Lonely Planet Philippines (Country Guide)

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Lonely Planet Philippines (Country Guide)
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  1. Paperback: 492 pages: 1 item
  2. Publisher: Lonely Planet; 2006-06-01
  3. Author: Chris Rowthorn, Greg Bloom, Michael Grosberg, Ryan Ver Berkmoes
  4. ISBN: 1741042895
  5. Sales Rank in Books: #1024702

Product Review

Escape to the Philippines! The Philippines boasts a string of coral-fringed islands, white-sand beaches and pristine strands of virgin rainforest. From diving to connecting with the locals, Lonely Planet will help you unlock the adventures to be enjoyed in this archipelago of natural wonders on the frontier of Southeast Asia.

We've Got It Covered – find everything from the rice terraces in the north to the fertile volcanic plateaus in the south.

Jump In With The Expert – from getting started to finding the best dive sites, our special diving chapter shows you the ropes.

Rest Easy – accommodation options to suit all tastes and budgets, from rustic nipa huts to luxury resorts.

Get Around with the help of over 95 maps to cities, islands, and everywhere in between.

Talk The Talk – chat with the locals with the help of our indispensable Language chapter.

Customer Reviews

Average Customer Review
2.8 out of 5 stars (33 customer reviews)

70 of 73 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Worst Guide Book to the Philippines !!!, March 10, 2004
Cheyenne (El Nido, Philippines) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Lonely Planet Philippines (Paperback)
Im an Australian living fulltime in the Philippines and travel extensively as I'm a realtor selling islands & beaches here. Do not waste your money buying this book. Firstly, it is a second rate copy of the previous editions written by Jen Peters. You are better of buying his "Philippines Travel Guide" also available on Amazon. Secondly, its full of so many errors and danger warnings that I'm suprised anybody would come here if it were really true. For instance they write that Palawan is dangerous based upon a bomb being found at the airport. The bomb was in fact a defunct WWII hand grenade which was found in the grass at the edge of the runway, hardly something designed to kill tourists. It warnings about danger in Palawan are COMPLETELY wrong in every instance. I live there and crime and danger are almost non-existant. Yes the Abu Sayeff kidnapped people from a resort, but they were from Mindanao on the other extreme of the Philippines and there has not been 1...Read more


67 of 76 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Does not live up to the Lonely Planet standard, November 19, 2004
J. Turner (Minnesota United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Lonely Planet Philippines (Paperback)
I love Lonely Planet travel guides. The pithy been-there-done-that tone and insider information is invaluable. Every where I travel, I take along an LP guide. My recent trip to the Philippines was no different, but I cannot recommend this travel guide to anyone. The LP Philippines guide simply does not live up to the standard.

The historical information is biased and slightly anti-American. The authors go out of their way to make anti-American comments throughout the historical section, while saying little or nothing about the historical atrocities committed by other nations in the Philippines (Japanese death march anyone?). The authors clearly feel that is their duty to inform the world that the United States is an empire building, bumbling, inept nation. I found the condescending tone and political prejudices personally offensive.

Secondly, I felt like the guide was written like a research report. There is so much that isn't reflected in the guide. We...Read more


18 of 18 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars rewrite this thing, January 13, 2005
pmaligaya "pmaligaya" - See all my reviews
This review is from: Lonely Planet Philippines (Paperback)
I was recently in Indonesia for several months for work, and I could not thank Lonely Planet enough for a wonderful job that is the Indonesia guidebook, which we referred to as The Bible in the course of our travel. When I came back home, I bought the Philippines guidebook because I was curious how they did it. I was so disappointed! The inaccuracies and omissions were horrible. One appalling omission: arguably the Philippines biggest and most colorful festival, the annual Sinulog in Cebu, is nowhere mentioned in the book. (I'm telling you guys planning to go the Philippines, this book could have been a lot thicker). And the worst part of reading this guidebook, you get the sense that as if the writers hacked their way through the archipelago to write this. Unlike in the Indonesia book wherein the writers sound like they truly loved the places they covered and have in fact spent some time in the places to be able to write about them accurately, in the Philippines guidebook it seemed...Read more

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