China (Country Guide)

China (Country Guide)

Selected Book Details

  • Paperback
  • Edition: 11th Revised edition
  • Author: Damian Harper
  • Publisher: Lonely Planet
  • Release Date: May 2009
  • ISBN-10: 1741048664
  • ISBN-13: 9781741048667
  • List Price: $31.99

Price Comparisons

Bookmark and Share

E-mail these Cheap Book Prices to a friend!

Store Price Condition Free Shipping? Online Coupons and Deals

Amazon
(Marketplace)

Shop & Save

$20.05

as of 11/21 10am EST

New

NO, $3.99

There are no current coupons/deals for this store in our database.
If you find one, please contact us.

Half.com
(Marketplace)

Shop & Save

$20.68

as of 11/21 10am EST

Used

NO, $3.49 to $3.99

Get $5 off a $50+ purchase.

Restrictions: New Users ONLY

Click "Shop & Save" to show coupon code HERE!

Click to view coupon instructions

Half.com
(Marketplace)

Shop & Save

$20.83

as of 11/21 10am EST

New

NO, $3.49 to $3.99

Get $5 off a $50+ purchase.

Restrictions: New Users ONLY

Click "Shop & Save" to show coupon code HERE!

Click to view coupon instructions

Amazon

Shop & Save

$21.11

as of 11/21 10am EST

New

YES, spend $25+

Get FREE Shipping with a $25+ puchase.

Restrictions: Spend over $25, see Amazon for details.

Click "Shop & Save" to show coupon code HERE!

Click to view coupon instructions

TextbookX

Shop & Save

$23.02

as of 11/21 10am EST

New

YES, spend $49+

Get FREE Shipping with a $49+ order.

Restrictions: See site for details.

Click "Shop & Save" to show coupon code HERE!

Alibris
(Marketplace)

Shop & Save

$23.06

as of 11/21 10am EST

Used

NO, $3.99

There are no current coupons/deals for this store in our database.
If you find one, please contact us.

Alibris
(Marketplace)

Shop & Save

$23.87

as of 11/21 10am EST

New

NO, $3.99

There are no current coupons/deals for this store in our database.
If you find one, please contact us.

Amazon
(Marketplace)

Shop & Save

$27.39

as of 11/21 10am EST

Used

NO, $3.99

There are no current coupons/deals for this store in our database.
If you find one, please contact us.

Alibris

Shop & Save

$29.59

as of 11/21 10am EST

New

YES, Spend $49+ on eligible books

There are no current coupons/deals for this store in our database.
If you find one, please contact us.

Shop & Save

button not working?   Click Here

Summaries and Customer Reviews provided by Amazon

Summary

Nobody knows China like Lonely Planet. Whether you want to sip cocktails in Shanghai, trek Tibet's holy Mt Kailash or contemplate history at Xu'an's Army of Terracotta Warriors, our 11th edition will guide you through the best of this jaw-dropping destination - and reveal more of it than any other guide.

In This Guide:

All-new color chapters feature treks, iconic sights and culinary delights
Comprehensive activities coverage, including new cycling trips and unforgettable river tours
Expert trustworthy knowledge from resident and specialist authors

Customer Reviews

Average Rating: Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5

Chief Buzzard

Rating: Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5

Have traveled and backpacked in China for 3 weeks for the past 3 years and will be leaving for another adventure with these wonderful people in December. This is the third edition of this book I have used. Wouldn't travel overseas ANYWHERE without a Lonely Planet guide book. This edition with the additional maps is outstanding.

Not updated enough!

Rating: Score = 3 Score = 3 Score = 3 Score = 3 Score = 3

I traveled for 3 month through China and pretty much gave up on this guide (latest edition) after the first 1.5 mth. There is a LOT of outdated information in this book. Granted, china is changing VERY fast, but there were things that were in this guide that I have been told have been shut down over 3 years (and it wasn't just by the touts)!! I encountered some outdated information practically every city I went to in China, from closed down things to see, restaurants that have long moved and hotels that were no longer in operation. Come on lonely planet! If you expect to be the leader in this field, you need to do a better job overhauling your new editions and checking your facts.

Great friend!

Rating: Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4

Traveling trough China we had a great friend and translater with us: The Lonely planet!

2009 edition gets more wrong than right ... and "ever-changing country" is no excuse.

Rating: Score = 2 Score = 2 Score = 2 Score = 2 Score = 2

Like many people, I read the mixed reviews for prior editions to this guide, but didn't see a better alternative, so got it, hoping that the kinks had been worked out. They hadn't.

No travel guide to the largest and fastest-changing country in the world can get everything right, but this guide gets a lot more wrong than it has any excuse to. I first encountered this in Macau, when, after wasting a fair bit of time following its maps, I was assured that the official "Tourist Map" had full bus information. It in fact has no bus information, which was not a pleasant thing to learn at night, far from my Hong Kong hotel room. But things only got worse from there.

One problem is that the hours posted in Lonely Planet are very often wrong, but, even more so, misleading. Thus, when the guide indicates that the Forbidden City closes at 5:00, what it doesn't tell you is that the officials close all buildings and start kicking you out at 4:30, which can be a huge disappointment if you waited to see a particular exhibition that has closed. Contrast this with the Old Summer Palace, where no one cares if you stay well after closing, making it the perfect cap to a late afternoon. These two places also illustrate a huge problem with the maps in the book: They don't tell you where the entrances and exits are. Thus, you could walk an extra mile than you need to get to the only listed entrance in the Old Summer Palace, and another extra mile to get to the ruins therein. Or, you could waste lots of time in the Forbidden City because Lonely Planet doesn't deem it important to distinguish doors from walls.

Costs and cost structures are often far off or ill-explained, and I checked with locals who insisted this wasn't because of any recent changes. There are no subway maps, which is especially bad in Beijing, which is famously stingy with having such maps. Scam warnings are far, far too specific; scams warned about for Beijing also take place in Shanghai, so if you go to the latter first, you'll be unprepared. The best warning would be that anyone from anywhere China approaching you in a tourist locale speaking English wants to shake you down, not to practice their English, so be careful if you follow them anywhere, even somewhere official-looking. Sad but true. And the pages of Chinese words in the mini-phrasebook somehow neglect food-related ones like "hot," "cold," "water," or "rice." These basics would be especially useful when being served a spicy, salty meal with warm water in the midst of the summer heat.

It's also clear that this book hasn't really been updated, even on the most important things. One tell-tale sign is talking about "targets" for 2008 rather than actual statistics. A more worrying sign is the lack of knowledge of the fact that the east side of the Bund, the main Shanghai tourist site, is closed due to construction for Expo 2010. This is not a brief closure, but a huge project that will likely take about a year. The biggest tourist site in the biggest city of the country and Lonely Planet makes no mention of this? Sadly, that's what I came to expect of Lonely Planet China. I can't give it fewer stars, because I don't have a better alternative and at least there is some Chinese (albeit inconsistently) on the maps and site lists. But I'd certainly wouldn't recommend it.

Fire the writers and start over.

Rating: Score = 1 Score = 1 Score = 1 Score = 1 Score = 1




I have used several LP guides, Ireland, Amsterdam, South Africa, Cambodia and Vietnam etc. All were good and useful to have. I just returned from a two month trip to China. I was frustrated with this book so many times I was ready to throw it in a trash can. There are errors and omissions all over the place. For a book that is only two years old is feels quite out of date. It is better that nothing, almost, but I would buy something else.