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E**O
Lonely Planet-Japan
Informative and comprehensive guide to Japan
A**R
Great book
Interesting book full of handy facts
H**G
A very detailed guide.
A very detailed guide to Japan that will be a bit bulky to use on the move.Great for planning.
D**G
Great book
Great bookVery informative and useful
M**
Indispensable. It’s as simple as that.
Yes. Yes. Yes. Buy. Buy. Buy.
M**U
definitely rec
Loved everything about it. Helped us a lot to plan our holiday to Japan, lots of helpful insights and advice. Totally recommend
K**K
A picture book not a guide
I have used LP for decades, often buying newer editions even when returning to the same location. I won't be using them anymore after having bought a number of guidebooks in the new design. In this case I already owned the previous Japan LP edition from 2021 in the old layout and can clearly compare the differences. The 2021 version was approx. 930 pages long, the new edition comes in at around 770 pages. With the new design LP have essentially become picture books, with lots more images and mini essays instead of listings, but their actual content and informative value has been reduced considerably. Some sections barely serve essential needs: per city one gets only a handful of accommodation recommendations, restaurants, bars, and shopping outlets to choose from. The maps inside the book are bizarrely faint and so minimalist that I wonder who is supposed to find their way with them (the detachable map of Tokyo has sensibly retained the old design and remains usable). Practical information on public transport, opening times, or addresses barely feature, or are difficult to locate. I guess the assumption is that readers are supposed to find these details by themselves searching online. The service and contexts sections at the end of the old LP books have been replaced by a generously illustrated 'Toolkit' (e.g. the LGBT section features a rainbow flag that takes up a fifth of the page, while the health and safety section weirdly focusses on beach safety signals, without mentioning essential health advice). Informative summaries on land and culture, meanwhile are now curated as a 'storybook' with 'curated' texts on random topics. This book may be useful for people who have their entire holidays organised for them and like to dip into some light reading while travelling, but for independent travellers it is useless. I am grateful that I bought the old edition which, despite being a few years old, will still serve me OK for my trip this year. For future journeys I will be looking for alternatives.
T**W
Confusing layout
This is ok, I just don’t like the way lonely planet sections out its information anymore. Please go back to writing by areas and towns rather than confusing ‘strolling along the river’ type titles where you have to search through to understand what you’re reading about. Town? Forest? City? Its hard to know. It’s a bit frustrating at times.
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