Product Description
Famed throughout Europe for its wild nights and lazy days, Madrid provides a whole lot more, whether your interests lie in spectacular opera productions or chirpy folkloric zarzuela; in cutting-edge cuisine or ancient, tiled tabernas; in designer-shoe shopping or mooching around flea markets. Put together by journalists resident in the city, Time Out Madrid also covers the artistic jewels housed in the Prado, Thyssen and Reina Sofia, as well as the etiquette of watching a bullfight or joining in with a flamenco performance, as well as where to stay and how to escape the city heat.
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Time Out Madrid
- Paperback: 320 pages
- Publisher: Time Out Publishing; 2004-12
- Label: Time Out Publishing
- Studio: Time Out Publishing
- ISBN: 1904978266
- Average Customer Review:
based on 5 reviews
- Sales Rank in Books: #839048
Avg. Customer Review:
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: an excellent guide unless you want to shop 2008-12-14
Comment: I used this guide for a business trip + 2 days sightseeing in Madrid in December of 2008.
Largely it is excellent - good for finding hotels, restaurants, clubs, museums. It gives excellent advice about getting around the city and has some nice walks (I took the one through old Madrid -- quite good and informative). The maps are also very good (though small type -- reading them at night under weak Madrid street lamps proved tough).
The one place it failed me was shopping -- I wanted to bring back a few truly spanish/truly madrid items for Christmas presents for family and friends. Yet the guide points towards the core shopping districts which are largely filled with your standard EU department stores and chain shops. There was a good pointer to a ceramics store -- but for the rest I had to rely on guides from tourist information in Madrid (which pointed me to excellent local shops).
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: Simply the Best Guidebook to Madrid in English 2008-10-24
Comment: This is the best guide in English to Madrid. Written by residents (and it shows in all sorts of ways), its recommendations for restaurants, hotels, bars and cafés, culture, and entertainment are invariably on the mark. Trust me: I was a resident for 6 years and many of its finds are unknown even to life-long citizens. It's also almost entirely free of the sloppy, tired, and sad travel-book clichés about Madrid (tendentious comparisons with other European capitals, with Barcelona, etc.) that still too often bedevil journalistic writing about the city (fortunately, now beginning to change as writers learn to trade their arrogant ignorance for a little knowledge), written as a rule by outsiders with 3 days in the city and too much prejudiced baggage to understand what they're seeing or know what to look for. The city is fabulous and this guide is a superb companion to its fabulousness.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: OK, maybe, but not for me. 2006-08-05
Comment: The basics are here: what's where, hotels, restaurants, museums, and the rest. If there were no other guides to Madrid, this would probably be OK. If you're a twenty-something party animal, it's probably quite good. This has a strong emphasis on night life, music, and sport. It points out the places that are friendly to same-sex social life as well as the more traditional venues. If you're in the target demographic, you'll probably like this a lot better than I do. I have just a little time away from a business trip to enjoy the city, and I'm looking for a different side of the city.
Irrespective of the book's intended readership, a few things about it annoy me. On the positive side, it's attractively illustrated. Too often, though, an enticing picture has no caption and offers no way to find out more. Worse, although p.7 assures us that "no establishment has been included because it advertised in any of our publications," an awful lot of pages look just like advertisements to me, the kind that you'd see bought and paid for in travel magazines. The most annoying of the ads, though, are the many for other "Time Out" guides and products.
So, decide what you want and what you don't want in a travel guide. If you differ from me in both areas, this guide might work for you. In that case: great! It's just not for me.
//wiredweird
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: the best madrid guide we found 2006-05-05
Comment: After living in Madrid for six months, I can honestly say this is the best guide that we found for recommendations on local bars, cafes, restaurants, shopping, nightlife, and tourist attractions. For people with a limited amount of time in the city it might be best to go with a tourism-focused guide like Rick Steves which gives you specific itinerary recommendations, but Time Out would still be a good secondary guide for those folks. It contains extensive information on all of the usual and unusual tourist sights, including up-to-date pricing and hours, as well as an abundance of listings of bars, restaurants, and cafes that contain more locals than tourists (which I prefer). I know I'm sounding like an ad for Time Out, but this was the first time I'd used one of their guides and I was impressed. It ended up being the one we turned to again and again, when we needed a recommendation but wanted something that would feel truly "Spanish" (and not created for tourists). We also found their day-trip info for the surrounding towns very helpful. I couldn't more highly recommend this guide.
18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: Must take book 2005-04-10
Comment: If you are going to Madrid there are two books minimum you must read before hand and take with you: Eyewitness Guide Madrid, and this Time Out Guide. I have been to Madrid several times and always take the most current version of the Time Out with me.
To understand why the books are so good, you need to know that Madrid has the greatest number of bars and restaurants per capita of any city in the world. In Spain, the people of Madrid are given the nickname gatos, which means cats, because they stay up all night. They go to work at 8am, leave at noon, go home and sleep after the big meal of the day, return to work at 5pm, work until 9, leave work and go to tapas bars, where they have one drink and a snack, move to the next. Keep moving until around 11pm, when they stop for dinner, then it is off to a disco club, flamenco club, or a bar. But the same m.o.: in for a half hour or hour, then move on again. At 4:30 am on the weekends there are traffic jams because the streets are so busy. And I saw only one person who was drunk, that person undoubtable a tourist. The locals have fun, but behave themselves.
This is why the Time Out guide is so valuable. Even if you dont want to stay up until 4 am, the Time Out guide assumes that just as important as the monuments and art musems, the lifestyle is a 'must do' part of your stay. The book has 109 pages devoted to details on cafes, bars, arts and enteratinment. There is another 22 pages just on shopping; the 18 pages of hotel listings are detailed and a good source of information. The first 34 pages do a solid job of covering history, architecture, and modern Madird; 44 well done pages on sightseeing sights. Although the Eyewitness Guides usually win the best map award, the maps in this guide I think are acutally a little better. Slightly larger and they include the bus routes.
Two of my favorite places I found by reading this book, both on the same street 4 doors apart. The Time Out guide says "CARDAMOMO, open 9pm-4am daily. If you've got any interest in flamenco or salsa, this is an essential stop. The dancing varies from eye-catchingly sensual to reassuringly clumsy. No one here gives fig about such niceties, and the gitano flavour ensures the music can't be resisted for long."
The other is "EL BURLADERO open 3 to 3:30am daily. A packed two-storey locale off Plaza Santa Anna that's regularly full of copupes swinging each other round to flamenco, shouting Ole, and clapping. On the upper floor its calmer and a bit more space."
The descriptions are accurate, you wont find them in the other books. You would miss alot if you didn't have this book on your trip. When you go to Madrid, use the jet lag to your advantage; sleep in the middle of the day and early evening, get up at 10, go out for dinner, wander the Plaza Santa Ana area, catch a flamenco show, and see if Madrid isn't one of your all time favorite cities.
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