This guide to Sri Lanka provides practical information on most aspects of travel, including health and safety advice, information on local cuisine, advice on customs and etiquette, historical and cultural information, and maps.
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.
My full review to come, but I have found this an indispensable resource for planning my trip to Sri Lanka. I’ll see how accurate it is and report back!
Some useful information like how to travel between different areas and stuff to do in each place, but quite out of date information regarding where to stay at times. Also sometimes oversells how good a place is or how long to spend there e.g. 3-4 hours in Galle Fort which is actually quite small to walk around and would only take that long if you went into every shop.
When I'm planning a trip there are certain travel books that are my go-to guides. Turns out that many of my go-to companies do not publish a book on Sri Lanka. Seriously? Been dipping in and out of this guide book, highlighting, planning, dreaming, getting excited. While this is a good overall introduction, it is not of the caliber I expect from Lonely Planet.
Pri prvom plánovaní dlhšieho výletu po krajine pomohla. Prakticky sme ju počas troch týždňov na Srí Lanke nosili stále so sebou. Ale akosi automaticky sme po nej siahali stále menej a menej.
Kniha je to úslužná, obsahuje mnoho máp, navrhovaných trás podľa času stráveného v krajine, oboznámi vás s históriou aj aktuálnou situáciou, obsahuje tiež základný slovník, veľa fotiek a všetkého možného, čo vie pomôcť.
Treba však filtrovať, pretože tieto guide sú ako články pseudotravel blogeriek - množstvo veci si pri lowcost cestovani nedokážete, či ani nechcete dovoliť.
It was good for a generic weekend guide; however, I found it surprisingly judgmental and overly opinionated about some of the areas. A specific example being Unawatuna. Why it's not necessarily my cup of tea, it does appeal to others and was far from what the author described. I just feel a Lonely Planet guide book should stick to the facts and be some what neutral, taking into account that all types of people travel, not every one is a 20-something backpacker.
Lonely Planet’s Sri Lanka guide was my go-to for planning an unforgettable trip—from the beaches of Mirissa to the tea hills of Ella, it covered everything with practical insights and local flavor. One tip that made my journey smoother: applying for the Sri Lanka eVisa online [ https://www.govt.sl/en-us/apply.php ] in advance. It was super easy and saved me from long lines at the airport. If you're heading to this gem of an island, definitely get your eVisa sorted before you fly!
I read two guides. I liked this one the second best. Sri Lanka is huge. It's hard to find info on it at the current time. this book was fairly close to what I saw. That said, there is a dire need for more info on this country. It just extremely dense with sites.
Great country but I’m a bit over Lonely Planet. No more cartilage crunching alliteration.
Sri Lanka has a lot to offer. The book covers the standard tourist stuff that happens to be on the foreigner lists. But listen to locals and go where they say also. Less touristy, less cost and still amazing.
Normally the Lonely Planet series books are useful and close to the the reality/Truth.
This book completely missed the mark in many ways.
To Authors: Ryan Ver Berkmoes, Stuart Butler and Amy Karafin: PLEASE read the well researched, valuable Huffington Post article and update your kindle version and/or update your next version of the book.
If you understood and really felt about the Holocaust, the different Genocides (Armenian, Rwandan), then it makes sense to do the Ethical Tourism in Sri Lanka:
I like the Lonely Planet. Having discussed Sri Lanka with a couple of friends who have been the recommendations seem pretty good. The real proof will be when we go in July !