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France on Foot: Village to Village, Hotel to Hotel: How to Walk the French Trail System on Your Own

France on Foot: Village to Village, Hotel to Hotel: How to Walk the French Trail System on Your Own

List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $16.47
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great read AND an essential guide to planning a walk
Review: After picking up a copy of LeFavour's book three months ago, Iam ready to embark on my first walking tour in France. LeFavourstarts with a logical first question: Why walk? After reading his answer, I ran home to call my girlfriend to suggest our walking trip through Provence. The book is organized well: it starts with a broad overview and the focus gradually narrows. This structure gives ample time for readers to form their own goals and itineraries before becoming burdened by details. When you are ready, you can read onward to find well-written answers to all a beginning traveler's questions. I found LeFavour's discussion on the three levels of maps especially helpful while navigating through bookstores and websites full of extraneous information. I thought his various budgets catered to both the wealthy and the scrimping. The index is cross-referenced nicely, the photographs are beautiful, and the walker-specific phrasebook is useful for beginning French students. Because LeFavour includes well-researched reading and contact lists, this book is a good place to start when planning your trip. The time and effort you will save following LeFavour's leads easily pays for the cost of the book...A great buy.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent book for planning your trip
Review: After picking up a copy of LeFavour's book three months ago, Iam ready to embark on my first walking tour in France. LeFavourstarts with a logical first question: Why walk? After reading his answer, I ran home to call my girlfriend to suggest our walking trip through Provence. The book is organized well: it starts with a broad overview and the focus gradually narrows. This structure gives ample time for readers to form their own goals and itineraries before becoming burdened by details. When you are ready, you can read onward to find well-written answers to all a beginning traveler's questions. I found LeFavour's discussion on the three levels of maps especially helpful while navigating through bookstores and websites full of extraneous information. I thought his various budgets catered to both the wealthy and the scrimping. The index is cross-referenced nicely, the photographs are beautiful, and the walker-specific phrasebook is useful for beginning French students. Because LeFavour includes well-researched reading and contact lists, this book is a good place to start when planning your trip. The time and effort you will save following LeFavour's leads easily pays for the cost of the book...A great buy.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Don't bother with this book
Review: Bruce LeFavour has turned the practicalities of taking on a walking holiday into an adventure. The book is packed with common sense, down to earth ideas - all packaged with a great sense of humour. Being a francophile I have experienced some of the scenarios Bruce refers too e.g. eating in France is a time of communication, not a way of just adding calories, so don't get frustrated when waiting for a table in a cafe - have a drink and sip the atmosphere. This book makes the planning stage as much fun as the walk. A great read.

"Machez donc!"

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The most practical book on walking in France I've ever read!
Review: Bruce LeFavour has turned the practicalities of taking on a walking holiday into an adventure. The book is packed with common sense, down to earth ideas - all packaged with a great sense of humour. Being a francophile I have experienced some of the scenarios Bruce refers too e.g. eating in France is a time of communication, not a way of just adding calories, so don't get frustrated when waiting for a table in a cafe - have a drink and sip the atmosphere. This book makes the planning stage as much fun as the walk. A great read.

"Machez donc!"

