| Footprint Argentina Handbook: The Travel Guide | 
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Avg. Customer Rating:   (based on 11 reviews) Sales Rank: 1183873 Category: Book
Author: Charlie Nurse Publisher: NTC/Contemporary Publishing Company Studio: NTC/Contemporary Publishing Company Manufacturer: NTC/Contemporary Publishing Company Label: NTC/Contemporary Publishing Company Languages: English (Unknown), English (Original Language), English (Published) Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 528 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 4.8 x 1
ISBN: 0844249467 Dewey Decimal Number: 918.20464 UPC: 000844249467 EAN: 9780844249469 ASIN: 0844249467
Publication Date: July 1998 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description The second edition of Footprint's ARGENTINA HANDBOOK has been completely updated and revised and is published in the new Footprint paperback format. It is packed with ideas on how to plan a visit, when to go, where to stay and how to get about. It includes highlights of Argentina with colour photography, a special feature on estancia tourism and adventure tourism from climbing and trekking to skiing. It gives information on Chilean Patagonia, including Parque Nacional Torres del Paine, and excursion from Buenos Aires to Uruguay. It has extensive listing in Buenos Aires for all budgets as well as "Where to Tango". The background information on history, culture, art and theatre is interesting and comprehensive. There are colour maps to help you plan your journey and keep you orientated while you are travelling in addition to literally dozens of local town and site maps.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 6 more reviews...
  Beautiful Maps. The Best. March 11, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
We used this book for 3 months as we lived in Buenos Aires with few, if any, complaints.
Footprint has been writing its South America guidebook series for 80+ years. It is simply the most well-informed guidebook for this continent. Compared to Lonely Planet, there is more information packed into Footprint and the quality of the materials and printing are superior.
The maps are a level above the competition, especially the sad, gray smudges that pass for maps in the Lonely Planet. The multi-page country maps at the back of this series are by far the best maps in any guidebook printed today.
5 stars. The best.
  This 2007 / 4th Edition is a great guide for Argentina and an excellent guide for Patagonia. February 27, 2007 26 out of 26 found this review helpful
There was a day when Rough Guide and Lonely Planet were the best guides for travelers that sought to leave the tour groups behind and explore on their own. But slowly, year by year, Footprint has improved, and now this 4th edition is one of the best guides for Argentina that you can buy. *Note that this review is for the the 4th edition, other reviews below are probably refering to the 3rd Edition.
I took five travel guides with me to explore Argentina/Patagonia, and I found myself consistently reaching for Footprint first. It is the most current (2006) and the guide consistently listed quality accommodations and good restaurants, some of which were exemplary. The city maps in the guide are excellent. All the restaurants and hotels are well marked on each map. Kudos.
Footprint Argentina's background section (history, religion, culture etc.) is well written, brief, yet informative. There is an abundance of website references throughout the text and a website listing for almost every accommodation = excellent.
I spent five weeks exploring Patagonia and found Footprint to be the best single guide to have. More than 200 pages in this Argentinean guide are devoted to this region, including a section on Chilean Patagonia. If you purchase "Time Out Patagonia" (see my review) you will have the best two guides possible for Patagonia.
On the downside Footprint uses a cumbersome letter system instead of just telling you the price for accommodations (i.e., LL=$200 plus, L=$150-$200, AL=$101-$150, A,B,C,D,E,F etc. -- putting the legend at the back of the book - a serious hassle). It also fails to tell you what is the price range for the restaurants; so at one eatery you could pay $10 for your meal, then have a $35 bill at another. Not good. The descriptions of the restaurants are insipid and verge on being meaningless: "tasty food", "cosy", "very popular", "delicious food". Whereas, other good guides (Rough Guide - also highly recommended - see my review) give you pointers: "best grilled shrimp ever" / "the steaks here are the best in town" etc.
Bottom line: this is a very good guide for Argentina and the best guide for those that are going to Patagonia. Highly recommended
  Totally useless! May 26, 2006 12 out of 13 found this review helpful
Everything about this book, from phone numbers to accommodation reviews, has been almost laughably wrong. I've never felt compelled to write a review on amazon before, but this book has been so inaccurate I think I should warn people. The only reason anyone should buy this book is to do the exact OPPOSITE of whatever it says. I doubt this author has even been to the places she writes about, that's how consistently wrong this book is. It is impossible to locate a copyright date, and they probably did that on purpose, considering many places have closed and info is obviously outdated. I understand that some places change over time, but I've given this book a chance in 10 different places throughout Argentina and the advice here has failed miserably.
  Not bad, but.... December 25, 2005 9 out of 11 found this review helpful
I returned from Argentina just two weeks ago, and I used this book exclusively. I usually use the "Let's Go" guides when I travel, and I didn't like this one nearly as much. Too many superlatives throughout the book - unfortunately not everything can be amazing or fantastic - so after a while there was really no way to differenciate the truly fantastic (the falls or Perito Moreno Glacier), from the just so so things. And regardless of what the book says, unless you love to eat beef and pork every meal, the food is terrible. Very mediocre pasta and pizzas everywhere, and vegetarians are highly restricted. The food was definitely the lowlight of our trip. If interested in hiking and the outdoors - plan on spending the majority of your time way down south. El Calafate, El Chalten, and Ushuaia are all truly amazing areas. And if you can fit the Falls in, they are definitely worth the trip. The prices in the book were pretty accurate, although things tended to be a bit higher. But it is still quite inexpensive. We thought the book did a poor job of letting you know just how difficult it would be to get to many of the wilderness areas without your own car or hiring an expensive guide. Another thing to remember when planning your trip is that it is much cheaper in the North, and the buses are nicer and more plentiful. Overall, I thought it was a good book, but the authors could have been a bit more honest about the shortcomings of the country.
  Highly recommended - December 2, 2004 7 out of 8 found this review helpful
We travelled around Argentina out of season using this guide and the Rough Guide, and found that we turned time and again to the Footprint Guide for reliable and up-to-date information. I broke my ankle in Salta, but thanks to this guide, we were booked into a fantastic hotel, and later spent a few nights luxuriating in a gorgeous and fantastic value for money estancia in Pumamarca, which went some way towards saving the holiday from disaster. If you're thinking of going to Argentina, go now, and take this guide with you!
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