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On the other hand, the best restaurant in Genova, as any taxi driver or concierge can tell you, is a seafood house in the port area called Vittorio's - a fun and popular place with amazing food. The only restaurants Altman mentions are one nice place outside of town (unappealing since driving in and around Genova is a nightmare), and, of course, a trattoria. Sounds like Altman had one lunch and one dinner in Genova also. The book simply fails to mention the wonderful Aquarium that is Genova's best tourist attraction, although it may not have been open when Altman visited.
Beyond these critical failures in restaurants and hotels, Altman fails to provide important information about parking, mass transit, store and restaurant hours, etc. There are no useful road maps or city maps, so it is often impossible to get to a desired location within a city without another guidebook. Even when describing attractions, his prose is sodden and self-important, as when he argues with Napoleon's characterization of Venice's St.Mark's square as Europe's "finest drawing room". No, says, Altman, "this is no drawing room, Bonaparte, it's a great piece of Italian theatre". Give me a break. Speaking of Venice, imagine a guidebook that fails to explain how to park a car and catch a water taxi in a city famous for banning land vehicles.
Guide books cost so much money, and there are so many out there on Italy, do yourself a favor and buy another one. Otherwise you'll be halfway through your trip and you'll buy the other one anyway.
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