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29 of 30 humans found the following review helpful.
An splendid travel companion
By A
The Lonely Planet develops splendid travel guides, and their Tanzania/Zanzibar edition is no exception. I have employed this book on four dissimilar trips, and found it indispensible. The guide does an admirable occupation describing the ordinary tourist stops (the game parks, Zanzibar's Stone Town, etc.), but it is real strength lies in giving the details necessary to take the roads less travelled.
I have found the hotel prices in the guide to be outstandingly accurate, though naturally a heap of things have changed. The "getting there and away" sectionalizations provide choices for transportation to and from cities and towns; while the range of number of things from which only one can be chosen in general stays the same, departure times and prices may alter drastically. Always plan on things taking longer than you expect.
Tanzania and Zanzibar are astounding places to visit, and the Lonely Planet will give you the means to make the most of your trip.
26 of 28 persons found the following review helpful.
zanzibar
By A
We are a couple of divers and we decisive to go to Zanzibar for diving holidays. We took the book with us and the only thing we may say is - it's a bible for budget travelers. There are a good deal of splendid recommendations when it comes to the overnights and good restaurants. The prices in the book were somewhat accurate. Important thing was that it gave us a good start out in bargening. The only thing this book was missing out was some more data on island pemba.
25 of 27 people found the following review helpful.
The book is full of errors
By Torstein
This is one of the worst editions of Lonely Planet books I've ever read.
The book is full of factual errors which in all probability is a result of poor research. I doubt that the researcher genuinely have been at numerous of the places, and that he has copied selective information from the Internet instead.
I traveled this summer in Tanzania, and ran into faults in this guidebook time and again. The Rough Guide was far more accurate, even altho that book is two years older.
I may receive that phone numbers are wrong, given the perpetually elaboration and changes in the Tanzanian mobile phone system, but addresses will have to be right most of the time.
Further more, I may receive that travel times can't be relied upon as precise in Africa, but if the journalist had actually travelled the distanses himself, he would have noticed things like:
Travel times for bus companies are given to the region, not inevitably the city it self. That may mean a lot of divergence given that the regions are huge.
The slow ferry to Zanzibar does not take 3 hours as stated in the guide - nonetheless if you ask at the ticket office they will tell you that. The slow ferrys are all old freight boats with an extra deck, and they take amidst 6 till 8 hours on the entire journey.
Several restaurants in this edition do not exist, or haven't opened yet. Given the lack of data on the feed and service I doubt that the journalist in truth troubled to sit down to eat at the places cited in the book.
Shopping districts brought up in the Dar es Salaam chapter does not integrate the type of shops mentioned. For instance, there are nearly no curio or souvenir shops along the Samora avenue, even even though the book claims there's a whole lot of them.
The exploration behind this book is just so bad that it can't be relied upon. Get the Rough Guide rather - it's much better!
Torstein
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