Time Out Paris

  • ISBN13: 9781846701689
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description

Time Out Paris helps visitors maximize a trip to the City of Lights, whether it’s a short visit or an extended stay. Along with the major attractions, it gives the inside track on local culture, with candid reviews of great brasseries, chic boutiques, and tips about places only locals frequent. Explore as much on foot as possible, with the help of Time Out’s user-friendly maps with venues clearly marked. Fully illustrated feature chapters give journalistic insight into the history and architecture of Paris. Several day-trips are also recommmended.

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4 Responses to “Time Out Paris”

  • Steven Lang says:

    I spend one week in Paris every year. Updated annually, Time Out Paris keeps me advised of scheduling changes at museums and other public facilities, new methods of paying for public transport, and the evolution of interesting neighborhoods off the usual tourist circuit.

    It’s a little thin with regard to hotels, but Trip Advisor is the better source of this information.
    Rating: 4 / 5

  • I am a frequent user of timeout ny and found this guide to be very helpful to find the kinds of spots I like. The off the beaten path sites, quaint cafe’s and tasty restaurants, none of which were overly touristy.
    Rating: 4 / 5

  • Carl Stewart says:

    I have always been a big admirer of the Time Out guides. Whether the editors are writing about the “big” ones, e.g., Paris, London, Rome, or some of the less well-known cities and places, they do it with great erudition, and they also tend to avoid the cliches. No one needs a book on Paris touting the wonders of the Tour Eiffel or the Louvre.

    If you pack one book for a Paris trip, I think that there can be little question that this one is the right one.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  • Jackal says:

    I like this guide, which is organised around the different areas of town. The restaurant suggestions are especially valid in my view. But this is not Michelin sophistication. It is a British guide afterall. Don’t care so much about the hotels. There is also historial/background introductions. Where the book is weak is in somewhat off the beaten track attractions. I can also recommend Michelin’s green Paris guide. That book is stronger on high culture, but certainly not the only domain of that guidebook.
    Rating: 5 / 5


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