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Lonely Planet Chicago (City Guide)

Lonely Planet Chicago (City Guide)

Product Type: Book

Product Price: $18.99

Manufacturer: Lonely Planet

Purchase

Description

Discover Chicago

Splash in Millennium Park's Crown Fountain, with its gargoyle-style video fountain
Canvass West Loop galleries, Chicago's beachhead for contemporary arts
Browse Wicker Park boutiques for vintage pillbox hats, graphic novels and Tortise CDs
Score bleacher seats for the Cubs at Wrigley Field

In This Guide:

Three authors, 1800 research hours, 97 well-tested bars, clubs and concert halls
Expanded coverage of Chicago's culinary scene, from gourmet hot dogs to celebrity chefs
New itinerary Builder helps you choose your own adventure

Reviews

Rating: 2 / 5
Date: 2010-07-27
Summary: "decent guide book but bogus page references"

This might be the best Chicago guide book available -- I don't know of a better alternative, but I think I would look for one if I were traveling there again. The biggest problem is that very many of the page number references throughout the book are just plain wrong! For example on page 51 in the section titled Famous Loop Architecture is a reference to tours offered by the Chicago Architecture Foundation on page 262. But page 262 has sections for Relocating, Safety, Taxes, and Telephone usage -- nothing about Chicago Architecture Foundation or tours or architecture. Sometimes it's possible to find the reference a few pages nearby the referred page but at least half the time I just had to scratch my head and wonder.

Also the book is laid out quite differently from other LP books. I've used LP books all over the world and this one just wasn't as helpful as I hoped.


Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2010-05-16
Summary: "Lonely Planet Guide to Chicago"

My brother (a UK resident) based his entire 3-day visit to Chicago on this guide and had a great time. He is an experienced traveler to all parts of the globe [Europe, Asia, South America etc.] and Lonely Planet is his first choice of guidebook.


Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2010-04-25
Summary: "Useful travel guide to the City of Big Shoulders"

I recently attended the Midwest Political Science Association in Chicago. So, this volume has some real interest for me, as I check out its recommendations and compare with my experience over time. I stayed at the Intercontinental (the conference hotel, the Palmer House, was sold out). Both hotels are accurately reviewed here. The refurbished lobby of the Palmer House is a delight! I was used to the decayed beauty for many years and find the new lobby wonderful!

But this volume is about more than hotels. There is a serviceable history of Chicago. I love the juxtaposition of Richard Daley pere et fils. Recently, Richard M. Daley became the longest serving mayor in Chicago history, beating out his dad, Richard J. Daley!

Chicago, as other large cities, features many neighborhoods, each with its own personality. Among these: The Loop, Near North and Navy Pier, Gold Coast, Lincoln Park and Old Town, South Loop and Near South Side, and so on. The book explores the neighborhoods and gives a sense of their unique features. It then notes shopping, eating, drinking, and hotels neighborhood by neighborhood. In addition, the book covers nightlife, the arts (of which there is an abundance--from high art [the Art Institute, Symphony Hall] to more popular art), sports (Duh Bears! The Cubbies, the White Sox, the Bulls, Black Hawks, and so on), and day trips.

As with all such volumes, one can debate. There are eateries not mentioned here that easily could be (for instance, I've always liked Stetson's at the Hyatt Regency, for its delectable beef). But that's part of the fun with a book like this.

Anyhow, going to Chicago? This is one useful travel guide. . . .


Rating: 2 / 5
Date: 2010-03-24
Summary: "A Nice Look at Half of a City."

If you enter Chicago from the east along I-94 or I-90 you would cross city limits at the Indiana-Illinois border or at the Calumet River. According to this book, however, you would seemingly not enter Chicago until you reached Roosevelt Road after another dozen-or-so miles. By focusing overwhelmingly on the North Side of the city, the book deprives its readers of some of the most inspiring and memorable features of what Norman Mailer called "the last of the great American cities."

True, Lonely Planet does a serviceable job covering the tourist meccas of the Magnificent Mile and Cubs-fanatic Wrigleyville; it might be sufficient for someone whose only goal is to kill boredom for a weekend in Chicago, and there's nothing wrong in that. But I look at visiting a new city as an opportunity to really get under the skin of a place; to absorb the sights and sounds of an exciting and unfamiliar world, and the Lonely Planet Guide to Chicago is deficient when it comes to sharing what makes Chicago Chicago.

For example, you can't come to terms with the meaning of baseball in this town unless you deal with the rivalry between the North Side Cubs and the 2005 World Series Champion White Sox on the South Side. But here, the latter is given a succinct and somewhat disparaging review and isn't even entitled to an entry in the Index. The History section makes a brief mention of black migration to "glitzy images of thriving neighborhoods like Bronzeville" with a reference to a half-page spent on that neighborhood (compared to six pages spent on the Gold Coast). The Pullman neighborhood, formerly a company-owned village and site of one of the defining strikes in American labor history doesn't even warrant a mention, despite city-run walking tours and a host of national accolades and historic designations. Surprisingly, even Downtown Chicago gets short shift here. The Chicago Loop is the second-largest business district in the U.S., after Midtown Manhattan, yet it is given a mere ten pages of this 280 page book, shouldered aside to make room for an extensive look at the Navy Pier tourist trap. These are just a few of many omissions, and they are not trivial.

The book isn't a total wash. What it does cover it tends to cover well, and the interesting and insightful sidebars provide a more nuanced look at this fascinating place than the table of contents would suggest. But if you want to meet Chicago for the first time -- if you want to see the postcard skyline *and* meet some of the characters that made Studs Terkel's "Division Street" such a powerful and revealing work, you'll have to go a little further than Lonely Planet will take you. Scour contents of guides to Chicago (quick and easy to do here at Amazon), and when you find one with headings for Bridgeport, Bronzeville, Pilsen, and Lincoln Park, you've probably found a winner.


Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2008-11-29
Summary: "Learning a new city"

My family and I relocated to the Chicago area, and wanted to learn as much about it as we could. Streetwise Chicago Map Laminated City Center Street Map of Chicago, Illinios Folding pocket size travel map with CTA & Metra map including lines & stations The book has been very helpful. We've have already hit some of the great locations recommended. The books concise descriptions helped us determine where we did or did not want to go.