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Lonely Planet Jordan (Country Guide) (Country Travel Guide)
 
 

Lonely Planet Jordan (Country Guide) (Country Travel Guide) [Kindle Edition]

Matthew Firestone , Jenny WALKER
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Product Description

Nobody knows Jordan like Lonely Planet. Our 7th edition will help you discover the magic of this ancient land - whether it be basking in the sun-drenched glory of Petra, exploring the desert citadels, getting off the beaten track on a camel safari or simply sipping a bittersweet cardamom-flavored coffee. Lonely Planet guides are written by experts who get to the heart of every destination they visit. This fully updated edition is packed with accurate, practial and honest advice, designed to give you the information you need to make the most of your trip. In This Guide: Extended coverage of Petra and Wadi Rum. Full-color Outdoor guide covering hiking, camel trekking, cycling and more. Unique Green Index highlights the best eco-tourism options.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful
Travelling in Jordan 11 Mar 2010
By The 'Q'
Format:Paperback
Like all of the Lonely Planet books, this will be familiar to anyone who has used these books before; providing excellent and really helpful guidence and advice for travelling in Jordan. Having just returned, we found the information to be pretty accurate and it more than fulfilled the purpose for which we purchased the book. We'd certainly recommend it if you're thinking of travelling to Jordan. Although it doesn't have many pictures, it does have a huge amount of extra information and details that other guide books simply don't cover. We found that fellow travellers often asked if they could borrow it while we were there, as they found their alternative travel guides rather lacking in detail. Highly recommneded and easily worthy of 5 stars!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Quite O.K. 7 May 2011
Format:Paperback
I bought this book to read up on Jordan before a 7 nights trip to Aqaba, Petra, Wadi Rum and the Dead Sea. I found it to be O.K., containing the information expected. One thing that annoyed me was that the page references and references to illustrations were completely off. It also had plenty of grammatical errors. The combination of both makes me believe that this book was somewhat rushed and did not get all the proof reading it should have. Comparing with the book another traveller on the same tour had I noticed her book had much more useful maps in comparison. I wouldn't know about the rest though.

Still not a bad buy but I am wondering how other books compare...
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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
The 7th edition of Lonely Planet's guide to Jordan (written by Jenny Walker and Matthew D. Firestone) was published in 2009. I had it with me on a recent trip to Jordan during which I had the opportunity to check (some of) the facts presented in it - down to the smallest detail.

One thing I checked was the price level. In many cases the price to enter a museum or a historical site is still the same as it was in 2009. The typical price is 1 or 2 Jordanian Dinars.

[1 JD is almost the same as 1 Euro.]

One important exception is the price to enter Petra. According to the book the prices are 21, 26, or 31 JD for 1 day, 2 days or 3 days (page 218). But in 2010 the prices were raised dramatically, and in March 2011 they were as follows:

* 1 day 50 JD
* 2 days 55 JD
* 3 days 60 JD

This guidebook is in many ways useful and reliable, but I have to mention a few things which bother me. There are mistakes and misunderstandings which should not be found in any book - let alone in the 7th edition of a book.

Let me give you some examples:

(1) On page 131 we are told that "Christianity became the official state religion under Emperor Constantine in AD 324."

[An almost identical passage appears in the timeline on the bottom of page 40.]

[This is a common misunderstanding: The Rough Guide to Jordan makes the same claim - no less than three times: pp. 155, 265, and 366. The official guide who showed us around on the Citadel in Amman made the same claim.]

But it is not true. Constantine recognised Christianity in a decree of AD 313, but Christianity did not become the official state religion during his reign. This happened much later, during the reign of Theodosius (379-395). Some observers say it happened in AD 380, but perhaps it is more correct to say it happened in AD 391.

(2) On page 100 the Roman odeon in Amman is described as a "small amphitheatre." An odeon was built for music and songs; the shape is a semi-circle. An amphitheatre was built for spectacles with gladiators and wild animals (and has a different shape - it is an oval).

(3) On page 128 we are told that the Circus Maximus in Rome could seat "157,000 spectators." This strange figure looks like a misprint for 175,000. But even this round figure is not high enough. The Circus Maximus could seat some 250,000 spectators.

(4) On page 159 we are told the Roman emperor Caracalla ruled "AD 198-217." This is not true. Caracalla was born in 188, he was named Caesar in 196 and Augustus in 198, but he did not become emperor until the death of his father in 211.

(5) On page 169 we find the following passage: "For the minority Shiite, the lack of discord in the Muslim nation and the denial of Ali's heirs were grave injustices that simply could not be forgiven."

Something is wrong here: It cannot be "the lack of discord." It must be "the lack of unity" or perhaps "the discord."

(6) The map of Madaba (on page 185) gives the distance to two locations further south: "To Karak 86 km" and "To Mukawir 86 km." The first one is correct, but the second is wrong. The distance from Madaba to Mukawir is only about 33 km.

(7) The glossary on pp. 338-339 claims the word "decapolis" comes from Latin. This is not true; it comes from Greek.

If you think these mistakes are minor, please remember that this is the 7th edition of the book. Mistakes like these should have been discovered and corrected long ago.

There is a section on car travel (pp. 317-321) and in addition a brief section on maps (page 297), but one important suggestion is missing in both cases: if you are going to drive by yourself, you should get a GPS with your rental car. This may help you even more than a map. The price is about five JD per day.

In some cases the book's instructions for drivers are insufficient. For the desert castle Qasr Al-Hallabat, all we get is this: "If you're driving, the castle is located off Route 30." This is not good enough, because this place is quite difficult to find, as I know from personal experience.

[The castle was not in our GPS. We had to ask some local people to find it.]

On the cover of the 7th edition there is a picture of a Bedouin standing on top of the tholos of the Monastery in Petra. It is a great picture with a great composition: the small figure on top of the huge monument and the majestic mountains in the background. But there is something wrong with this picture.

You are not allowed to use the footpath and the steps which lead to the top of the monument, because it is dangerous. On the left side of the monument, where the footpath begins, there is a sign with the text "No climbing." But this picture may inspire some adventurous traveller to ignore the warning and climb the steps in order to stand where the Bedouin is standing in the picture.

The Monastery is presented on page 230, but the text has no warning against climbing the steps. The more I think about it, the more I feel it is irresponsible of Lonely Planet to use this photo. Do not attempt to copy what you see on the front cover!

For these reasons I can only give the book four out of five stars.
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