Experience the best of Prague with "DK Eyewitness Travel Guide: Prague." This newly updated travel guide for Prague will lead you straight to the best attractions this city has to offer, from strolling across the Charles Bridge in the early morning to sampling regional brews at bars and kavarnas to exploring the grounds of historic Prague Castle. Themed itineraries help plan trips to Prague by length of stay or by interest. Neighborhood walking maps include restaurant locations by area. Hotel and restaurant listings include DK Choice special recommendations. Inside "DK Eyewitness Travel Guide: Prague," you'll find DK's famous cutaway illustrations of major architectural and historic sights, museum floor plans, and 3-D aerial views of key districts to explore on foot, along with in-depth coverage of the city's history and culture. A free pull-out city map is marked with sights from the guidebook and includes a street index, a metro map, and a chart showing the walking distances between major sights.
With hundreds of full-color photographs, hand-drawn illustrations, and custom maps that illuminate every page, "DK Eyewitness Travel Guide: Prague" truly shows you this city as no one else can."
Dorling Kindersley (DK) is a British multinational publishing company specializing in illustrated reference books for adults and children in 62 languages. It is part of Penguin Random House, a consumer publishing company jointly owned by Bertelsmann SE & Co. KGaA and Pearson PLC. Bertelsmann owns 53% of the company and Pearson owns 47%.
Established in 1974, DK publishes a range of titles in genres including travel (including Eyewitness Travel Guides), arts and crafts, business, history, cooking, gaming, gardening, health and fitness, natural history, parenting, science and reference. They also publish books for children, toddlers and babies, covering such topics as history, the human body, animals and activities, as well as licensed properties such as LEGO, Disney and DeLiSo, licensor of the toy Sophie la Girafe. DK has offices in New York, London, Munich, New Delhi, Toronto and Melbourne.
Great organization, eye-catching photography, well written narrative and superb cartography! DK Eyewitness Travel guides have got it all but, for me, it's the photography that really separates them from the competition. And Prague covers it all - restaurants, music, beer halls, walks, art galleries, museums, spas, architecture, palaces, hotels, cafés, theatres and churches. And all of the information is organized by neighbourhood in the city so I can make the most effective use of my time once I'm in a certain area.
Here's the outline of the guide in a little more detail:
How to use this guide
Introducing Prague ...A Suggested Four Day Itinerary ...Prague on the Map ...The History of Prague ...Prague at a Glance ...Through the Year (events, holidays) ...A River View of Prague
Prague Area by Area, each section includes: ...Introduction to street by street area ......Detailed pictorials of area buildings ......Architectural drawings, pictures, cut-aways of buildings ......Specific stops, historical monuments, churches, buildings, etc. ...Further Afield (trips just outside Prague) ...Four Guided Walks (highly recommended)
Travelers Needs - includes full list with rankings and notes ...Hotels ...Restaurants, bars, cafes ...Shops / Markets ...Entertainment
Survival Information ...Practical ......Tourist info., Etiquete, Personal Security and Health ......Currencies, Telephones, misc info. ...Getting to Prague ...Getting Around Prague ......Planes, trains and automobiles, signs ......Street Maps ......General Index ...Phrase Book
As far as the phrase book is concerned, Czech is exceptionally difficult to learn and pronounce (among other problems, for example, their nouns are declined with no less than seven cases!) I found that most of the locals have enough broken tourist English to allow even the most linguistic phobic tourist to survive. But, and this is the most basic common courtesy, I recommend you learn at least the Czech words for "please" and "thank you", (prosím and d'kuji vám). Two other mandatory words in a surviving tourist's vocabulary (in this humble traveler's opinion) have to be pivo (beer) and toalety (toilets). Frankly, everything else is luxury and amounts to learning above and beyond the call of duty.
Here's my "best practices" strategy. Read Top 10 Prague first. Make some basic choices, get your mind wrapped around Prague's geography and begin to localize your choices to certain areas. Fine tune your choice and plan your attack day by day by reading Prague. Familiarize yourself with some of the local customs by reading the basic country information in the back of the larger Prague guide - currency, communications, etiquette, food, beer and wine, local transportation and specialized hints like local tipping practices.
Why not five stars? Frankly, with the internet now providing so much current information, I can't see the value in attempting to include lengthy (and probably outdated) lists of hotels and restaurants in densely packed small print index lists at the back of a book like this. There are some outdated addresses which resulted in time wasted on unsuccessful searches for a couple of stores and restaurants which have either moved or closed down. There are also references to a couple of palaces that are now converted to embassies or businesses that are closed to the public. Since they're now at best an external photo op, I'd rather see the space devoted to smaller homes or sites of historical interest that can be still be toured.
