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Series · 34
books · 1963-1984

Books in series

The Companion Guide to Paris book cover
#1

The Companion Guide to Paris

1963

1963 Harper & Row Publishing; First Edition Hardcover w/Dust Jacket (Sealed in Brodart)
#2

The Companion Guide to the South of France

1963

These world-famous Companion Guides—completely revised and updated—help you turn each travel experience into an unforgettable, exotic adventure. Written for the discerning traveler who seeks more than routine tours, Companion guides offer rich, detailed background information not available in other guides. They conjure up an atmosphere that only extended stay in the country could equal. They relate fascinating, entertaining stories—an historical who, what, where, and when—that put you inside the region for total appreciation of the site. And they do this in so conversational and intimate a style, you'll swear you have the benefit of a friendly native giving you an informal, personal tour. They are much more than mere reference books, Companion Guides will be read cover to cover by travelers looking for the flavor behind the facts. Fully illustrated with scores of black-and-white photographs, Companion Guides are all you need to bring your trips to life.
The Companion Guide to the Greek Islands book cover
#3

The Companion Guide to the Greek Islands

1963

A lively, discerning companion to the beauty, myth and history of a fascinating and lovely region."A consistently first-rate series." THE TIMES When Ernle Bradford's Companion Guide to the Greek Islands first appeared in 1963 it was immediately hailed as the best published guide to the diverse and endlessly fascinating islands of the Aegean and Ionian seas. This revised edition of this classic travel guide profits from FRANCIS PAGAN's twenty years' of travel in Greek waters, and deep knowledge of the area. He has added further touches to Bradford's vivid accounts of the moods of the sea and the islanders' traditional ways of life, leading the reader to unexpected discoveries (hidden monasteries, hill-top villages, flowery valleys, quiet places by the sea), and writes in more depth of the Classical, Byzantine and medieval past. Included in this edition are accounts of recent archaeological work in the islands by British, American, and other European schools; he also guides the reader to sites which have become more accessible as communications multiply by sea, air and land. Photographs by George Domatas.
The Companion Guide to London book cover
#4

The Companion Guide to London

1964

Has strong claims to be among the best guidebooks ever written. SUNDAY TELEGRAPH It is surely remarkable to write of a guidebook that it is difficult to put down. But it is certainly true of this one. ECONOMIST Calls our attention to everything beautiful, historic or curious left in the heart of London. SUNDAY TIMES David Piper's classic book is the most elegant, lyrical and stimulating of all guides to London, written with undisguised enthusiasm, intimacy and affection. It traverses London from Regent's Park to Lambeth, from the Tower of London to Kensington, with excursions on the river and forays to outlying points of interest, each chapter covering an area which can be comfortably walked in a day. The author draws out the individual character of each district through history, literature, art and architecture and his own informed and entertaining comments. This is an essential guide for those who really want to understand how London has developed; it has been thoroughly revised and updated for this new edition. DAVID PIPER was an art historian, director of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, from 1973-1985, and before that director of the National Portrait Gallery, London; FIONNUALA JERVIS, who revised the guide, has edited and contributed to numerous historical and art historical publications, and in the course of this revision has walked every step of the way in David Piper's footprints from her home in Kensington.
The Companion Guide to Venice book cover
#5

The Companion Guide to Venice

1965

`It offers all that the visitor with a concern for beauty and for leisurely sight-seeing will require.' Financial Times`If ever a guidebook were designed to be read as literature it is Mr Honour's. Even those who know Venice welland love it well will add to their appreciation from this seemingly endless store of information.' Economist Offers all that the visitor with a concern for beauty and for leisurely sight-seeing will require. FINANCIAL TIMES The best guide book I have ever encountered... and a book I found it impossible not to read from beginning to end. OBSERVER There are few pleasanter ways of passing a summer's evening than sitting over a cup of coffee, and perhaps a glass of Aurum, in the Piazza San Marco. It is especially agreeable on those nights when the Venetian city band thunders away at some throbbingly romantic piece... And all the while the younger inhabitants parade around the square, chattering, flirting, quarrelling and staring at their visitors with that same unwinking gaze that Venetians have turned on their guests for the past five centuries. The facade of San Marco closes the scene in a glitter of golden mosaic and a bubbling of cupolas, while the great thick red campanile stretches up into the warm mothy darkness of the summer sky. Hugh Honour, it is clear, knows Venice exceptionally well and catches the rhythms of the city's life with unerring skill. His guide, with its winning blend of evocativedetail and precise information, spurs the reader to investigate Venice's Piazza San Marco is only the beginning of a journey into the heart of Venice and its history.
The Companion Guide to Rome book cover
#6

