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Mexico (Country Guide)

Mexico (Country Guide)

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Author: John Noble
Publisher: Lonely Planet
Category: Book

List Price: $26.99
Buy New: $16.86
You Save: $10.13 (38%)



Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 55 reviews
Sales Rank: 8016

Media: Paperback
Edition: 11th
Pages: 1056
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9
Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5 x 1.7

ISBN: 1741048044
Dewey Decimal Number: 917.20484
EAN: 9781741048049
ASIN: 1741048044

Publication Date: September 1, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Mexico (Lonely Planet Mexico)
  • Paperback - Lonely Planet Mexico (Lonely Planet Travel Survival Kit)
  • Paperback - Lonely Planet Mexico
  • Paperback - Lonely Planet Mexico
  • Paperback - Lonely Planet Mexico
  • Paperback - Lonely Planet Mexico (Lonely Planet. (Spanish Guides))
  • Paperback - Mexico (Country Guide)
  • Rag Book - Lonely Planet Mexico
  • Paperback - Lonely Planet Mexico (en espanol) (Lonely Planet Travel Guide)
  • Paperback - Lonely Planet Mexico (Loney Planet Mexico (Spanish))
  • Paperback - Lonely Planet Mexico

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  • The People's Guide to Mexico (Peoples Guide to Mexico)
  • Central America (Shoestring)
  • Mexico (EYEWITNESS TRAVEL GUIDE)
  • Mexico City: An Opinionated Guide for the Curious Traveler

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Initially specializing in Asia guidebooks, the Lonely Planet Travel Survival Kit series has long been a favorite of budget travelers all over the globe. Lonely Planet guides have a reputation for plainspoken and practical advice as well as thoughtful writing about history and culture, and Lonely Planet Mexico is no exception. Complementing the information about sights, accommodations, and food are extensive background notes about each region's notable past and present characteristics, from cuisine to geography to art. (Check out the full-color illustrated insert on Mexican artesanias, or handicrafts.) One note: this edition came out during the worst of the peso devaluation crisis, so the prices quoted may vary widely from the actual amount. It's best to rely on another guidebook for exact prices (try one that comes out every year), but for basic comparative information, Lonely Planet is a good name to trust.

Product Description
Offering coverage of Baja California, the Yucatn Peninsula, and the Central Pacific Coast, this guide features a GreenDex directory listing of sustainable vendors and contains a special color section on regional Mexican delicacies.


Customer Reviews:   Read 50 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars good enough   October 23, 2008
Michael Fiedler (missoula, MT)
this is an excellent over view of mostly mainstream Mexico,with a few off-the-wall eclectic destinations and side trips..all and all an excellent introduction to Mexico travel,but for detail you need some back-up..i.e.,Footprint's Mexico/Central America Handbook and esp. Moon regional guides ,i.e. Northern Mexico and also ,Oaxaca handbooks..much needed are guide books and references for the less developed and wilder south-west Sierra;particularly the Cordillera in Michoacan,Guerrero ,and Chiapas... those interested in this project and or travel to this(or other magic) region[...]


3 out of 5 stars Is Lonely Planet Losing Its Touch?   October 16, 2008
James M. Martin (Corpus Christi, Texas)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I have about five editions of Lonely Planet Mexico. All previous editions (this is the 11th) were better, if not a lot better. They have quit pricing in dollars, so you have to convert to pesos (admittedly not too hard when the exchange rate hovers at $10M to $1US) for hotels and restaurants. (Forget that travel guides for high inflationary countries are obsolete the day they are distributed.) Worse, they have ceased categorizing hotels as "Budget," "Mid-range" and "Top End," instead using a listing in ascending order of price (no help if the lodgings remodel and go up in price). Worse still, they continue to avoid money saving tips, like staying in San Juan del Rio (which they oimit entirely) when hotels and restaurants in nearby Tequisquiapan are out of sight: the latter caters mostly to rich "Chilangos" (Mexico City people), who go over for a weekend getaway. Some of the comments are downright absurd, e.g. calling Orizaba an industrialized dump, while praising the pricier, relatively boring Cordoba. All in all, this is a B- effort. I am considering taking some other travel guide next trip. In L.P.'s favor, I must admit it still covers small, out of the way spots that are in reality must see's: Rio Atoyac for its tasty, garlicky langostinos and Cuetzalan, Puebla, for its charm.


5 out of 5 stars Loved this guide   July 28, 2008
Teresa Aboueljoud (Milford, MI United States)
Just got back form Mexico, great guide. Every question I had I found answers for.


2 out of 5 stars Lonely Planet's slipping up   June 18, 2008
S. Parker (providence ri)
I've used these guide books for years. Chalcatzingo, Morales isn't even in the book. It's an important Olmec site. The major museum in Mexico City (National Anthropology) wasn't high lighted in the index. You have to hunt through every museo entry and there are many. This stuff is annoying.


4 out of 5 stars Still ubiquitous among backpackers   June 6, 2008
B. S. McIntyre (Naugatuck, CT USA)
Honestly, you don't even need to buy this, because everyone else will have one if you're staying at hostels. But I took it on a 2-week trip in May 2008, and it does the job. I wasn't disappointed with any of the hostels or restaurants that were recommended, and they all existed, which is nice.

A few minor criticisms:

The Mexico City Metro map is awful. Too gray and too hard to read. The maps in the station are easier to use to navigate, which is sad.
All the prices are in dollars. That's just silly, and sometimes confusing since they use $ for pesos in Mexico. Further, all the prices are wrong. I assume this is because it's a couple of years old, but maybe it's because the exchange rate changed. In particular, every single archaeological attraction was a different price (48 pesos, not $3.50).
The abbreviations for the bus services are annoying since they don't use them locally.
Should the Author's Choice hostel in a Lonely Planet really be a $325 / night room?


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