I'm being obsessed with Prague right now. I've never actually read a guidebook from cover to cover because I typically use the internet to learn about places but, in this case, I actually just wanted to learn all I could about the city without anyone's opinions on it. Not only is this where Daughter of Smoke and Bone takes place, but at the turn of the century, my mother's family immigrated from towns just outside Prague that DON'T have books about them so reading about Prague, I felt, would give me the best sense of the history of the area without actually having to read a textbook :)
And I was right! There is a great historical section at the beginning of this book with lots of pictures and timelines that are great reference - plus, as you read about different buildings or areas, they provide the original historical page numbers so you can go back and remind yourself about what you learned and place it in historical context.
I really loved learning about this ancient city. I feel like I have a sense of the basic conflicts and resolutions as well as the actual geography of the space - the different districts and major landmarks. The graphics in this guide book are quite good and there MANY colorful maps and diagrams. My only complaint (why it gets 4 stars instead of 5) is that sometimes things felt a bit out of order. In general, there would be a map of a district, say New Town, and on that map are lots of numbers that correspond to different paragraphs about that specific place. Almost always, it would go map then paragraphs (so you could go back and forth to reference). And then a couple times, there would be additional numbers that weren't on that initial map and so I'd search all around and find that number on a later map and that was annoying. Consistency would've been better - or a notation to see map on pg. # whatever.
Of course, at the end there are practical sections for people who are actually going to travel there, which seem to be very thorough and up-to-date, but probably I would always look online first before traveling to make sure things haven't changed. I did skim through most of that stuff but there appears to be lots of suggestions for hotels/restaurants, etc. I don't actually know if they skipped anything important but it was really full of information and for places of larger significance (the most popular cathedrals/art galleries/palaces) they would get their own two page spreads with suggested walking routes and particular things to look out for.
I think this book is really well done and an awesome resource for people who either are going to travel there or just want to learn about this major city and the surrounding area.
I bought this after first starting to visit Eastern Europe and after having already been to Prague, I wanted to have a great guide when going there the next time - which this book beautifully fullfilled. Ironically, wasn't really needed when there as was staying with a Czech local who lived in Prague so what it ened up serving as was a great memento of my wonderful stay in this still beautiful city. While my edition has since been updated, it came at the time before the likes of McDonald's sprung up there and 'modernised' the experience. In the book are detailed, full colour diagrams and city highlights to help you find and identify key sites. If you are visiting Prague, especially if not with a local, this book is a fantastic asset for your time there. Yes, you can pay to follow a tour guide along the 'tourist trails' where you will spend time amongst a swarm of others - or you can do use this book to do it independently, step a few metres off their overly beaten track, and also explore the areas of Prague normally known only by locals.
We adore these comprehensive guide books. They are small enough to fit in your pocket or handbag. They contain lots of information, colour drawings, explanations, interesting facts, tips, information, full-colour pictures, descriptions, recommendations and a fold-out map. They are well edited and very well thought through. We have a lot of them and I am happy to recommend them for a short break in a foreign city.
I was a travel agent for 23 years - in my late, lamented youth - and prepared many European trips for clients. I wish then that I had had a book like "DK Eyewitness Prague" to work with. These books, which come out yearly, are the best, most complete siteseeing guides produced today. They are mostly siteseeing because while they give a few suggestions for restaurants and hotels, the books' publishers realise that those things are covered by websites devoted to up-to-date info on dining and accommodations.
"DK Eyewitness Prague, 2019" is the latest in the Prague guide series. I think this year's book is a bit lighter than in previous editions. The front and back covers are thinner than before, and that makes a difference in carrying the book with you OR committing burn/slash on the book, cutting out the needed pages. That's what I was doing with the books when I travel.
Now, as for the book itself. I go to Prague every two or three years so I'm fairly familiar with the city and it's sites. The DK Eyewitness books cover the sites in great detail. They highlight small, out of the way museums and historic sites. The book is so detailed that a high school or college history professor could use the book in teaching the history of Berlin. By the way, the book is also available in Kindle.
J'aime les guides qui donnent du contexte historique. Cependant, après le voyage, j'ai trouvé que les suggestions offertes étaient des offres banales que j'ai ignoré.
Decent travel guide. I am not the biggest fan of travel guides as I feel you can get a lot more information and up to date advice online. I only read travel books if I borrow them from the library.