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Wit
• The exclusive Nota Bene series (NB Publishing) is the splashiest—and snootiest—entry in the guidebook field. Available by subscription at a cost of $300 for 10 issues, the skinny, sorbet-colored "destination reviews" are devoted to seeking out the hippest hotels, the trendiest bars and the hottest restaurants in places from Courchevel to Marrakech. Reviewers tell you not only what to order on the menu but also the right table to sit at. "We endure the duds so you don't have to," promise the authors in the Paris issue. "Read NB assiduously and your travel itinerary will consist of jewel after jewel." But not everything is a jewel: the Hôtel Meurice, they decree, is a "shrine to bad taste ... We loathe it."
• A more egalitarian but still trendy guide is the sleek new Moon Metro series, which explores cities—so far, New York, Paris, Washington, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, London and Amsterdam—by neighborhood, with highly individualized but not snarky descriptions written by local correspondents. The guides send travelers to traditional tourist spots as well as chic shops and clubs. The chapters include detailed foldout maps that are discreet enough that you can open them on the street without looking lost.
—L.M.
Jakarta, plugged in
Less a guidebook than an alphabet book of Indonesia's capital, Daniel
Ziv's Jakarta Inside Out is a curious hybrid that will have a hard time
finding a place on bookstore shelves. Which is a pity. The slim volume
is graced with striking photographs of city life, but the paperback
format and irreverent, witty observations keep it firmly out of the
coffee-table book genre. The 60-odd short essays on subjects ranging
from the ubiquitous Asongan (vendors who ply their wares through the
city's equally ubiquitous traffic jams), to bules (resident foreigners),
nonkong (the art of hanging out) and waria (ladyboys) make up the ideal
Jakarta primer, perfect for tourists who want to peek below the surface,
or bule who want to know their adopted city better. And all the while it
manages to avoid the exotic clichés prevalent in most books on
Indonesia. In fact, Jakarta Inside Out is cheekily stamped "Wayang
Free," certifying that there are no representations—visual,
metaphorical or otherwise—of the traditional Indonesian shadow
puppets. Now that's something worth putting on your coffee table.
—A.B.
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