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Don't bother with this book
Review: Having searched far and wide for a good book about walking tours of France, I expected to be very satisfied with this book. Unfortunately, it is a supreme disappointment. LeFavour fails to decide whether this book should be a travelouge or a walking guide; thus, we get a few italicized accounts of his travels and one cursory chapter summarizing the trails in the different regions. The rest of the book is mere filler: what maps to buy, what guides to search through, what clothes to wear. Lefavour fully acknowledges that he does not have a whole lot of experience on the France trails and so must replace true recommendations with meaningless discussions about the difference between pizzerias and bistros and complaining about Bed and Breakfasts. The practical information -- like what a gites d'etape is and that the Michelin Red Guide is a must for the tourist -- is helpful but can be found for free. Instead of wasting your money, spend a few hours on the internet and go buy the Red Guide and some good maps.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Not only useful, but a pleasure to read
Review: I think the other reviewers have already covered most of the points. This book is written by a chef, and it is composed like a fine meal. The pace is wonderful: relaxing, but never boring-- the same way he advocates undertaking a long walk in France. Although a backpacker (I am one) would find this book useful, it is not intended for anyone who has ever spent a night without a roof, nor for anyone who intends to ever spend a night without a roof. What it will do is lead you to an experience that will leave you with a sense of accomplishment after enjoying a couple of weeks of beautiful scenery and fabulous food in the most relaxing and healthy manner possible. I am not exaggerating when I say that this is one of the best books I've ever read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great place to start
Review: I was really excited to have found "France on Foot", since my husband and I wanted to explore the French countryside. We used it as a starting point to plan our week-long walk on the GR, and found Bruce's advice to be invaluable. His suggestions for what books and maps to buy, and, more importantly, how to plan a day-to-day itinerary were fantastic. Also, the recommended research that goes into organizing a walk really familiarizes you with the area that you're travelling and turns into part of the adventure. We're now planning on walking as much of France as we can, something that we probably wouldn't have attempted had we not stumbled across this book. This isn't a detailed regional travel guide, but rather a resource that will guide you through making your own personal travel plan.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Not only useful, but a pleasure to read
Review: The other reviews have adequately described this wonderful book, so I will just tell you one or two things about putting it into practice. 1) Get in shape before you go. Prior to leaving, we did a lot of fast walking on flat ground without packs - this was NOT sufficient. Those packs get very heavy going up even a gentle hill. 2) Pack as light as you possibly can, then get rid of half of it. We ended up mailing home or throwing away city shoes, extra pants, makeup, etc.etc. Also, buy a smaller pack than you think you need. 3) Set realistic daily distance goals - the author is a bit too optimistic in our opinion. 4). Always carry water and at least a little food, like granola bars. Some places that look on the map like little towns perfect for lunch are just a group of houses and farm buildings. 5) Try to check "closed" days ahead of time. In France, it is generally not Saturday or Sunday, but some weekday. We walked into a tiny town dead-beat at the end of our first day (a Tuesday) to find it was closing day - not one restaurant, bistro, cafe, ANYTHING open, including the hotel's restaurant. However, all that being said, our walk through the Dordogne was THE single best vacation we've ever had (with the possible exception of Cuba). I love to browse through this book dreaming about our next one, maybe through Provence.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Practical Advice
Review: The other reviews have adequately described this wonderful book, so I will just tell you one or two things about putting it into practice. 1) Get in shape before you go. Prior to leaving, we did a lot of fast walking on flat ground without packs - this was NOT sufficient. Those packs get very heavy going up even a gentle hill. 2) Pack as light as you possibly can, then get rid of half of it. We ended up mailing home or throwing away city shoes, extra pants, makeup, etc.etc. Also, buy a smaller pack than you think you need. 3) Set realistic daily distance goals - the author is a bit too optimistic in our opinion. 4). Always carry water and at least a little food, like granola bars. Some places that look on the map like little towns perfect for lunch are just a group of houses and farm buildings. 5) Try to check "closed" days ahead of time. In France, it is generally not Saturday or Sunday, but some weekday. We walked into a tiny town dead-beat at the end of our first day (a Tuesday) to find it was closing day - not one restaurant, bistro, cafe, ANYTHING open, including the hotel's restaurant. However, all that being said, our walk through the Dordogne was THE single best vacation we've ever had (with the possible exception of Cuba). I love to browse through this book dreaming about our next one, maybe through Provence.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Buckle up your Mephistos!
Review: There is no better way to discover the soul of a city than on foot. Whether the city is Helsinki or New Orleans, San Francisco or Paris, Chicago or Berlin, when you walk its streets and see its people face to face and sit next to them while you sip coffee or wine, you come to know the city. Although I have yet to try walking from hamlet to hamlet in France, I fully intend to. Bruce LeFacour and his photographer wife Faith Echtermeyer obviously have the same idea about knowing a land. I have read this book several times and would like nothing more than to spend next summer, in France, walking to all the lovely places.


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