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enlarge | Author: David Stanley Publisher: Avalon Travel Publishing Category: Book
List Price: $15.95 Buy New: $2.78 You Save: $13.17 (83%)
New (2) Used (8) from $1.48
Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 943553
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 321 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.1 x 0.6
ISBN: 1566911745 Dewey Decimal Number: 919.61204 EAN: 9781566911740 ASIN: 1566911745
Publication Date: October 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: New - Old stock or Closeout, May have Slight Shelf wear or Remainder Mark
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| Customer Reviews:
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Not as good as Lonely Planet... August 24, 2000 8 out of 15 found this review helpful
I bought this and the Lonely Planet Samoa book just before visiting the South Pacific and I have to say that this book gives a completly misleading picture of Samoa and it's people.With stories of how you'll be stoned by children while walking though a village, having your rental car vandalised and being ripped off by local taxi drivers (to quote just 3 examples), it is quite obivously written with the paranoid American tourist in mind. Buy the Lonely Planet guide instead.
Indispensable guide January 22, 2000 10 out of 11 found this review helpful
David Stanley has done it again. Following his excellent and thorough guides on Fiji and Tahiti, he has put out THE guide to Tonga and Samoa in the South Pacific. This 320+ page tome is in fact indispensable to travelers intending to see and experience Tonga and Samoa. From his intro section on the land, flora & fauna, history, people, etc. through travel tips etc. Stanley seems to leave no stone unturned. The country sections include thorough and detailed descriptions of the towns, districts, areas, etc. plus recommendations on lodging, restaurants, activities, etc. Whether a backpacker looking for budget digs or a traveler seeking a holiday resort experience, you'll find it and more in these pages. Stanley shares his wealth of knowledge of and about travel in Tonga, Samoa, American Samoa and Niue with an eye for detail. He covers just about every possible aspect of travel in the islands. The book is loaded with excellent detailed maps that are easy to read and follow. There are also very helpful and practical sections on Resources-Information Offices, a great Bibliography, and an Internet list with numerous contacts for South Pacific culture, history and information, lodging, travel, dining, activities, tours, etc. For travelers planning to visit Tonga and Samoa, this is the one guide you need to have. It'll be in my bag next trip to the islands.
Tonga-Samoa Handbook January 16, 2000 17 out of 17 found this review helpful
First I have a confession to make - I am nuts about the South Pacific so any guidebook to the area has to really win me over. It must provide an accurate history and a concise background to the region as well as informing me about agreeable places to stay, enjoyable places to eat, how to get around easily, decent maps and of course the places and things to avoid. This guidebook comes up trumps in all these areas and will certainly be my trusty companion for the next trip.In this 320 plus page first edition (an amalgam of two previous separate ones by the same highly knowledgeable author) the extensive detail of Tonga and Samoa's history, politics, flora and wildlife provides a thorough background and could be a volume in itself. It also includes American Samoa and Niue so encompasses an entire area of the Pacific. Importantly, Stanley states that he does not accept 'freebies' from tourist boards etc. but pays his own way, a very significant point as it makes him objective not having to return favours. This certainly comes across in the places I know from personal experience and his reviews about hotels for instance are usually brief but mostly valid about the ones I have stayed at. A key factor for my buying a guidebook is the quality of the maps, they make a huge difference and inaccurate poorly drawn ones are worse than useless. Previous Moon guidebooks were let down by the maps which were thin and skimpily done on paper with a lot of 'show through' which made them confusing. Thankfully rectified in this edition, they are now excellent. I like it even more because it is not aimed solely at backpackers at one end or expense account travellers at the other unlike some other guidebooks. It is broader based and not condescending should you wish to stay in local huts and eat off market stalls or the best hotels and eat the finest meals in Tonga and Samoa. Quite rightly, Stanley doesn't lead you to expect too much in an area that is not wealthy by Western standards of affluence, although rich in other ways with scenery and people which are the stuff of collective dreams planted in our psyche by Gauguin, Robert Louis Stevenson and others more than a century ago. He puts these countries into context with the reality of what they have to offer and prepares you in advance to expect what you would think is only second rate in say New York but this is the Pacific and that's as good as it gets. Considering the frugality of how most of the population of these countries live themselves it is more than good enough. So if you are crossing the Pacific with a stopover in these countries and are considering a guidebook, take this one. It will take you deftly through these 'paradise islands' yet neither lead you astray or to expect too much, just like a good friend which it will surely become.
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