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Tom Chesshyre is on a mission: to visit a dozen destinations that he can't spell, can't pronounce and wouldn't have heard of if low-fare airlines didn't fly to them. Places like Szczecin, Poprad-Zakopane, Kaunas, Paderborn, Haugesund, Brno and Tampere. Squeezing into his no-frills seat, he enters a hidden world of ex-Solidarity leaders and ultra-cheap dentists in Pol∧ minus 50C ice-rooms in Slovakia; stag parties and Skype in Estonia. Along the way he learns about the 'New Europe', the collapse of the Iron Curtain, the expansion of the European union - plus the fun you can have on a 1p flight. But Tom also explores another highly topical question, and ventures into the headquarters of both Easyjet and Friends of the Earth as he ponders: should we even be flying at all? This is a funny and thought-provoking book on travel in the twenty-first century.
Achat du livre
How Low Can You Go?, Tom Chesshyre
- Langue
- Année de publication
- 2008
- product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
- (souple)
Modes de paiement
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- Titre
- How Low Can You Go?
- Sous-titre
- Round Europe for 1p Each Way (Plus Tax)
- Langue
- Anglais
- Auteurs
- Tom Chesshyre
- Éditeur
- Hodder Paperbacks
- Publié
- 2008
- Format
- souple
- Pages
- 272
- ISBN10
- 0340937866
- ISBN13
- 9780340937860
- Séries
- Mots clés
- Nonfiction, Cartes et voyages, Voyage
- Évaluation
- 3,25 sur 5
- Description
- Tom Chesshyre is on a mission: to visit a dozen destinations that he can't spell, can't pronounce and wouldn't have heard of if low-fare airlines didn't fly to them. Places like Szczecin, Poprad-Zakopane, Kaunas, Paderborn, Haugesund, Brno and Tampere. Squeezing into his no-frills seat, he enters a hidden world of ex-Solidarity leaders and ultra-cheap dentists in Pol∧ minus 50C ice-rooms in Slovakia; stag parties and Skype in Estonia. Along the way he learns about the 'New Europe', the collapse of the Iron Curtain, the expansion of the European union - plus the fun you can have on a 1p flight. But Tom also explores another highly topical question, and ventures into the headquarters of both Easyjet and Friends of the Earth as he ponders: should we even be flying at all? This is a funny and thought-provoking book on travel in the twenty-first century.


