Budapest has it all: spectacular architecture, award-winning cultural festivals, Michelin-starred restaurants, historic thermal baths, and business-friendly hotels. The authors share their enthusiasm for the city in an engaging and witty style. Thoroughly updated, the third edition is packed with up-to-the-minute information on hotels, caf's, bars and restaurants, as well as new walks. It provides travelers with all they need on where to stay, eat and drink, and what to see and do.
'An insightful, eminently readable guide that gets the visitor under the skin of this city.' Kate Simon, Travel Editor, Independent on Sunday
'As informative as ever. Combining an engaging, light-hearted tone with stylish prose and layout, this guide tempts you into digesting large chunks in one sitting. Dare I say it, perfect airport reading.' - Duncan Craig, Deputy Travel Editor, Daily Express
'An insightful, eminently readable guide that gets the visitor under the skin of this city.' - Kate Simon, Travel Editor, Independent on Sunday
'Comprehensive, clear-eyed and full of subtle insights. This guide is a pleasure to read, and a fine companion to one of Eastern Europe's greatest cities.' - Dan Linstead, Editor, Wanderlust
'Bradt Travel Guides are famous for their enthusiasm for going where no other travel guides have….packed full of useful information…for somebody intending on visiting Budapest and also for those who know the city superficially and would like to go deeper.' - Where magazine
'What I read by authors Adrian Phillips and Jo Scotchmer was ever so entertaining. Bradt is very good at putting the finger on the specifics of Hungarian life that can surprise visitors…Besides providing the inevitable information …The Bradt guide is an indispensable companion for a visit to this fabulous city.' - The Budapest Sun
'Guides to Hungary are often weighed down by the serious, self-conscious and even pompous attitude to the tragic history of the Carpathian Basin. Phillips and Scotchmer bring the refreshing irreverence of an external examination yet treat the subject with affection and respect…Phillips and Scotchmer have pounded the streets of the Hungarian capital and hunted down local characters and characteristics to bring the mini guide alive. The guide is written in a smooth, informative style, packed with details yet never lecturing…A section on ‘Natural Budapest’ reveals information which I have never seen in a guidebook.' - The Budapest Times