Best turkish travel guides according to redditors

We found 6 Reddit comments discussing the best turkish travel guides. We ranked the 6 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Subcategories:

Turkey travel guides
Istambul travel guides

Top Reddit comments about Turkey Travel Guides:

u/ThePostcard · 26 pointsr/travel

Awesome - I live in Amsterdam. There are lots of choices for a day trip, but Utrecht is one of my favorites. It's really easy to get to and (as you can see) beautiful. I wrote a blog post about my visit to Utrecht with the highlights and some recs -- the cathedral is great as are the two museums in town (musical clock museum and railway museum). And if you visit on a Saturday you can catch their flower market.

There's a bunch of other Netherlands content on my blog, too, so feel free to poke around or ask and I can point you in the right direction :)

u/dogtim · 3 pointsr/OCPoetry

In real life my name is Ernest Whitman Piper IV, and I am a writer and editor. Most of my published writing has been travel-related. My first book was an "adventure guide" which teaches young uni graduates and gap year types how and where to travel long-term, and why it is worth doing. It's I think available still on amazon and smashwords still though it's wildly out of date at this point. My second book was a brief memoir about producing a musical in Istanbul, and it is available nowhere, because I wrote it for my friends. (Though I recently talked to my mom and she suggested stripmining the both of them for material and making one ur-memoir about all my time spent in the Eastern Mediterranean, and it's not a bad idea.) I am currently working on a novel about a murder mystery, also set in Istanbul, and that's all you're getting from me on that.

My travel writing has also appeared in the Stranger in Seattle, as well as in the Daily Sabah, an unabashed propaganda outlet for the curent government of Turkey. And while I really cannot stand the current government in Turkey, there was a brief window where they paid me to travel all around the Balkans and Turkey and write whatever I wanted, which was pretty cool.

In terms of poetry I've got...not much? I'm very shy about my poetry. I have not been published anywhere for a long long time, other than like...my uni's lit journal ages ago. I've published here on the sub mostly. I credit this community for getting me back into it.

I started out trying to write like slash have been deeply influenced by:
Mairead Byrne, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Rumi, Nazim Hikmet, Shakespeare, Ocean Vuong, John Ashbery, Shel Silverstein, Derek Mahon, Catullus, Allen Ginsberg, Mary Oliver...I have to stop now or this list is going to get very long indeed

The modern poet's in a strange boat on a foreign sea. I think the mission of any poet should be to map the connections between islands and currents we didn't know were nearby. Poets celebrate useless things and magnify the unseen. I agree with /u/gwrgwir in that a poem should ask that its readers use their brains -- like basically a poet's task these days phrased in practical terms is "why read or write a poem when I could just scroll through the internet for hours unreflectively?"

The most recent thing that inspired a poem was a particularly brutal hangover.

u/Creek0512 · 2 pointsr/travel

Buy some guidebooks, such as this one, and this one, or whatever others. They cost practically nothing compared to the thousands you'll spend on the trip.

u/walkerharris11 · 1 pointr/travel

Get yourself a phrasebook that has a little bit of everything you need. Something like the Lonely Planet book http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1741040590/ref=pd_lpo_k2_dp_sr_3?pf_rd_p=486539851&pf_rd_s=lpo-top-stripe-1&pf_rd_t=201&pf_rd_i=2831577403&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_r=1J0KQR1GJT5AQF14EF12 will be good. If you expend just a little bit of effort to communicate in the local language, people will be much more receptive. I hardly speak a lick of French, but when I tried to speak French in Paris, the locals appreciated the effort and were more friendly after (and spoke to me in English).

u/ForeverCologne · 1 pointr/CityPorn

Wow man, memories. I've stood on those benches angling for the perfect shot....and trying to avoid those DAMN LIGHTS!

And all the food vendors thought I was crazy for asking why the Blue Mosque didn't look like the cover of my Lonely Planet Guidebook at night....grrrrrrr.

u/BombastixderTeutone · 1 pointr/einfach_posten

Kauf dir nen Lonely Planet für die Stadt. Gibts bestimmt am Flughafen