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A**N
I loved this book!
I spent 6 weeks driving around in this region and this was the most useful guide I had. I loved the information and even that British attitude. Probably not the best book re where to stay and eat, but for everything else in wonderful.
A**R
Cadogan Travel Books for Me!
The Cadogan books are the best - wish they weren't so difficult to find now that everyone researches travel online!
N**N
More textbook than travel guide.
Printing too small.More academic than I anticipated - or wanted; was looking forward to more info on the people, culture of today as I will be traveling there in Oct. I didn't need everybit of history from BC, AD.
K**N
Two Stars
Needs update.
D**S
chacun ses gouts
I came to this page in search of a new edition of this book. I don't have the old one, or obviously this one, so I will not write a review. But seeing that these two reviews on this site are so negative I just wanted to say that in general I find the Cadogan guides to be better than most others, including LP. The same authors write a series of guides on this part of the world--they actually live in SW France. Their South of France book (presumably incorporates their separate books on Provence, Cote d'Azure, Languedoc-Roussillon) is unreservedly excellent. I have to concur with the Amazon reviewer of that guide who wrote this:"When I travel to other places I'll look at the guides by Facaros and Pauls first."I have no connection with the authors or publisher but like them I have a special affection for SW France. Perhaps it is more a cultural difference for these two reviewers who didn't like the "Brit chatty tone". As an Australian who has lived in England and France (and briefly worked in USA) I cannot say I especially detected that in the SoF book and it made me curious: checking their website it is not clear but on Paul's website the current article begins "we Americans".. But on their shared website it says "Pauls' primary interest has always been cities and urban design, which sets their guidebooks apart.." This could be another reason why I find their guides a bit different because it happens that this is also a lifelong interest of mine.So there it is, perhaps simply chacun ses gouts.
A**S
Almost zero photos. Pithy, cheeky Brit-speak makes for a hard slog...
This book does have a fair amount of useful information. But this positive comes with a big negative: the guide is written in pithy, cheeky Brit-speak with a decidedly Anglo-Saxon, expatriate type of perspective on French culture and history. The text abounds in childish witticisms and conflations and is filled with adjective loaded condensations of and comments on history and facts. The author is, evidently, addicted to cartoonish metaphors and silly descriptions that convey French history as a grade school costume pageant.The text is in a very small type face, and is rather grayish rather than black, making for some hard reading in anything other than strong light. There is a brief color photo section at the front, but the book is otherwise all text and maps.There's useful info; but it's a hard slog. Insight Guide's "Southwest France", while less detailed in some ways as to recommendations, and far less opinionated, is vastly better in all meaningful respects. Eyewitness Guide's "Dordogne and Southwest France" is also filled with useful info and history, as well as wonderful photos and extensive illustrations. Either of these alternatives are superior. But if you buy both of them they will, together, completely out class the Cadogan "The Dordogne, Lot & Bordeaux, 6th"
C**L
Have they really been there?
While motoring from Bordeaux up through the Medoc to Pointe de Grave it became increasingly clear that the authors of this book either spent no time or very little in the area they are writing about. The book gives very little relevant information on the surroundings but tends to waffle on in childlike fashion about essentially nothing. The information on the Dordogne valley is as dissapointing.
K**E
Reliable Travel Guide
This is an excellent and detailed book. It was a replacement for my old one which was not returned by the borrower. I enjoy Dana Facaros' books, they always give details of fascinating places to visit which are a little out of the ordinary - like a hearse museum. Good advice about vineyards too.
A**R
DON'T GO WITHOUT IT!
My trusty companion for many enjoyable holidays in this part of France
D**T
Cadogan Guide Dordogne, the Lot & Bordeaux
leider gibt es in Deutsch derzeit nichts Brauchbares. Allgemeines Erzählen, zu wenig konkret. Fehlende Karten um wirklich vor Ort damit arbeiten zu können. Nicht sonderlich hilfreich
R**L
A nice read, but the format limits its use as a holiday guide.
This Cadogan guide includes some wonderful detail and certainly captures the essence of this part of France.For the first-time visitor, however, it is not a particularly user-friendly format. Incorporation of images and more maps would definitely enhance its use as a guide, whilst I find the Cadogan format a little stuffy.
M**E
Three Stars
lots of great information but in this 2007 edition not a lot of photos.
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