PDF Ebook Iceland (Bradt Travel Guide), by Andrew Evans
PDF Ebook Iceland (Bradt Travel Guide), by Andrew Evans
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Iceland (Bradt Travel Guide), by Andrew Evans
PDF Ebook Iceland (Bradt Travel Guide), by Andrew Evans
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Review
Recommended reading (Wanderlust)
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About the Author
Andrew Evans is a travel writer and TV host who has reported from over 100 countries and all 7 continents. Andrew has made over 20 trips to Iceland, exploring the island nation by foot, bicycle, car, boat, plane, and helicopter. As a contributor to National Geographic, and a frequent host for tours to Iceland, Andrew explores some of the remotest areas of the country regularly and is always on the lookout for undiscovered corners. Andrew has studied the Icelandic language, history, and biology and continues to lecture about the country to tour groups, as well as for the National Geographic Society and Smithsonian Institution.
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Product details
Series: Bradt Travel Guide
Paperback: 472 pages
Publisher: Bradt Travel Guides; 4th edition edition (January 1, 2018)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1784770442
ISBN-13: 978-1784770440
Product Dimensions:
5.5 x 0.9 x 8.5 inches
Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review:
3.9 out of 5 stars
42 customer reviews
Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#1,008,940 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
So we're not going to Iceland this until the summer so for now, this is only a preliminary review of this 2nd edition. I will try to post an update post-trip:WHY I CHOSE THIS BOOK OVER OTHERS:Usually, I'm not overly picky about travel books. My strategy is usually to go to the used books store and pick up whatever people sold back after their travels the year before. After all, how much could have possibly changed in a year or two? Boy was I wrong! I started out with the first edition of Frommer's for Iceland. I set out on our planning, picked out tour operators and other businesses based on the information given in that book. I copied the information down and laid out our plan for traveling ring road. And then I set out to book all of our adventures. This is where I started running into problems with that book. Remember that volcano that erupted in Iceland in 2010 and set all of the northern hemisphere into turmoil? Well it affected the locals too. Combine that with the recent economic troubles and you have a few differences to cope with. Some tour operators and attractions didn't make it through the crisis, while others had to relocate due to the changing geography. I would go to a tour operator's website to make reservations and be thinking that we would make time for them on a certain day that our car was scheduled to be in that part of the country, only to find that they had relocated to the other side of the island due to volcanic activity. I was going to just stick to the classic publishers- Frommer's and Lonely Planet- and buy their latest editions but I wasn't confident that they'd be caught up to "post volcano" life. The current edition of lonely planet Iceland was released June 2010 and the Frommer's edition was released March 2011. Eyjafjallajökul erupted May 2010. Somehow I wasn't confident that the few months that had elapsed between that event and the publishing of those books was enough to capture all the effects the locals would have felt. So I was very please to find this book which was published well after the volcano and seems to provide the most up to date info on Iceland available in a travel book.THE ACTUAL BOOK:It seems well written and unlike what I'm seeing from the reviews of the last edition, this new edition seems to have plenty of pictures and maps. They make good recommendations for all price brackets at restaurants as well as hotels/guest houses. The author is very clear about the value of one attraction vs. the other but isn't rude or pushy about it. One thing I appreciated was that the author recognizes that you're not going to eat out all the time and will mention the location of major grocery stores along the way. I've never seen that in any other travel book.Areas that I would mark as "needs improvement":- The index in this book is terrible! I'll read several chapters at a time and then want to go back to a topic covered in a minor heading of the book but not remember exactly where it was. When this happens you're S.O.L. since the index in this book is basically non-functional. Important topics like phone/cellular service are covered in the text but not indexed. And which page was the ferry info on again? Goofy stuff like that.- Annoying advertisements midchapter. I know the publisher has to advertise- but midchapter? Really? This only happens a handful of times but seriously, I don't want to flip the page to find some big old full-page add for the publisher's Greece book. I found it tacky and distracting.- The suggested itineraries could use some work. Make them more descriptive please!- I have found some minor discrepancies from the book's pricing of certain things and what that attraction lists on their own websites, but I will reserve full judgment until we return from Iceland. Maybe the business jacks up their prices on their website? Who knows?Ultimately, I would still recommend this book over competitor products to anyone to traveling to Iceland this year. I think this had a lot of good info in it even if it is still a bit rough around the edges. It reads better than a lonely planet or frommer's even if it lacks a few things organizationally.
This is the kind of guide book you order a couple months before your trip in order to develop a strong sense of a country's culture, history, geography, and geology. Evans is clearly intimately familiar with Iceland, and his passion for the people and the place is evident throughout the guide. While there's adequate information on hotels, restaurant, and how to get from point A to point B, the real draw of the Bradt guide are the frequent asides on folklore and history. With every location covered, Evans discusses things like how the area got it's name, it's founding and primary industries, where it appeared in the Icelandic sagas, resident historical figures, and the trolls, dragons, and sorcerers that reputedly stalk the area. There's as much discussion of the 9th century as the 20th. If you're primarily looking for a brass-tacks list of travel recommendations and advice, you'll probably be frustrated by this guide's approach.In my opinion, the major drawbacks of this guide are as follows:1) There are very few relevant pictures. While I don't usually need a richly illustrated guide along the lines of the "Eyewitness" series, Evans recommends many locations primarily for the grand vistas, strange rock formations, or atmospheric ocean views that are hard to visualize without any photos. You really need to read the guide with Google images at the ready. The photos included are almost all of statues, flora/fauna, and buildings.2) There's not much of an editorial voice when it comes to recommending "must dos" and "must sees". There's a half page of "recommended itineraries" but they amount to little more than a list of the major cities along a given route. If you're looking for recommendations for the best views, the best day hikes, or best places to try to fit in with the locals, you're not going to find it here. I had to read the guide cover to cover to try to cobble together a ring road itinerary, and even after that I wasn't very confident about what I put together.3) The maps aren't very good. You're definitely going to need a large, detailed, supplementary map. Most frustratingly, some of the places he discusses aren't even shown on the accompanying maps. I often felt like I was playing a game of fruitless "Where's Waldo".
We spent six days in Iceland in March 2012 and this book was invaluable. The author writes clearly, knowledgeably, and with a great sense of humor, and he covers every subject in great detail. It was helpful on everything from picking sights to see, to renting a car, to choosing restaurants, to finding our way around (although our GPS helped immeasurably in that regard), to providing interesting background on things that we saw en route. The background sections are also well-written, thorough, and amusing. There was only one place he recommended, a town above the Snaefellsnes peninsula, that was a disappointment, and there were a couple of restaurants that were not open, which the book had not indicated were seasonal, although that may have changed in the year since he did his research; so if you are planning on going to a particular restaurant, I would recommend calling first. But those were the only hitches in a jam-packed six days. I only wish I had had time to read more before we went -- I was still reading the background sections on the plane home.
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