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The Best Things in Life are Free
The Best Things in Life are Free | Lonely Planet
3 posts | 2 read | 12 to read
Lonely Planet's The Best Things in Life are Free is packed full of money-saving tips, tricks and recommendations for the best-value sights and experiences around the world. From parks, museums and exercise classes that are free, to insider ideas on food and experiences offered at great value, this book features over 60 major cities around the world and promises to help any traveller on a budget to make the most of their trip. Includes parks and gardens, street markets and food trucks, viewing points, museums and galleries, free experiences, spectator sports, city beaches, and much more. For many, free and cheap things are not only appealing but essential for stretching the funds to last as long as possible for an extended journey. Yet, even on a short trip, many unforgettable blasts of freedom and discovery can happen on a thin budget. You quickly realise that cheap can mean much, much better. No fancy Roman trattoria dinner can truly rival the bread and cheese picnic in Villa Celimontana, a short walk from the Colosseum, on a visit to the Eternal City. Needless to say, the monetary value implied in the term 'free' can misrepresent what's on offer within these pages. The quality of an experience, after all, is not always attached to a price tag, such as the priceless experience of unearthing the world's secret wonders, whether that's swimming around Sydney's ocean pools or strolling the tombs and monuments of Delhi's Lodi Gardens. Additionally, it's an exaggeration to say that everything good is 100% free, so you'll find plenty of excellent value cheap things to experience throughout this book as well. Dip into your spare change for classy street food like a choripn (chorizo sandwich) in Buenos Aires, the best views of Hong Kong's skyline from the Star Ferry and a Boston brewery tour. After using the tips in this book, you'll be left with great memories, a happier you and a grateful wallet. Happy travels! Destinations covered: AFRICA Cape Town Marrakesh ASIA Bangkok Beijing Beirut Delhi Dubai Hong Kong Mumbai Shanghai Singapore Tokyo EUROPE Amsterdam Athens Barcelona Berlin Bruges Budapest Copenhagen Dublin Edinburgh Geneva Helsinki Istanbul Lisbon London Madrid Milan Moscow Oslo Paris Prague Reykjavik Rome Stockholm Venice Vienna NORTH AMERICA Austin Boston The Caribbean Chicago Detroit Las Vegas Los Angeles Miami New Orleans New York City Portland, OR San Diego San Francisco Seattle Toronto Vancouver Washington, DC SOUTH AMERICA Bogota Buenos Aires San Salvador Lima Rio de Janeiro Sao Paulo OCEANIA Brisbane Melbourne North Island, NZ South Island, NZ Sydney About Lonely Planet: Started in 1973, Lonely Planet has become the world's leading travel guide publisher with guidebooks to every destination on the planet, as well as an award-winning website, a suite of mobile and digital travel products, and a dedicated traveller community. Lonely Planet's mission is to enable curious travellers to experience the world and to truly get to the heart of the places they find themselves in.
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AmandaL
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This Lonely Planet travel guide has free places and activities of interest worldwide. This guide has two entries for California, L.A. and San Francisco. #CaliforniaLove #90sinJuly

Robothugs Wow that's so cool! I need one of this! 7y
AmandaL @Robothugs It is a fun book to look through and dream. 😁 7y
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AmandaL
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I find books about places to visit around the world inspiring. #photoadaynov16

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MrBook
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Not everyone realizes there's a section in bookstores devoted to just travel. It's by the road atlases (which I still like to use despite GPS's modern ubiquity--at least I won't be set on the wrong path or to the wrong address! Anyway...). When I browse the section, I focus on the travelogues and memoir-ish books. This is a travel guide I definitely want in the future though. It's gorgeous to boot 😎👌🏻! Any recs for the travel genre?

BethFishReads I love the travel section. 8y
Shemac77 Armchair travel is a super cool genre. I loved Peter Mayles Provence series. For ascerbic wit I go to Thoreaux. I strongly do not recommend Carol Drinkwater's The Olive Farm; insipid, self congratulatory nonsense. Out of Africa by Izak Dinesen qualifies too. There's more but I'm drawing a blank. More coffee for me. 8y
juliannebenford This sounds great! 8y
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tricours (It is a travel book in a way, since you follow Uusma on her journey to the North Pole) 8y
Qemorio ❤️ travel writing! 8y
Gulfsidemusing Love travel memoirs! My book club had a wonderful discussion about Without Reservations by Alice Steinbach. 8y
HoneysuckleGrlReads I love photography travel books. 8y
bookishdawg All things Bill Bryson 👍🏻 8y
chlobee French travel writers are some of the best - Nicolas Bouvier, Ella Maillart, Sylvain Tesson, for example. They really capture the poetry and beauty of travel writing. I highly recommend them! 8y
Zelma I love Dervla Murphy especially 8y
Gonerogue I go classic travelog rec: The Narrow Road to the Deep North by Matsuo Baso. Originally in Japanese, there are several translations out with slightly different titles. ❤️❤️❤️😻❤️❤️❤️ 8y
MrBook @BethFishReads 😁🙌🏻👏🏻👏🏻👍🏻!!! @juliannebenford @Shemac77 @tricours @Jamielouise @Lakesidemusing @wahanakecil @LeahBergen @Lantern.In.The.Night.Readzzz @jodikpeterson @Peddler410 @chlobee @Zelma @Rowanwax Thank God for @Litsy !!! Without it, I would never have met all of you incredibly fantastic bibliophiles with all of your magnificent insights and recs and similar tastes 😁👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👍🏻!!!!! 8y
LitsyGoesPostal 😊👍🏻 8y
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