, another chance, another pass, September 3, 2007
Salty Saltillo (from the road, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Brazil (Lonely Planet Brazil) (Paperback)
I have been doing Brazil vacations for decades (literally) and have seen every guidebook in the English language. For some reason - perhaps because Brazil is such a big country with a limited English-language guidebook market - publishers have never found it worthwhile to invest money and time into producing a truly first rate guidebook. This latest edition of Lonely Planet is no exception. I cannot endorse ANY of the English language guidebooks out there today as a one stop guidebook(although each has a few redeeming qualities).

So what is a would-be Brazil traveller to do? Do what I have been doing for the last ten years: supplement your English language guidebook with a first rate, up-to-date guidebook from the Quatro Rodas series published in Brazil by Abril publishing. In other words, get an English language guidebook for background information (I prefer the footprint book, but LP is adequate for a broad overview of the country). Then, with a limited reading...Read more

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