iPhone Bundle
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » iPhone Books » General » The Rough Guide to India 6 (Rough Guide Travel Guides)  
Categories
Apple iPhone
iPhone Accessories
iPhone Wireless
iPhone Books
Car Accessories
Learn More
About the Apple iPhone
Camera Phones
Multimedia Players
Mobile Phones
About Email
Text Messaging
Web Browsing
Apple Inc.
About the Apple Mac
About Mac OS X
Click Here
The Rough Guide to India 6 (Rough Guide Travel Guides)
The Rough Guide to India 6 (Rough Guide Travel Guides)

zoom enlarge 
Authors: Nick Edwards, Devdan Sen, Mike Ford, Beth Wooldridge
Creators: David Abram, Daniel Jacobs
Publisher: Rough Guides
Category: Book

List Price: $26.99
Buy Used: $6.21
You Save: $20.78 (77%)



New (21) Used (18) from $6.21

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 8 reviews
Sales Rank: 186193

Media: Paperback
Edition: 6th
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 1480
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.8
Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.1 x 1.7

ISBN: 1843535017
Dewey Decimal Number: 915.40453
EAN: 9781843535010
ASIN: 1843535017

Publication Date: November 21, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Clean Text & Tight Binding. Some pages have slight watermark but all pages are readable.

Similar Items:

  • India (Country Guide)
  • India - Culture Smart!: a quick guide to customs and etiquette (Culture Smart!)
  • India (Eyewitness Travel Guides)
  • The Rough Guide to India Map 1 (Rough Guide Country/Region Map)
  • Waterproof India Map by ITMB (International Travel Maps)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
The Rough Guide to India is the essential handbook to this extraordinary country. The 24 page full-colour introduction includes stunning photography of the country''s many highlights. The guide has comprehensive accounts of every attraction, from fast-paced Delhi and the sacred sites of the Ganges plain to the Moghul splendour of Agra and the shell-sand beaches of the south. There is also practical advice on activities as diverse as boating through the Keralan backwaters, hiking through the high-altitude deserts of Ladakh or treatments at an ayurvedic spa. The listings sections provide hundreds of insider reviews of the best hotels, hostels, restaurants, bars, shops and museums in every city and village. The authors also give an informed insight into India''s history, politics, religion, music and cinema, providing a valuable context to the reader''s trip.


Customer Reviews:   Read 3 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars the rough guide hates india   January 26, 2008
 5 out of 8 found this review helpful

who ever wrote the rough guide to India obviously didnt have a very good time. almost every section is prefaced with "try to get out of this area as soon as possible, but if you have to stay here are some places you can get some bread and coffee." its down on most every city and only has a couple of places it can bring itself to recommend.

i never had any problem with any of the hotel or restaurant information but having that book was like having a whiny friend along who wanted to go home. it became a joke at the end every time we consulted the book on a new city and it had a mopey description.

i left mine on the table at the YMCA in Delhi on purpose.

ps do not eat the dahl at the ymca in delhi.



4 out of 5 stars Rough Guide India   July 4, 2007
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Some of the same complaints that I have for the Lonely Planet Guide except this one was harder to read due to the use of the lighter inks in the text. Information was excellent! Now print a smaller, more detailed version for Rajasthan, Delhi, Agra, Khajuraho and Varanasi. These are the areas that most tourists are traveling to and all the rest is just wasted paper as we tear the books apart for our travels.


5 out of 5 stars Best guidebook for India   April 27, 2007
 11 out of 12 found this review helpful

This is the best guidebook I know of for India. I used it on my recent trip and found it overall to have excellent, in-depth information, great info for putting things in cultural/historical context, and detailed, accurate maps. In my opinion it blows Lonely Planet out of the water. Several Indian guesthouse owners and the man at the tourist desk in Varanasi (who has worked there for 25 years) told me the same thing, and on the flipside I met not a single person who recommended Lonely Planet over this book. The general consensus about the Rough Guide is that rather than just giving a bunch of listings, it gives really practical information on how to get to places, get things done, get a ticket, avoid scams, and so on, in significantly greater depth than Lonely Planet. But not only is it more practical--it also gives more cultural/historical context, opinion, and descriptive writing. Lonely Planet, on the other hand, seems to have become lazy since they know they will sell a lot of books on name recognition alone. The last time I used Lonely Planet was on a trip to Brazil, and I was so disappointed with it that I vowed never to use them again. However, unlike Lonely Planet, I think you will have a positive experience with this book. A good guidebook is crucial in India because it is such a difficult country to travel in, and I think you won't be disappointed with this one.


4 out of 5 stars Not very useful for Northeastern India, but great for North India   March 14, 2007
 24 out of 24 found this review helpful

I have just returned from a one month holiday in Bangladesh and Northeastern India. I was hoping for a more region-specific guide but there isn't one, so I had to carry this bulky country-wide guide with me.

