Lonely Planet : un guide tout en couleurs illustré par des centaines de photos pour découvrir le meilleur de la Suisse Un guide tout en couleurs, illustré par des centaines de photos. Le lac Léman et Genève, le Cervin, Grindelwald et la région de la Jungfrau, les randonnées dans le Parc national suisse, le Glacier Express pour Saint-Moritz, Zurich, Lausanne, le lac de Constance, les sports d'hiver... tous les incontournables de la Suisse réunis dans ce volume. Les meilleures choses à voir et à faire sur place, par région et par thématique : le top des randonnées, des pistes de ski, des musées d'art, de la cuisine locale... Une sélection d'itinéraires pour découvrir le meilleur de la Suisse, quel que soit le temps dont on dispose (5, 10 ou 14 jours). Des sections ciblées sur les voyages en famille, les sports d'hiver et d'été, les stations thermales et les spas, les arts et le design... Un découpage de la Suisse en 6 sous-régions, avec pour chacune les expériences et lieux à ne pas manquer, des suggestions d'itinéraires, des adresses (hôtels, restaurants, circuits, activités, shoppings, bars...), de nombreux plans et cartes, et les principaux sites décrits dans le détail.
OUR STORY A beat-up old car, a few dollars in the pocket and a sense of adventure. In 1972 that’s all Tony and Maureen Wheeler needed for the trip of a lifetime – across Europe and Asia overland to Australia. It took several months, and at the end – broke but inspired – they sat at their kitchen table writing and stapling together their first travel guide, Across Asia on the Cheap. Within a week they’d sold 1500 copies and Lonely Planet was born. One hundred million guidebooks later, Lonely Planet is the world’s leading travel guide publisher with content to almost every destination on the planet.
I have been a connoisseur of travel books since I was in elementary school, and once adored Lonely Planet. I spent a few months living in Zurich, and then a year living in a small ski resort in the Suisse Romande called Villars-sur-Ollon. This text was my guide for my time in Zurich, and I found it to be terrible. Lonely Planet focuses too much on the cities now, and provides little context aside from an oddly chosen and dry assortment of history/culture narrative at the end of the book. For Switzerland, the authors chose to do this "anti-Switzerland" approach, eschewing the outdoor activities, small villages, etc., for oddly curated "non-traditional" sights and such. I would be all for this if it was done well; however, it is not. It's love for Lausanne's cultural sights is curious, as is the fact that it largely ignores areas like Ticino and Basel, and almost excludes the less popular areas around Neuchâtel. This guide does not paint a portrait of Switzerland, but rather presents a disjointed, misguided image of a country that is all but perfect. The beauty of Switzerland is the ability to get anywhere with public transport, and thus, the small villages are readily accessible and should be paid more attention to. Some people do in fact come to Switzerland to do outdoor activities, also, and I bet those thousands of individuals would have liked a tiny bit of information regarding those endeavors as opposed to excessive gushing about the (albeit very awesome) Geiger Bar in Gruyères. I was so disappointed with this book during my time as a Swiss resident that I switched my allegiance once and for all to the more thoughtful, readable companions that are the Rough Guide. Don't even get me started on the Lonely Planet for Ireland.
Page 27 says that Carnival sweeps through the Catholic cantons in February, and mentions that you can catch it in Basel. The problem with that statement is that Basel's celebration is, first and foremost, PROTESTANT, not Catholic--that's what sets it apart from all the others! Not only should a well-established company like theirs know this, but they also have a writer living there, and they still got it wrong.
There's no mention of the fact that Basel's Fasnacht lasts for 72 hours either, or that it closes nearly every attraction in the city for its entire duration. This is important information that a traveler needs to know ahead of time. My husband and I went to Basel on our honeymoon in 2011, and didn't know Fasnacht was happening then, and many of the things we planned to see we just had to skip, because they were closed due to Fasnacht. Travel books in 2011 didn't outline the impact of the celebration in Basel either, or we could've been clued-in ahead of time.
The information in this book is incredibly sparse. Lonely Planet guides used to be thicker & more comprehensive, & I wish they were still like that. Disappointed. You'll have better luck with a DK Eyewitness or Fodor's guide--not Rick Steves' Switzerland book though, because it doesn't even mention Basel, as though they don't even think it's worth visiting.
If you want a guide book with pictures this isn't for you. Really good off-the-beaten-track advise. Considering it was my 4th trip to the country, I still found lots of fascinating things to do using it and marked some more off for my next visit.