The Companion Guide to Rome

1965

This classic guide to Rome begins at the Capitol, 'rising as it does like an island of peace out of the strident roar of the Piazza Venezia in the heart of the city, leading us backwards by degrees through the centuries to the time when Rome first emerged from a collection of pastoral villages set upon seven hills... And at night it is not so difficult to picture the stately ranks of colonnaded temples crowned with gilded statues and the basilicas rearing their great bulk against the night sky, or to imagine the faint glow of the sacred fire warming the marbles of the Temple of Vesta, and above them all the vast palace of the emperors on the Palatine overshadowing the whole scene, as it then dominated the civilized world.' From this seductive start, the glories of Rome are unrolled; Masson's home was in the grounds of the Villa Pamphilj, on the outskirts of Rome, during the years when she was writing this book, and she knew Rome intimately. She has been fortunate in her reviser John Fort, resident in Rome for thirty years - in the Palazzo Doria Pamphillj, who has brought this latest edition up to date.
The Companion Guide to Florence book cover
#7

The Companion Guide to Florence

1966

This is a book to read before you go, to carry with you and to re-read on your return. SPECTATORA sure and illuminating guide. SUNDAY TIMESThe city state of Florence led the rest of the western world in art, science and political idealism in the middle ages. This early richness, the importance of the achievements of its famous sons, including Dante, Giotto, Leonardo and Michelangelo, the great quantity of visible remains, make Florence as a city to visit both alluring and challenging. In true Companion Guide manner, this book describes, with the knowledge and insight distilled from long residence in Florence, and with an art historian's eye, what is to be seen and its place in history. In discussing the Florentine monuments and their origins in the city's life, EVE BORSOOK presents a study of the ideas, events and personalities of Florence yesterday and today; she communicates to the visitor her delight in her chosen city, including those districts usually neglected by the tourist but particularly rich in Florentine life.EVE BORSOOK is a research associate at Harvard's Center for Italian Renaissance Studies at Villa I Tatti in Florence.
The Companion Guide to Yugoslavia book cover
#8

The Companion Guide to Yugoslavia

1968

This is the most sympathetic and perceptive book about Jugoslavia since Rebecca West's Black Lamb and Grey Falcon . It is more than a guide book, although it has everything a guide book should have. Tourists who want to see interesting buildings or exciting scenery will learn what is most important to see in each town and in each museum and how they can reach out-of-the-way roads through beautiful places like Rugovo Gorge or the mountains of Slovenia. The real excellence of the book, however, is in the author's knowledge of the people and their language, their history and their legends. TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT
#9

The companion guide to the West Highlands of Scotland

1968

Book by Murray, W. H.
The Companion Guide to Umbria book cover
#10

The Companion Guide to Umbria

1969

Another in the series of Companion Guides, designed for both readers and travellers who want in-depth information rather than up-to-date travel tips.
The Companion Guide to Southern Italy book cover
#11

The Companion Guide to Southern Italy

1969

The Companion Guide to East Anglia book cover
#12

The Companion Guide to East Anglia

1970

'One of the best books in a consistently excellent series' Country Life 'Finely written and beautifully presented guide' Church Times John Seymour's Companion Guide to East Anglia has established itself as the essential guide to this wonderful yet neglected area of England. This edition, revised and updated, covers the core areas of East Anglia, Norfolk and Suffolk, in detail; in his inimitable style, the author brings out the most distinctive features of the region, from its wealth of medieval churches and Tudor farmhouses to the deserted and unspoilt coasts, undiscovered villages and market towns, from Breckland in the west to Broadland in the east.
The Companion Guide to Southern Greece book cover
#14

The Companion Guide to Southern Greece

Athens, the Peloponnese, Delphi

1972

The companion guide to Kent and Sussex book cover
#15

The companion guide to Kent and Sussex

1973

One of the classic "Companion Guides", this volume explores the English counties of Kent and Sussex. Each book in the series aims to provide a comprehensive travel companion in the person of the author, who knows intimately the places and people of which he or she writes.
The Companion Guide to Tuscany book cover
#16

