Travel books
About the guides |
Insight Guides include lots of
high quality illustrations, good texts and practical information in a section at the end
of the book. They are particularly useful for preparing a trip or reading about a country
after your return - a bit heavy to carry around when travelling. |
Mobil Travel Guides Very useful if you decide on the next
destination as you go along - or to plan your overnight stays. Good list of hotels, maps
at the beginning of the book. |
Lonely Planet travel survival kit I like the Lonely Planet
guides because of their concise and practical approach, with an accent on budget travel.
The background information on the country or region, at the beginning of the book, helps
to understand the place. |
Lonely Planet travel atlas Provide useful maps in a compact
format. |
Travel books and guides
USA California and Southwest |
Insight
Guides
US National Parks West |
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Mobil
98 Travel Guide California and the West - Arizona, California,
Nevada, Utah |
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Lonely
Planet
travel survival kit Arizona, New Mexico, Utah |
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Frommer's
California '98 - Erika Lenkert, et al; Paperback
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- Islamic Art
(World of Art)
- David Talbot Rice Paperback Published 1985
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If you look for more background than a guide can provide, David Talbot Rice's book
provides a good grounding in the Islamic art, in all of its variety and geographic breadth
- from Europe to Asia, Middle East and North Africa.
In Europe, the Islamic treasures of the Andalucia (southern Spain) are witness to the peak
of the Islamic civilization. |
Hawaii |
Frommer's
Hawaii from $60 a Day (31st Ed) - Jocelyn K. Fujii, et
al; Paperback |
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Egypt, Sinai |
Lonely Planet
Egypt - A Travel Survival Kit
 |
Again, this Lonely Planet guide sets itself apart from the competition. Just leafing
through it, you will find who is Naguib Mahfouz (writer, winner of the 1988 Nobel prize
for literature for the Cairo Trilogy), besides the obvious coverage of the monuments and
the Nile. |
Lonely Planet
travel atlas Egypt |
When travelling in the Middle East, you cannot buy maps. When asking for directions,
locals are likely to tell you: "Turn left 2 hours after the oasis", which is
rather vague, considering my navigational skills. Buy all the maps you are likely
to need before you leave. |
Italy |
Lonely
Planet
travel survival kit Italy |
To half decently cover Italy, you should travel with a whole library - for each main
city. This guide succeeds in covering the essentials, including some practical
information. It also manages to cover, in a few pages, information about Italian culture,
stereotypes, family, the mafia, the cinema and music, political scandals, etc. You don't
just visit the monuments, but have a chance to understand the country as it is today. |
The Penguin Historical
Atlas of Ancient Rome Paperback

The Penguin Historical
Atlas of Ancient Rome Hardcover |
If you want to go beyond what a guide can give you, without taking a degree course in
ancient Roman history, this book is for you. Written in a readable style, it's full of
useful photographs, graphs and maps. And it's small enough to carry on your trip (144
pages) to compelement your guides. |
South Africa |
Lonely
Planet Africa the South (Lonely Planet Travel
Survival Kit) |
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Insight
Guides
South Africa Johannes Haape (Editor) / Paperback / Published 1996 |
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Lonely Planet
South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland (Lonely Planet Travel Survival Kit) |
What a place! The guide will help you understand the country and to get around. With
the usual Lonely Planet features. |
Switzerland |
Dilbert's Future "Prediction
19: In the future, we'll realize that the creatures we thought were from other planets are
actually smart people who live in Switzerland" |
Walking
in Switzerland - A Lonely Planet Walking Guide |
Hiking in Switzerland is a must, this guide will take you to some of the best places. |
Lonely
Planet Switzerland - Travel Survival Kit (2nd
Ed) |
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Insight
Compact Guides Switzerland |
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Zimbabwe |
Hurry up to visit Zimbabwe
before it becomes too fashionable and spoiled by the tourists! The Victoria Falls are out
of this world - you've seen some of my pictures. Not to mention the lodges and parks... |
Lonely Planet
Zimbabwe Botswana and Namibia Travel Atlas (Lonely Planet Travel Survival
Kit) |
The usual remarkable coverage from Lonely Planet. |
Spectrum
Guide to Zimbabwe |
Good illustrations, similar format to Insight Guides.
A section on Business Zimbabwe contains useful information for people who wish to make
business in the country. |
Other books I enjoyed reading
recently
Scott Adams |
The
Dilbert Future
Thriving on Stupidity in the 21st Century |
How can you ignore a writer and cartoonist who wrote the "Prediction 27: In
the future, scientists will create a powerful and legal aphrodisiac". That was
before Viagra took the world by storm. The man is a visionary!
Although you could claim that all the Dilbert books are management handbooks, you should
not read them in your cubicle, as you will not manage to conceal your laughter. |
I'm
not Anti-Business, I'm Anti-Idiot |
This one is cartoons only.
I got snared again - I just picked it up in the bookshop and could not stop chuckling and
guffawing all the way to the checkout. |
The Dilbert Principle - A Cubicle's-Eye View of
Bosses, Meetings, Management Fads & Other Workplace Afflictions |
Another classic Dilbert book.
For the cubicle (or open plan dweller) it's comforting to know that it's not just me going
mad... |
Peter De la Billière |
Looking for Trouble:
SAS to Gulf Command, the autobiography |
The commander of the British force in the Gulf War 1990, Peter de la Billière, starts
from his childhood, to finish with his retirement from the army after the Gulf War.Reading
about his difficult childhood and his later career in the SAS, one cannot fail to notice
the parallel with the author of Bravo Two Zero, Andy McNab: turbulence and
misbehavior in the civilian life, make for excellent soldiers.What is unacceptable
behavior on civy street, is very desibrable, tough and resourceful behavior in the special
forces.
Among the proliferation of books about the SAS, this is the definitive account on the
special force - de la Billière was its commander and then director, he should know a
thing or two about it, although he still cannot write it all.
A must for the modern history and military buff, with a lesson or two about management
thrown in for good measure. |
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