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Ebook Lonely Planet Tasmania (Travel Guide), by Lonely Planet Brett Atkinson

Ebook Lonely Planet Tasmania (Travel Guide), by Lonely Planet Brett Atkinson

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Lonely Planet Tasmania (Travel Guide), by Lonely Planet Brett Atkinson

Lonely Planet Tasmania (Travel Guide), by Lonely Planet Brett Atkinson


Lonely Planet Tasmania (Travel Guide), by Lonely Planet Brett Atkinson


Ebook Lonely Planet Tasmania (Travel Guide), by Lonely Planet Brett Atkinson

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Lonely Planet Tasmania (Travel Guide), by Lonely Planet Brett Atkinson

About the Author

Born in Rotorua and raised in Auckland, proud North Islander Brett still proudly supports the Auckland Blues rugby team, but needs no encouragement at all to regale friends and family with stories of wild West Coast scenery, hang gliding above Queenstown, and taste-testing South Island micro-breweries. Six weeks on the road impressed him so much that in his retirement Brett plans to build scale model matchstick replicas of all of the one-way bridges on the West Coast. Home is currently a cosy apartment in Auckland with Carol. It may not be big enough for all those bridges.

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Product details

Series: Travel Guide

Paperback: 336 pages

Publisher: Lonely Planet; 6 edition (August 1, 2011)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 1741794617

ISBN-13: 978-1741794618

Product Dimensions:

5 x 0.7 x 7.8 inches

Shipping Weight: 13.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

3.7 out of 5 stars

12 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#1,665,581 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

This review is of the Kindle edition as experienced on an original Paperwhite. Lonely Planet guides in their paper form have served me well: I find them at least as helpful as other travel guides. I did not use this one enough to comment on its content, whence the narrow scope of these notes. Other forms of Kindle may be better than the Paperwhite at some tasks. But read on.I quickly decided the volume (not the device!) was useless. I found the graphics too difficult to bother with: as the extreme examples, I found the overall map of Tasmania and the key to icons both quite useless. And navigation is clumsy.As usual on the Paperwhite, maps are illegible and almost unusable: I say "almost", because if they were the only maps you had, you would persevere, and get something from them. I simply can't see anything like the detail I can on the paper equivalents. There is never a temptation to use a Kindle map on the Paperwhite if anything else can be found. In fact, the book has a paragraph which begins "E-reader devices vary in their ability to show our maps." Assess this aspect on your own device (using a sample, or other volumes from the same publisher) before relying on the legibility of maps and graphics: an approach might be to make sure that Lonely Planet's PDF maps, or their printouts, are available to you along with your Kindle text.The book abounds with helpful hyperlinks to appropriate web sites - so that tapping the screen to navigate forwards or back, or to go to the menu, can't be done without watching exactly what you're doing, else you soon inadvertently hit a link to a web page! This is almost inevitable when attempting to go forward or back a few pages quickly.Such internet links work ok, but most web pages (displayed as shades of grey on white) are not designed to be legible on the Paperwhite's browser, and I quickly decided not to bother.The Table of Contents contains a heading "ON THE ROAD", which can be expanded to show the sub-headings for various "chunks" of Tassie: "Hobart & Around"; "Tasman Peninsula & Port Arthur", etc. Each of these leads to six or eight further hyperlinks, which I found were not separated by enough white space to make for accurate touching. This necessary approach to geography always raises questions like "Is Dunalley regarded as part of Hobart and Around, or of the Tasman Peninsula and Port Arthur?" In a paper book, this is resolved by consulting the index - which the Kindle edition does not have. So you do a text search (hoping you have remembered whether Dunalley has an "e" in it or not) and try to deduce which of the results point to the principal references as opposed to incidental mentions. (You want to try this for charming and charmingly-named Snug: snug tearooms and snug cottages clutter the search results alarmingly!)If you select the main "ON THE ROAD" heading instead of one of its sub-headings, you are taken to a page of all the sub-headings each with its own sub-headings - all hyperlinks. However, since these are the sole contents of these pages, and since there is no left margin, it is impossible to page back on the Paperwhite, for you always have to touch a hyperlink to somewhere else! This is doubtless not a problem on non-touchscreen devices.There are many hyperlinks to other places in the book (usually with the text "Click here"). These work well, and the "back" button on the main menu takes you back to where you came from.Many headings, and boldface items in the text, are in an insipid grey - still legible, but the form is at odds with the message.So, here are the main complaints:First, I suspect that any electronic version of a travel guide should contain a hyperlinked index. A travel guide is almost the quintessential reference book, and it is important to be able to find what you want and navigate there without fuss. Some other aspects of navigating the book are clumsy.Second, the strangeness of the "unhighlighted" grey for emphasis is something that is fixable.Third, maps and other graphics seem to be the weakest part of a Paperwhite display: where graphics are not essential, normal text would seem to be a better option.Fourth, I can't think of a solution to the unfortunate marriage between a volume which contains many hyperlinked web references (which I imagine are very useful on some devices), and a technology requiring page-taps to navigate forwards and back!

During my travels I have used quite a few different travel guides but Lonely Planet is a travel guide series I always return to because I've always made good experiences with the guides - the information always turned out to be reliable and thanks to the guides I was often able to either choose or avoid certain places/accommodation providers (not a fan of accommodation that is too noisy). I always supplement the travel guides with information from information centres and the internet, so I get the most up to date info but the Lonely Planet guides always give me a very good starting point and the maps are really useful!I gave the guide only four stars because it lacks tours and extensive information for people who have more than 10 days to explore a place, and because too much information was repeated in the beginning. You could easily skip part of the book if you are after detailed information.

A reasonable guidebook, w. seemingly little effort put into making it a kindle book. It's very difficult and time consuming to navigate around in it because of this. It needs to be searchable and 'smart' as opposed to it's current 'dumb as a sack of rocks state'.

This book guide ma very well while I travel in Tasmania. I could be better if it include more detail map of each site, including Cradle mountain hiking map.

Because it had so much unknown info, I hadn't found anywhere.Very explicit. Great map. Outstanding pictures. Sent it to my brother who is planning trip to Tasmania in December. Says he could never have planned the trip without it !!!!!!!!!

Excellent book, just sorry the new edition will not be available when I need it.

We used this guidebook extensively during our 7 day exploration of Tasmania (about 7 days too short). Lots of history, interesting details about some of the more out-of-the-way towns in the middle of the island. A good companion for our trip.

while I do realize this was a lonely planet book it still fell a bit short compared to some of my other lonely planet purchases. I was disappointed by the lack of details related to tent-camping sites for a state that is the "wilderness state." The book could have had better details on the national parks and trails. The book did have some wonderful tips about 'good eats' in Tassie. This book needs to be updated because several times on our trip we would go somewhere recommended only to find out it was not there- also, it would be helpful if it included more inclusive information about associated fees with areas such as port arthur- tassie was great and the guide somewhat helpful- the map was worthless. Better than other tassie guide books.

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