The Companion Guide to Tuscany

1973

Another in the extensive series of Companion Guides, which act as a sort of literary companion to the traveller, be he or she in an armchair or on the road. Described variously as lyrical, witty, penetrating and insightful, these guides offer in-depth information about classical sites around Europe and the British isles (with a few other international destinations available as well), rather than up-to-the-minute info for travellers on the run.
The Companion Guide to Ireland book cover
#17

The Companion Guide to Ireland

1973

(COMPANION GUIDES) (map)
The Companion Guide to the South of Spain book cover
#18

The Companion Guide to the South of Spain

1973

I value the traditional virtues of the Companion Guides... actually written by an individual rather than packaged by production teams... straightforward intelligent guides to cultural sites. BOOKSELLER Andalucia in its heyday, after the invasion of the Moors in 711, was famous for its wealth and fertility, and the province's Moorish character remains distinct; even before the Moors, the Phoenicians, the Romans and the Vandals had all beendrawn to this beautiful land. The Moors cultivated science and the arts, and their influence was felt throughout western Europe - in the songs of the troubadours, the poems of Dante and the discoveries of Copernicus; their merchants enriched the province; their courtiers and architects set new standards of luxurious living. This glory finally ended in 1492, when the Christian armies of the Reconquista entered Granada, but much remains in the three Moorishtowns of Cordoba, Seville and Granada, and the country round about, to recall the great times. Alfonso Lowe is an admirable guide, from the intricacies of the distinction between Mozarabic and Mudejar Moorish styles to the characteristic dishes to be found in restaurants and bars - and to the adjacent territories of Murcia and the greater part of Alicante.
#20

The Companion Guide to Madrid and Central Spain

1974

One of the classic Companion Guides, this covers both the city of Madrid and the central region of Spain. Each volume in the series aims to provide a comprehensive travel companion in the person of the author, who knows intimately the places and people of which he or she writes.
#21

The Companion Guide to the Coast of North East England

1974

The Companion Guide To The Coast of North East England
The Companion Guide to Burgundy book cover
#23

The Companion Guide to Burgundy

1975

For anyone planning a visit to Burgundy this Guide is indispensable. TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT As elegant as it is exhaustive. The whole book has body and bouquet, \[its author\] is well-read, witty, relaxed and impeccably observant. GUARDIAN Burgundy is one of the richest areas in France - rich in its art and architecture, its history, its food and wines, and its glorious countryside. Nowhere in Europe are there greater examples of the the basilica of the Madeleine at Vézelay, the sculptures of Gislebertus of Autun, the cathedral of St Philibert at Tournus. The very names of its vineyards - Corton, Chambertin, Montrachet - conjure up the robust and mature bouquet of the province. Once the abbeys at Cluny, Pontigny and Fontenay were the wellspring of medieval Christianity in Europe; now the spiritual community at Taizé speaks to the whole world. Nowhere in France is the sense of the past more immediate, nowhere does it so palpably inform the present. On its first publication, the Companion Guide to Burgundy established itself as the indispensable guide to the region. In this extensively revised new edition, FRANCIS PAGAN has updated and expanded the text to provide the reader with the most knowledgeable, reliable and attentive guide now available to this most fascinating and hospitable region of France.
#24

The companion guide to North Wales

1975

The Companion Guide To North Wales
#25

The Companion Guide to the Coast of South West England

1974

#27

The companion guide to Devon and Cornwall

1976

The companion guide to south-west France book cover
#28

The companion guide to south-west France

Bordeaux and the Dordogne

1977

The companion guide to South Africa book cover
#30

The companion guide to South Africa

1978

#31

Companion Guide to The Loire

1979

Portrays the culture and scenic beauty of the Loire River Valley in France and depicts the hotels, historic landmarks, museums, sights, and attractions in the region
The Companion Guide to the Country round Paris book cover
#32

The Companion Guide to the Country round Paris

1979

This is a second, revised and updated edition of Ian Dunlop's essential guide, originally published under the title of The Companion Guide to the Ile de France. This guide is a labour of love. It is a key that will open many tiny, hidden, forsaken places, a ruined keep in a farmyard, the remains of an arch in a field, an escutcheon, forlorn and heralding nothing but desolation and an old Revolution, a triumphal entrance leading to emptiness, a stone stag in an autumnal forest that has heard the French horn for 200 years, and the infinite sadness of the Petit Trianon. SPECTATOR
The Companion Guide to Turkey book cover
#33

