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Reviews for Improve Your Bridge

 Improve Your Bridge magazine reviews

The average rating for Improve Your Bridge based on 2 reviews is 2.5 stars.has a rating of 2.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2009-09-28 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Wayne Simpler
Links speaks directly to the reader with what Jan Morris calls "the kind of urbanity that is masked in simplicity." He makes no great claims for this travel guide, saying "Its simple object is to guide the reader to places he might otherwise miss and, having reached them, to tell him what he might wish to know and then leave him there to admire, to enjoy or, perhaps, to be disappointed." He is brisk about the Accademia ("The first nineteen rooms of the Accademia can be done in half an hour by any traveler with sound limbs and a willingness to postpone the delights of such heavyweights as Titan, Tintoretto and Veronese..."), though he himself was a noted Canaletto scholar. His description of the Piazza was our accompaniment as we sat, per his suggestion, with a Campari spritz one late afternoon and surveyed the delectations of the Doge's Palace and St. Mark's Basilica. It was a delight to have him with us.
Review # 2 was written on 2015-07-12 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 2 stars Lisa Blackman
JG Links� guide to the wonders of Venice, Venice for Pleasure, was first published around the time when England were winning the World Cup and Harold Wilson was puffing on his pipe as our prime minister. That it is still in print today should tell you something; that this is the book to have with you when first you visit that magical city. It has of course, been updated since it first saw the light of day in 1966. You can rely upon its seventh edition to make sense of the current Vaporetto routes, and the restaurants and cafes it notes are (mostly) still there. Since JG Links is sadly no longer with us to add to his urbane and witty volume, this may not be true for ever. But to go to Venice for the first time without this important book would be a shame. It is not only the best guide to Venice, it is possibly the best guide to any city, written with the casual visitor in mind (not for the art historian or the history scholar), and written solely with pleasure in view. Why is it so good? I think because it puts no pressure on you whatever. Most guides have a sort of breathless, open-mouthed and unquestioning reverence for the places they discuss, Venice for Pleasure has achieved its goal if it leaves you sitting in the sunshine on the banks of a canal, sipping a coffee. Other Venice guides deliver you to the door of the Frari or the Accademia with injunctions not to miss a whole list of things. Only Venice for Pleasure will tell you (of the Accademia) not to panic, since the first nineteen rooms can be �done in half an hour by any traveller with sound limbs�. Only JG Links will exclaim (once you have gazed on some gross and absurdly scaled monuments � as well as Bellini�s angels � and have reached the open air once more), �We have done the Frari.� The book itself consists of four walking routes around Venice. These take in everything you will want to see (including many not so much visited treasures), but they will generally keep you moving past the crowds of St Marks, and most other crowds too, for Venice beyond the obvious still stubbornly resists being explored. Wandering around Venice, one often encounters those with other guide books. You can tell these people by the glazed expression, the fixed rictus of having �enjoyed� so many Titians or Donatellos, the footsore limp of the enthusiast who has taken on one church too many. Death, in Venice, often approaches as a result of unquestioning admiration, and it is only the city itself that saves you. As Venice for Pleasure points out, the big picture is really what is so special about the place. Having been established by luck, having prospered by intrigue and plunder, having survived against all odds, Venice is a miracle of history. It is the place itself (and not the glittering details within) which contains the magic.


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