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Frommer's Puerto Rico, 4th Edition

Frommer's Puerto Rico, 4th Edition

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Authors: Darwin Porter, Danforth Prince
Publisher: MacMillan Publishing Company
Category: Book

List Price: $14.95
Buy Used: $0.01
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New (8) Used (27) from $0.01

Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 1450470

Media: Paperback
Edition: 4th Bk&Map
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 259
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.1 x 0.7

ISBN: 0028622715
Dewey Decimal Number: 917.2950453
UPC: 021898622716
EAN: 9780028622712
ASIN: 0028622715

Publication Date: August 11, 1998
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Shows definite wear, and perhaps considerable marking on inside. 100% Money Back Guarantee. Shipped to over one million happy customers. Your purchase benefits world literacy!

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Frommer's Puerto Rico
  • Paperback - Frommer's Puerto Rico
  • Paperback - Frommer's Puerto Rico (Frommer's Complete)
  • Paperback - Frommer's Puerto Rico
  • Paperback - Frommer's Puerto Rico (Frommer's Complete)
  • Paperback - Frommer's Puerto Rico

Similar Items:

  • Puerto Rico Off the Beaten Path, 5th (Off the Beaten Path Series)
  • Fodor's Puerto Rico, 4th Edition (Fodor's Gold Guides)
  • Rand McNally Puerto Rico Easyfinder (Rand McNally Easyfinder)
  • Moon Puerto Rico (Moon Handbooks)
  • Puerto Rico (Regional Guide)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Puerto Rico continues to grow in popularity, with tourism from the U.S. mainland up by 8.2% over last season. This year, weve completely rewritten our guide to the island with a fresh new voice, and weve added all-new and improved interior maps. Well give readers the lowdown on the spectacular hotels, casinos, and salsa clubs of San Juan and the leading resort areas, plus complete coverage of El Yunque Rain Forest and Vieques and Culebra islands, just offshore, with some of the loveliest beaches in the Caribbean.


Customer Reviews:

2 out of 5 stars Puerto Rico   May 14, 2007
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

I keep forgetting how much I don't care for Frommer's guides and wind up buying another one.

1. Frommer's has next to no pictures.
2. I think somebody went to a couple of random restaurants and beaches and decided to call them the "Best of".

For example, Frommer's says there is snorkeling at Luqillo beach, but there is none (unless all you want to see is sand). Luquillo is a great beach for swimming, but the snorkeling sucks.

Another example is the restaurant in the southeast part of the island called Tulio's. While it is a nice restaurant and our food was good, it is not cheap. At least I don't consider $20 a plate cheap.



2 out of 5 stars Map Problems   January 6, 2007
 9 out of 9 found this review helpful

Some maps in the guide don't reflect current reality eg the pull out map shows a major highway on the SE coast. However construction projects for many sections of that highway (Rt 53) have not yet commenced.

In general we had problems navigating because every map we picked up from guidebooks and tourist brochures was wrong, each in its own special way! If driving, do yourself a favor and buy a very detailed and up-to-date map before you head out.



4 out of 5 stars A Cultural Tour of Puerto Rico for Mid-Income Tourists   January 11, 2003
 19 out of 20 found this review helpful

This is a good guide for seeing the cultural sights of Puerto Rico, especially in San Juan. The book is geared towards travellers only moderately concerned with budget. A few pieces of information are outdated, such as bus numbers and changes in price, but the numbering system (up to three stars) is useful for the first-time traveller with little knowledge of the country. Detailed descriptions of the sights in San Juan help visitors get a sense of the city's history while the walking tour takes them around to key spots. There is a comparable walking tour of Ponce, along with a description of the Museo de Arte de Ponce which prevented me from missing out on this fine museum. Ponce is the only place where we tried one of the listed hotels. Although the book described Hotel Belgica as "roughing it," we thought the accommodations were fine and enjoyed the unusual atmosphere of an old-style hotel. The book is full of useful tidbits. For example, en route to Parguera (which should get two stars, not one), the name of the road changes several times along the way (101, 116, 315, 305, 304). No wonder people get confused. Additional information: The book should include a warning that the $5 boat trip to the Phosphorescent Bay near Parguera doesn't let you see much, so it's best to go with the friendly folks at Paradise Scuba Center (the address is listed). Additionally, the Rio Camuy Cave Park sometimes sells out of tickets by 9am (especially on weekends), so it's best to get there early. Finally, good snorkeling is available in San Juan on the west side of the Wyndham Hotel (Condado).


2 out of 5 stars Why doesn't someone write a decent travel guide to PR?   October 12, 1999
 45 out of 46 found this review helpful

I've used this guide for three PR vacations, and each time I want to throw it across the hotel room. But I can't because the other guides are even worse or even less comprehensive. What's the problem with this one? The lack of description: it gives you no feel as to what makes each beach/hotel unique. Invariably every second beach is summed up vaguely as 'one of the best beaches on the island,' even if one has brownish sand and no snorkling while another "best" beach is pristine white, loaded with fish, and secluded. It's the same with hotels, too, except there's no explanation of what the mood is like there, what kind of people stay there, what the view is like, what the rooms are like, if there's a bar to hang out in after dinner, how close the beach is.... It's almost comic, except when you're trying to figure out where to spend your precious time and money.

Another frustrating problem is that no one took the time to edit this guide. One beach or hotel will be mentioned in two (or three) places in entirely different tones, so it's hard to guess whether a place is just wacky or dirty (or, in the instance of La Parguera, too polluted to swim in one mention; just fine in another). Also, uninspired writing means a breathtaking mountain retreat like the Casa Grande Hotel in Utuado comes across as completely unremarkable and possibly worth skipping. Can't the writers come out and say "This place is great" or, if necessary, "This place is a dump?" A reader might wonder if these guys visited anything but bloated resorts at all. PR deserves better and I certainly expected better from Frommer's.


2 out of 5 stars This book had few redeeming qualities.   June 7, 1999
 27 out of 28 found this review helpful

My husband and I purchased this book to go on our honeymoon and were sorely disappointed. The descriptions were vague and often downright incorrect. Luquillo beach, which the authors described as one of the best beaches in the Carribean, had dingy grey water and was filled with garbage. This is only one example of many many misrepresentations. The guide leaned almost exclusively to very expensive restaurants, and even these were nothing to write home about. We had more luck after we ditched the guide and started exploring on our own. Its one good point was some interesting background on the history of Puerto Rico. However, this was not enough to make me buy another Frommer's guide.

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