The Companion Guide to Turkey

1979

For thousands of years Turkey has been at the crossroads of history. All of the civilizations that have flourished here have left magnificent monuments to their greatness, ranging from the ruins of Homeric Troy to the theatres and temples of the Graeco-Roman world, from the churches of Byzantium to the mosques and palaces of the Ottoman Empire.
The Companion Guide to Greece book cover
#34

The Companion Guide to Greece

1979

When Brian de Jongh's two classic Companion Guides, Southern Greece and Mainland Greece, were first published they were greeted with acclaim and immediately established themselves as essential guides. They have now been combined into this single volume, covering the whole of the Greek mainland. This new edition has been thoroughly revised by John Gandon (Brian de Jongh's nephew) and Geoffrey Graham-Bell, taking into account both new archaeological discoveries and recent development. Brian de Jongh combined an expert knowledge of history, archaeology and mythology with a profound understanding of the Greek people and a feeling for the landscape which inspired their myths and he describes a country that he loved and much of which Pausanias, writing almost two thousand years ago, would still recognise. This book is, more than ever, the most indispensable of all modern guides toGreece.
#35

The companion guide to the Shakespeare country

1983

COUNTRY (COMPANION GDES.) (Map)
The Companion Guide to Normandy book cover
#36

The Companion Guide to Normandy

1980

One of an excellent series of travel guides covering much of Europe and the British Isles that can be enjoyed just as much at home as on the road. Always well written, they are obviously not intended as a guide to hotels and restaurants although some classic establishments do get a mention. They are concerned with those timeless aspects of European culture, including architecture and historic sites of all kinds, which are described in the individual style of the particular writer.
#37

Companion Guide to Outer London

1984

#38

The companion guide to Westland

1981

The Companion Guide to New York book cover
#40

The Companion Guide to New York

1983

Book by Leapman, Michael

Authors

Ernle Bradford
Ernle Bradford
Author · 23 books
Ernle Dusgate Selby Bradford was a noted British historian specializing in the Mediterranean world and naval topics. Bradford was an enthusiastic sailor himself and spent almost thirty years sailing the Mediterranean, where many of his books are set. He served in the Royal Navy during World War II, finishing as the first Lieutenant of a destroyer. He did occasional broadcast work for the BBC, was a magazine editor, and wrote many books.
Errol Brathwaite
Author · 1 books
Errol Brathwaite was born in Clive, Hawke's Bay (New Zealand) in 1924, and educated at Waipukurau and at Timaru Boys' High School. He spent 12 years in the RNZAF, serving as an Air Gunner in the Pacific Theatre during the Second World War.
Alastair Boyd
Author · 1 books

Alastair Ivor Gilbert Boyd, 7th Baron Kilmarnock (11 May 1927 – 19 March 2009) was a British writer, Hispanophile, and Chief of the Clan Boyd. Boyd was born into an aristocratic British family, and served as a pageboy at the coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth. He was educated at Bradfield College and King's College, Cambridge and was commissioned into the Irish Guards in 1946. He served with them until 1948, including a spell in Palestine. His publications include Sabbatical Year (1958); The Road from Ronda (1969); The Companion Guide to Madrid and Central Spain (1974); The Essence of Catalonia (1988); The Sierras of the South (1992); The Social Market and the State (1999); and Rosemary: A Memoir (2005).

Simon Jenkins
Simon Jenkins
Author · 16 books
Sir Simon David Jenkins, FSA, FRSL is the author of the international bestsellers England’s Thousand Best Churches and England’s Thousand Best Houses, the former editor of The Times and Evening Standard and a columnist for the Guardian. He is chairman of the National Trust.
Vincent Cronin
Vincent Cronin
Author · 14 books