This appears to be an excellent guide for the more "usual" destinations in India, but people should be aware that it barely covers Northeastern India at all. Part of this is due to an editorial decision to drop information from prior editions due to political instability in many of those states, but the decisions on which areas to drop do not match local knowledge about which areas actually might prove unsafe for foreigners as opposed to local politicians. Granted, it is an ever-changing scenario, and this guide is by now a few years old.

My main complaint though is the maps of the hill stations; particularly those of Darjeeling and Gangtok. They are just plain wrong, and not to scale (even in cases where they say they are to scale). Unfortunately the Indian government tourist maps for those towns and also Kalimpong are also wrong, and not to scale either, but are somewhat more helpful, so my suggestion is to visit the local tourist offices immediately upon arrival in each town and pick up their official maps.

In both cases, however, contours are missing, and considering that these towns have several hundred to several thousand feet differential between top and bottom, and that there are no pedestrian steps to cut across the time-consuming road switchbacks, one can easily make a wrong decision at a switchback crossing and miss a major point of interest (such as the major monastery at the top of Gangtok). At the very least, since most roads are one-way (and few if any are marked), showing directionals would help.

Considering this edition is many generations removed from the first edition, it is not acceptable that directions are often completely inaccurate. For instance, the major monastery outside Gangtok is listed as being to its east, when it is really to its southwest (but I did find it). And in Kalimpong, I missed the main monastery as I ran out of time after going more than twice as far as the stated distance and still not reaching the monastery south of town (which R.G. listed as being at the top of the hill, when ALL of the locals that I asked confirm it is near the bottom!).

To be fair, the Lonely Planet guide is much, much worse all around. I have just ordered the Footprint guide to see if it is more accurate and complete for this region of India. I would at least like an accurate reference for matching against my trip notes, photos, and writeups!

As far as the non-Himalayan eastern states are concerned, there is almost no coverage at all, for the previously stated reasons, but hopefully this will change in the next edition, as travel restrictions are blightening up and it is now possible to arrange permits for Aranchal Pradesh and Naga just a few days in advance (quite easy if you sign up for a local multi-day tour based out of a major town such as Guwahati in Assam).

It would have been helpful to be more specific about which languages are spoken in which towns/regions, as this area is quite a patchwork, and also to mention the likelihood (or not) of encountering English speakers. As it turns out, the main hub for northeastern connections, Siliguri (in the northern part of West Bengal state), inexplicably has almost no English fluency at all, even though ALL travelers must pass through this town to make onward connections. Most resourceful travelers can work through this though, but travel guides need to also guide the more timid tourists.

I will give Rough Guide credit for fairly good descriptions of the major highlights and how to reach them (which is quite difficult and more than one can ask from a guide that is only updated every two to three years). As always, they are the most culturally sensitive guide book and take the most effort to go for first source information (vs. Lonely Planet's habit of quoting second source information that is incorrect, without bothering to check it out -- and I am referring not just to location based information, but also cultural and historical background).



2 out of 5 stars Maps lacking detail & accuracy   February 10, 2007
 9 out of 11 found this review helpful

A bit too much like the Lonely Planet and like LP, a bit lazy and predictable. Why, for instance, do these guides not recommend hotels near the Jama Masjid in Agra (where one can find shops and food in abundance, where one is but a short walk from the Red Fort and hence a short walk from access to the Taj and where transportation does not involve the hassles that one encounters in other parts of town)? You tend to find that LP and Rough Guide give the same recommendations as far as hotels are concerned 6 out of ten times...it's not that difficult - most Indian towns of any size have an array of options.

I find the most frustrating aspects of this guide to be: the complete lack of maps for certain regions (I found there to be few maps of smaller towns in Tamil Nadu); inaccuracies in the maps (the Akbar Inn in Agra is 1km away from the point indicated and not on the same street as Tourist Guest House...in Gwalior, the guide will have you walking lenghty circles only to find that the hotel you are looking for is a stone's throw from the station on a road not indicated...in Bhavnagar a circle haphazardly placed on a map in the middle of a labyrinthine bazaar is apparently meant to serve a purpose); and the scales are occasionally wrong.

There are also internal contradictions...the time from town A to town B is indicated as 5 hours when one looks at the travel info for town A but as 7 hours when one looks at the info for town B.

Having recently decided that LP had seriously dropped its standards when it suggested turning left out of the bus stop in a Chinese town of plus 1 million people and looking for a red sign, I am at a loss for a decent guide book. Maybe the Footprint or Handbook guides are the way to go - I have yet to try them. What I tend to find most useful are older LPs (eg those of 10 years ago)...prices change and hotels open and close but those guides did tend to provide more options as far as hotels are concerned and the maps tended to be more accurate - some hotels will remain and where one finds one, one usually finds others.


Powered by Associate-O-Matic
Iphone: The Missing Manual
Click Here
T-Shirts
Paltalk Plus Free Trial
| iPhone News | iPhone Links | Sitemap | Contact: admin @ iphonebundle.com
All trademarks and copyrights owned by their respective owners and are used for illustration only. This is not an official iPhone site and we're in no way affiliated with iPhone or Apple.
Last Minute Ipods and iPhones | iPhone Gossip | CloseOut on MP 3 | iPhone Vlog |