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Women's Fiction
Lonely Planet Norway (Norway, 2nd Ed)

Lonely Planet Norway (Norway, 2nd Ed)

List Price: $19.99
Your Price: $13.59
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Definitive Trave Guide on Norway (4 1/2 Stars)
Review: Deanna Swaney (along with and Mark Griffith's outstanding mapping and design) have produced the definitive travel guide on Norway.

Deanna Swaney's writing is both engaging and descriptive. In my "must have" list, to qualify a guide as "excellent", are easy to read maps. This book has the best maps found in any Norway travel guide. The superb information and recommendations are reliable and though the publication date is 1999 (thus the information is pre '99). Norway is a stable nation with very low inflation and the prices are close to the quotes.

"Lonely Planet Norway" has a solid introduction section that covers Norway's history, government, economy, ecology, climate etc. This guide has an informative, practical, travel section and, most important, a reliable and up to date listing of recommendations that Swaney has checked out (lodging, restaurants, entertainment, places to see and things to do). At the start of each section is a regional map, more maps, and a list of highlights or "must see" for that region. Great!

Deanna must not be a motorcycle afficionado for there is no mention in her book of motorcycle rental in Norway. I rented a Harley in Trondheim for a week of travel through the Western Fjords, Central Norway and the Trondelag region. Brilliant way to see this glorious country, but, beware the weather is more temperamental than a manic Chihuahua. It can and will go from warm to cold to wet back to sun in the space and distance of one hours travel. My motorcycle rental did include the all-purpose riding gear, I brought my own helmet.

A weak area is the intermittent use of email/web site addresses. These are very helpful, especially for hotel quotes and reservations. I am sure this will be addressed when the next edition comes out.

This is the best guide out on Norway, my second choice is Norway: The Rough Guide (see my review). If you are heading to Norway, get 'Lonely Planet', you will be glad you did. Highly Recommended

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Generally a good book
Review: During my two-week whirlwind driving tour around southern Norway, I used both LP Norway along with Fodor's Norway, and found Lonely Planet to be much more informative and better at capturing the essence of the country. I'm basing my opinion on both this trip and my previous experience living in Stavanger for 3 years as a teenager. This year's journey covered a lot of ground, originating in Stavanger, heading south along the coast through Kristiansand, northeast through Oslo, north through Lillehammer, and west through Lom to Geiranger, and then south through Gudvangen, Stalheim, and Bergen and back to Stavanger. In most regards, this book was pretty much right on the mark.

One aspect of the book which bothered me was the fact that it placed too much emphasis on Svalbard, an island archipelago halfway between mainland Norway and the North Pole, and not enough emphasis on central and southern Norway, where over 98% of the population lives and the bulk of the tourist kroner are spent.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: fun reading but apparently not-so-accurate
Review: I adore Lonely Planet guides and bought this to plan a trip to Tromsø from where to explore Lofoten, Troms, and Finnmark. The person coaching me on my visit and with whom I've got crash space if I get there before they head off travelling themselves is from Havenstøy and goes to school in Tromsø -- they read this guide while visiting New Zealand and said it's rather inaccurate regarding the northern part of Norway. Not having gone yet, I cannot confirm this but it's a great read for background information and b/c I've had astounding luck with Lonely Planet guides elsewhere I'll be sticking with it regardless.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: fun reading but apparently not-so-accurate
Review: I adore Lonely Planet guides and bought this to plan a trip to Tromsø from where to explore Lofoten, Troms, and Finnmark. The person coaching me on my visit and with whom I've got crash space if I get there before they head off travelling themselves is from Havenstøy and goes to school in Tromsø -- they read this guide while visiting New Zealand and said it's rather inaccurate regarding the northern part of Norway. Not having gone yet, I cannot confirm this but it's a great read for background information and b/c I've had astounding luck with Lonely Planet guides elsewhere I'll be sticking with it regardless.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great for students
Review: I went to Norway in the summers of 2000 and 2001, and both times I brought a Lonely Planet book. I found them to be very informative, and when I went from Oslo-Bergen-Trondheim-Oslo, they were very helpful in finding hostels and places to eat. Overall, it was a good buy. Compared to the Fodor's guide, this one was aimed more to budget travellers (i.e. students).

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good guide, altought with some weak points
Review: I've been recently travelling all around Norway, from South to North, including the Arctic archipelago of Svalbard. I found this guide generally very useful, but weak when it comes to talk about the Nordland, the Far North (Troms and the Finnmark) and Svalbard. For example, Lofoten is surely a fascinating place especially for hikers - like I suppose the author is - but many description are exhagerated and you might be disappointed once there - like I was. The Nordland is not sufficiently covered and the information sometimes might be poor in contents. Same about the Finnmark. The Svalbard part of the guide could be more exhaustive, altought I agree is a surely less touristic place than Bergen as a matter of fact is. There is space for improvements, but you cannot find anything better packed.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A daunting task...
Review: Norway's a deceptively large country with many, many small towns and interesting regions, all of which are separated by large distances. This book scratches the surface of all of them.

I found the guide fairly weak for southwestern Norway (Stavanger & Bergen areas). While it did direct me to the more obvious tourist areas, I felt as if I had no idea about 90% of the other things I could do.

In summary, because they try to cover the whole country in one book, the coverage of any one area tends to be superficial.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A daunting task...
Review: Norway's a deceptively large country with many, many small towns and interesting regions, all of which are separated by large distances. This book scratches the surface of all of them.

I found the guide fairly weak for southwestern Norway (Stavanger & Bergen areas). While it did direct me to the more obvious tourist areas, I felt as if I had no idea about 90% of the other things I could do.

In summary, because they try to cover the whole country in one book, the coverage of any one area tends to be superficial.


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