Product Description
Created with the overland budget traveler in mind, this ultimate travel companion is brimming with hundreds of tips and insights to make travel more enjoyable and worry-free. Compiled from years of research and the travel experience of its authors, The Globetrotter's Guide is an easy-to-read compendium that guides travelers through every stage of their trip, from conception to safe return.
|
The Globetrotter's Guide: Essential Skills for Budget Travel (Non Fiction)
- Paperback: 240 pages (2002-09-10)
- Publisher: Red Deer Press; 2002-09-10
- Label: Red Deer Press
- Studio: Red Deer Press
- ISBN: 0889951721
- Average Customer Review:
based on 1 reviews
- Sales Rank in Books: #2095013
Avg. Customer Review:
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: Solid and well-researched advice 1999-05-13
Comment: Penning a guidebook to general budget travel is indeed an ambitious task, and authors Wayne Smits and Carol Dolinko must have realized the scope of such a work. The book's subtitle, Essential Skills for Budget Travel, is no misnomer: the index covers everything from traveling with a significant other to photography etiquette in developing countries. The work's impressive coverage of all topics related to budget travel is by no means incidental: both Smits and Dolinko boast travel-intensive backgrounds, and their experiences show through the text.The duo delves into the logistics of travel with prose that is mercifully no-frills et good-humored, and with a willingness to broach topics like women's safety with absolute candidness; instead of the usual "be careful, use common sense, don't get paranoid" gloss-over, the authors spell out the dangers -- and offer practical advice -- even on tough situations like gynecological problems (including rape) and surviving a plane crash. One of the last chapters -- a section enticingly titled "Trouble on the Overland Route" -- is a veritable troubleshooter guide to Murphy's Law of travel, and the subsections make a fascinating read even to savvy, hardened travellers who've braved anything from larceny-prone monkeys (p. 186) to coups d'état. Smits and Dolinko make no pretense of attempting to cover in minute detail every aspect of budget travel; readers looking for verbose outpourings of advice on which African countries require Australian citizens to obtain visas should look elsewhere, but those searching for solid, well-researched advice on how to prepare (both materially and psychologically) will not be disappointed. Also noteworthy is the wisely-collected list of travel resources at the back of the book. Covering everything from guidebook titles to travel website URLs, it provides a perfect complement for an already info-packed book. Smits and Dolinko, by discarding the adage "Use your common sense" in favor of the advice "Prepare", have created a unique and unusually thorough book.
|