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Home : Travel to Canada :
Review:Lonely Planet Montreal
Travel to Provinces
Travel-helper.com review all the media and related products you need to make your travel to Provinces more than perfect. Check out "Lonely Planet Montreal" below.
Lonely Planet Montreal
Format: Paperback
Author: Jeremy Gray
ReleaseDate: June, 2004
Publisher: Lonely Planet Publications
Rating:
Disappointing 
This book is very poorly organized, the "French dictionary" contained no useful phrases, and the maps were terrible!! I would definitely choose something more comprehensive & buy a separate city map.
good, but could've been much better 
a map of the metro which most other books didn't seem to have), good info. i picked this book out of the ones at the bookstore b/c i liked the look of it: good number of pictures, good maps (inc. -however-, a huge drawback to this book is its poor organization. if you're looking at one of the street maps in the book, the landmarks, etc. aren't marked by page number, so you have to look up the landmark in the index (which they have separated into food, accomodations, sites instead of all together, which proved to be very annoying), and then flip back to the page in the book. also, the book is organized again according to categories (food, sites, shopping, etc. ) instead of by area, so if you're trying to build a list of things to do in one part of the city you have to keep flipping back and forth from the maps to the indices to the book, which is a huge effort that could've been fixed w/ better planning. this is really too bad, b/c o/w it has a lot of good info. next time i'm def. getting a book by a diff. company.
another good Lonely Planet guidebook 
As to be expected from Lonely Planet, the color maps at the back are great and the three walking tours really give you a feel for the city. I used this guidebook while visiting Montreal in summer 2001 and had no problems at all. The restaurant list was excellent, especially an extended section on Montreal's famous bagels. There was a large chapter on excursions from Montreal, which included Ottawa, Quebec City and the Laurentian mountains among other places. All the standard Lonely Planet bits on history, culture, arts and religion were very informing; best was the little section on Canadian French where I learned to say "y'est quelle heure" instead of "quelle heure est-il. " The only complaint I could have was the lack of a map of the underground shopping city, which we found confusing to navigate, even with the map provided by the tourist authority. Otherwise it's as good a guidebook to Montreal as you're likely to find anywhere.
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