Vincent Archibald Patrick Cronin FRSL (24 May 1924 – 25 January 2011) was a British historical, cultural, and biographical writer, best known for his biographies of Louis XIV, Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, Catherine the Great, and Napoleon, as well as for his books on the Renaissance. Cronin was born in Tredegar, Monmouthshire, to Scottish doctor and novelist, A. J. Cronin, and May Gibson, but moved to London at the age of two. He was educated at Ampleforth College, Harvard University, the Sorbonne, and Trinity College, Oxford, from which he graduated with honours in 1947, earning a degree in Literae Humaniores. During the Second World War, he served as a lieutenant in the British Army. In 1949, he married Chantal de Rolland, and they had five children. The Cronins were long-time residents of London, Marbella, and Dragey, in Avranches, Normandy, where they lived at the Manoir de Brion. Cronin was a recipient of the Richard Hillary Award, the W.H. Heinemann Award (1955), and the Rockefeller Foundation Award (1958). He also contributed to the Revue des Deux Mondes, was the first General Editor of the Companion Guides series, and was on the Council of the Royal Society of Literature. He died at his home in Marbella on 25 January 2011. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vincent...

John Seymour
John Seymour
Author · 11 books

John Seymour was an idealist - he had a vision of a better world where people aren't alienated from their labours. As a young man, he travelled all over Africa and fought in Burma in World War II. Returning penniless to England, he lived in a trolley bus and on a Dutch sailing barge before settling on a five-acre smallholding in Suffolk to lead a self-sufficient life. He continued this lifestyle with his companion Angela Ashe on the banks of the River Barrow in County Wexford, Ireland. The two had built up the smallholding from scratch over 19 years. In his last years John, Angela and William Sutherland had been running courses in self-sufficiency from their home at Killowen, New Ross. The courses were taken by students from all over the world, who come to Killowen to learn about his lifestyle and philosophies at first hand. He was the author of over 40 books, including the best-selling The Complete Book of Self-Sufficiency, and he had made numerous films and radio programmes. Most of his later writing and public campaigning had been devoted to country matters, self-sufficiency and the environment. In the last 18 months, he was back on his beloved Pembrokeshire farm with his daughter Ann, telling stories to his grandchildren and writing rhyming poetry, with an acerbic wit that was his last weapon against what he saw as our destructive era.

Richard Barber
Author · 20 books

Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the GoodReads database with this name. Richard William Barber is a prominent British historian who has been writing and publishing in the field of medieval history and literature ever since his student days. He has specialised in the Arthurian legend, beginning with a general survey, Arthur of Albion, in 1961, which is still in print in a revised edition. His other major interest is historical biography; he has published on Henry Plantagenet (1964) and among his other books is the standard biography of Edward the Black Prince, Edward Prince of Wales and Aquitaine. The interplay between history and literature was the theme of The Knight and Chivalry, for which he won the Somerset Maugham Prize in 1971 and he returned to this in The Holy Grail: Imagination and Belief (2004); this was widely praised in the UK press, and had major reviews in The New York Times and The Washington Post. His other career has been as a publisher. In 1969 he helped to found The Boydell Press, which later became Boydell & Brewer Ltd, one of the leading publishers in medieval studies, and he is currently group managing director. In 1989, Boydell & Brewer Ltd, in association with the University of Rochester, started the University of Rochester Press in upstate New York. The group currently publishes over 200 titles a year.

Hugh Honour
Author · 6 books
A self-taught British art historian.
John Freely
John Freely
Author · 19 books
John Freely was born in 1926 in Brooklyn, New York to Irish immigrant parents, and spent half of his early childhood in Ireland. He dropped out of high school when he was 17 to join the U. S. Navy, serving for two years, including combat duty with a commando unit in the Pacific, India, Burma and China during the last year of World War II. After the war, he went to college on the G. I. Bill and eventually received a Ph.D. in physics from New York University, followed by a year of post-doctoral study at Oxford in the history of science. He worked as a research physicist for nine years, including five years at Princeton University. In 1960 he went to İstanbul to teach physics at the Robert College, now the Boğaziçi University, and taught there until 1976. He then went on to teach and write in Athens (1976-79), Boston (1979-87), London (1987-88), İstanbul (1988-91) and Venice (1991-93). In 1993 he returned to Boğaziçi University, where he taught a course on the history of science. His first book, co-authored by the late Hilary Sumner-Boyd, was Strolling Through İstanbul (1972). Since then he has published more than forty books.
Jonathan Keates
Author · 12 books
Jonathan Keates, is an English writer, biographer, novelist and Chairman of the Venice in Peril Fund. Keates was educated at Bryanston School and went on to read for his undergraduate degree at Magdalen College, Oxford.
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