Books for Prep









Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - A fairly good guide to Provence
LP contains so much information that it makes it difficult to plan your trip without any other guide. So, at your planning stage of the trip I suggest you resort to some other guide.
But, while travelling, I found the book to be very useful. It gives you a lot of vital information that every backpacker needs. However, some of the maps in this LP are slightly incorrect, so I suggest you do not rely soley on the LP maps, but use some more detailed ones. Also, for a traveller on tight budget, the book could contain some more info about camping places.
All in all, a good book that is definitely worth the buy.




Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Almost Great -- Worth The Buy
The Lonely Planet series of travel guides is one I have come to depend on, and this is one of the better ones. Good, concise, useable information. The thing that keeps it from being five stars is the hotel and restaurant listings, which are woefully insufficient. But when you're driving around Provence and stumble on a medieval town and want to know if there's a story there or not, this book will tell you.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Great.
I must say this is my first experience with Lonely Planet guides, though i already had high recommendations and positive feed-backs. I decided to give it a go with my 4-weeks in Sun. :-) I spent four weeks travelling around Cote D'Azur and Haute-Provence from Monaco to Marseille and into Alps e.g. Castellane, St. Andre, etc. The information contained is ver much accurate and helpful (i was travelling alone, not with a group!). There are sufficient maps of major regions and city but this guide should not be used for the sake of map. Always take a detailed map e.g. a driving one if you got wheels otherwise every tourist office got full detailed city maps.
Five stars stuff.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - good all-around guide that was useful and mainly accurate
We used this guide, along with the Triple A guide on Provence and the Cote d'Azure. The Lonely Planet guide was by far the most relevant and contained most of the practacilities the traveler needs. Some of the facts and features were a little different than the author stated, and it could have been quite a bit more thorough regarding the practacilities of driving. Historical and cultural information was both well done and interesting. Definitely 4* and possibly 4 1/2 *.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - As Usual - Great.
Once again, Lonely Planets demonstrates why so many travelers rely on its books. This book had exactly the information we needed: markets, hotels, bed/breakfasts, highlights, commentary.

We spent 5-days driving through Southern France and found the book to provide almost everything we needed to get around and plan our itinerary.

The book is organized very well and topics could be referenced very quickly. It may not have all the depth of others, but it does have enough content to inform. And the clarity of the writing and structure more than make up for it.





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