ローンリー・プレネット・ジャパン
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New Lonely Planet Tokyo launch at 300 Bar Next, Yurakucho, Tokyo |
Lonely Planet, the legendary guide book publisher, launched a new edition of
Lonely Planet Japan last night, at a lively launch party in Tokyo's Yurakucho district.
After an hour's warm up at the basement
300 Bar Next, Lonely Planet's North Asia Territory Manager,
Tim Burland, took the mike, and introduced us all to the hefty blue, hot-off-the-press version of
Lonely Planet Tokyo.
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Tim Burland and Rebecca Milner at Lonely Planet Tokyo launch. |
Following him, author of
Lonely Planet Pocket Tokyo,
Rebecca Milner, also addressed the crowd, with Burland resuming a little later with a commentated slide show to provide few more details about the books being launched. Among them, too, is the
Lonely Planet Pocket Kyoto & Osaka.
300 Bar Next also calls itself "Ginza 300 Bar Next" - but is a million miles from the slick glass-fronted feel of Ginza, partaking more of the rough-and-ready, even grungy, atmosphere of Yurakucho and evoking, maybe, something of Lonely Planet's original alternative vibe.
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Slideshow at 300 Bar Next for Lonely Planet Tokyo |
I made a new acquaintance or two, and caught up with a couple more. I managed to exchange a word or two with Tim Burland, and briefly acquaint him with JapanVisitor.com.
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Lonely Planet Tokyo new edition launch party posters |
A chasm seems to remain between the online and offline worlds of publishing. Tim Burland hadn't heard of JapanVisitor.com, and, to my surprise, hadn't even heard of JapanGuide, which dominates the search engines for queries about Japan.
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My name tag at the Lonely Planet Tokyo 2017 edition launch party |
Lonely Planet will remain the leading guide book for its thoroughness, candidness, its sense of being completely on the traveler's side, and the natural, familiar tone of its writing. It is a publication that aims to being the world together by facilitating travel: informing, sometimes teaching, warning where necessary, preparing us for the other, and ensuring that we at least survive comfortably enough - at best, edified, excited and energized enough - to want to do it over again.
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