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S**T
Informative and nicely organized
"Fodor's Essential Thailand: with Cambodia & Laos (Full-color Travel Guide)" by Fodor's Travel Guides is informative and nicely organized. The general information is at the front and worth the time to read. The pictures in this section are pleasing to the eye. After that, the guide starts with Bangkok and that makes sense since it is so well known. I like how the writers mix in the usual expected information with the more offbeat. The side note of "Beware: Happy Meals" towards the end in the Laos section was a good example of humorous and informative. I like that the sections are not a one-size fits all and that if there is a particular etiquette to observe, it will be mentioned. I also like the notes section for the reader to write in that Fodor guides insert towards the back of the book.The guide has a lot of information to take in but again, it is well organized. For most of us, it is usually one or two cities or regions that will be visited and the guide is designed so that the reader can jump to whatever city or region is of interest and get a good idea of that city or region.
J**S
Great travel guide with all the info you need
Covers all the things you need for a trip to Thailand. If your focus is on Cambodia and Laos and you want to hit more than the highlights, this might not be the best guide, but unless you are going deep into Cambodia or Laos this is a great book. Fodor's guides are always well organized. Photos aren't the best quality but when combined with the internet, this makes vacation planning a snap.Unfortunately, right now, as I write this, Thailand is in political turmoil and COVID-19 is making travel less desirable, but hopefully we get back to exploring soon. This book will help.
D**W
Hotels, restaurants, and tourism sites all well covered in this full color book.
Full of color photos and maps, this one pound book is compact enough to carry with you on a Thailand trip, but complete enough to provide some enjoyable armchair travel as well. There's plenty of planning information here as well: hotels, restaurants, tourism sites - all covered nicely along with sidebars on customs, travel within the country, and other useful tidbits. I do wish Fodor's would place the publication year on the book's spine to make it easy to tell whether you need an updated book for your library, but maybe they'll return to that in the future.
M**E
Why add Cambodia and Laos.
I had to take off one star because I dinged LP in the past for the same reason: why try to cram Laos and Cambodia into a book on Thailand? Especially an "essential" book, which is conceivably abridged?Anyway, it is up to typical Fodor's standards as of late, in that it has full color maps and pictures scattered throughout - Fodor's has become my favorite of the big brands for its tone and layout, and this book fits that same bill. This one does not include a pull-out map, which is fine with me.Great book for browsing and helping you with your trip. But Cambodia and Laos are awesome - they deserve enough attention to warrant their own books. Make this one smaller if it is an "essential" abridged version.By the way, I could have sworn I saw something that said this included Myanmar. That may have been just a description of what they were expecting to deliver or it could have been my imagination. But, regardless, it does not include Myanmar, in case you are wondering.
T**R
Excellent
I usually get the Fodor's guides when traveling to foreign countries and I have always been pleased with the depth and detail of information available. My wife and I have discussed traveling to Thailand and this has afforded me the opportunity to research this destination before we travel there and make some decisions about where we'd like to go and get some specific insight not only into the culture but also into some of the travel details (rail, bus, plane etc) as well as hotels. Much of that information can be researched on line but this makes a convenient reference to carry in the backpack with you without having to 'need' wifi access at the moment you need to look something up.
O**A
Good
Nice guide. Informative with beautiful pics. Great option for planning a trip.
C**C
Fodor's Essential Thailand: with Cambodia & Laos
First, I want to address the fact that Cambodia and Laos are included in this travel guide. I know a TON of travelers, backpackers who add either one or both of these two countries once they get to Thailand. They are so close and easy to get to that a spontaneous trip across the border is more common than not.I was in Thailand some months ago and I didn't have this book, but I will write my review with that itinerary in mind. Would this book have given me everything I needed or no?My itinerary was such: Bangkok, Koh Lipe, Koh Lanta, Phuket Town/Panwa Beach, Ko Phi Phi. I wanted mostly beach with some city thrown in. I also explored going to Chiang Mai but it would have been during burning season so I had to regretfully strike that out.This fact about Chiang Mai was not mentioned. I found out about burning season from a forum.As expected, Bangkok's sights were well covered. But I wish there was more emphasis on traveling via SkyTrain. The book only stresses that traffic is horrendous and not to drive. I would go further and say just AVOID taxis and driving altogether. If by some miracle you get an honest taxi driver, the traffic will drive up your fare up. The combination of SKyTrain and ferry is what I wholeheartedly recommend. The book does spend almost a page on ferries, which is a plus. I suggest doing your own, more in depth research prior. Related to transportation and the sights is the neighborhood. After looking at the SkyTrain lines, I ended up choosing Sukhumvit and I'm really glad I did. My hotel was a few minutes walk from a station, I found it to be a quiet area in a neighborhood with some lively streets (restaurants, clubs, and shops) all within short walking distance.I know that not every island can be included in this book but Koh Lipe wasn't even mentioned. And it was my favorite island of all! If I could I would have spent more time in Koh Lipe than any of the other islands.The section on Koh Lanta made it sound really idyllic. For me it was just okay. The beaches were not sandy white or postcard perfect like Koh Lipe, but pretty rocky.Ko Phi Phi section, as expected, was accurate but doesn't really emphasize that it's a party island(s). Maybe it's a given but there are those that might not know and would avoid it if they could. I did a day trip from Koh Lanta and it was enough. It is very beautiful but I don't think I could have stood the constant partying.I unexpectedly loved Phuket Town and loved strolling its streets and lingering in its cafes. I stayed at a resort in Panwa Beach and found it to be the perfect ending to my Thai trip.Overall, this book gave some good info. If you have trouble picking which islands to visit for the beach experience, I highly recommend LP's beach guide. Everything you need to know about every island (and definitely a lot more info you wouldn't get from this book).
L**R
Probably not the best guide book
I did quite a bit of research before I bought this book and used it for my month travelling around Thailand plans. Firstly, one third of the book is about Laos and Cambodia (not on the title) so a waste of effort carting this book in your backpack if you’re not planning to go there. There is too much emphasis on where to eat and sleep, which you can easily work out for yourself. Not enough descriptive text and tips on places to visit. There could be far more information on train services and other transport companies, ferries etc. More maps on where those services leave from. If there was no internet you would struggle with just this book.
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