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China

Whether you are looking for a self-guided China tour or want to join a guided tour of China, you will find a tour to suit your needs here. Click below to find some of the best guided and self-guided China tours available today. Many of these China tour packages feature unique China tour opportunities that you will not find anywhere else. China - Order FREE Travel Brochure!.

China Hotel Deals
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The
Rough Guide to China - 4th Edition
Tour China. Rough Guide to China is the essential handbook to
this vast and extraordinary country. In-depth coverage of the
entire country, from buzzing Beijing, Hong Kong and Shanghai
to the ethnic minority regions of the southwest and Tibet. The
authors give expert practical advice for every budget on where
to stay, where to find the best local cuisine and getting round
by public transport. There are also invaluable translations
into Chinese script of place names, accommodation and restaurants.
The guide also gives a detailed background on China's history,
politics, cultures and peoples.

Hangzhou Hotel Deals
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Yangtze
Flowing over 3900 miles from one end of China to the other,
the Yangtze is vast, varied, and mysterious, like China itself.
It rises in the highlands of Tibet, where glaciers drip and
ooze to create a network of icy channels that join to form what
the Chinese call simply Chang Jiang, the Long River. Tour China.
China
(Eyewitness Travel Guides)
Tour China. The guides that show you what others only tell you!
From the enigmatic Terra-Cotta Warriors to the buzzing nightlife
of Shanghai discover the real China with this essential guide.
Explore the Great Wall and China's other breathtaking sites
through the unique cutaway maps and 3D models. With tips on
where to enjoy the best Peking duck and Tsingtao beer, this
is one takeaway you'll never want to forget.
Explore
the Great Wall
Tour China. The Great Wall of China is the largest construction
on earth, yet myths about it are more widely known than facts.
The best way to appreciate the Great Wall is to explore it on
foot. This richly illustrated book focuses on especially rewarding
parts of the Ming Dynasty Wall (1368-1644). The book offers:
walking notes on seven sections in detail; clear site plans
of Badaling, Mutianyu and Simatai; two map panels showing the
entire Wall network, plus one panel around Beijing (larger scale);
practical information about transport and travel; introduction
to Mandarin Chinese, Pinyin and pictographs; lavishly illustrated,
with 70 colour photographs; rucksack-friendly format The sections
include Laolongtou, where the Wall runs into the sea, and Panjiakou
reservoir, a tranquil hike and boat trip. The glorious stretch
from Simatai to Jinshanling runs along high ridges with 30 watch
towers, and the Badaling and Mutianyu sections are surprisingly
accessible from Beijing. The book sets the Ming Wall in the
context of wall systems developed by different dynasties since
the seventh century BC.
China:
In the Kingdom of the Dragon
Here is the new China, opening itself up to the free market
and building cities that rival Western ones in terms of architecture
and technology. Here is also the old China - with its ancient
architectural wonders and natural beauty. In this book both
are described in fascinating commentary and in astounding colour
photographs that show a mix of the ancient and futuristic as
China's citizens head into the next millennium by rediscovering
their ancient roots. In China, cities with skylines that look
like backdrops to sci-fi movies coexist with millennium-old
monuments and values that have remained unchanged for centuries.
The overpopulated cities of the eastern plains are juxtaposed
with the natural marvels of the West, such as the forests and
blue lakes of Sichuan, the Himalayan peaks, and the deserts
and Blue Mountains of Xinjiang. And there are the Yellow and
Yangtze rivers, dividing the country into north and south, and
defending the landscape of the Three Gorges celebrated in Chinese
literature and painting. This book captures all of this natural
and architectural diversity as well as that of China's many
people. Photos of sweeping landscapes together with shots of
people going about everyday life, from applying makeup to fishing,
are accompanied by texts that explore the ethnic diversity of
the people and the range of cities from Zhenghou, the site of
archaeological discovery.
Lost
China: The Photographs of Leone Nani
An evocative compilation of more than 180 stunning period duotone
photographs by a missionary who served in central China from
1904 to 1914 captures an array of everyday life scenes, religious
ceremonies, architectural landmarks, landscapes, and people
from the remote villages that he served. 22,000 first printing.
Celestial
Realm: The Yellow Mountains of China
A lavishly produced volume featuring stunning duotone images
of China's fabled Yellow Mountains by the celebrated photographer
Wang Wusheng. For more than three decades, Wang Wusheng has
been captivated by the beauty of Mount Huangshan, also known
as the Yellow Mountains. Located in the southern part of the
Anhul province in northern China, Mount Huangshan has often
been described as the world's most beautiful and enchanting
mountain. Over the centuries this mountain with its seventy-two
peaks has been the subject of Chinese landscape painters, whose
singular works are so haunting it seems impossible that these
mountains exist in nature. Inspired by the legacy of these paintings,
Wang Wusheng has sought to portray this scenic wonder. As shown
in the collection of ninety photographs in this extraordinary
volume, here are mistshrouded, granlte peaks emerging from an
ever-changing veil of clouds, sculptural craggy rocks, springs
on lifty cliffs, and weathered, oddly-shaped pine trees, depicted
in all seasons and at various times of day.
China
The photographer Yann Layma has spent nine years in China and
his reportage of this vast country includes town and country,
tradition and modernity, and every aspect of public and private
life. The pictures are complemented by essays from a group of
highly-regarded writers.
Vanished
Kingdoms: A Woman Explorer in Tibet, China and Mongolia 1921-1925
In the early 1920s, the last great age of world explorers, a
remarkable young woman, Janet Elliott Wulsin, set out with her
husband, Frederick Wulsin, for the far reaches of China, Tibet
and Mongolia to study the people, flora and fauna of the region.
Janet's strenuous, eventful exploration is detailed by a text
enriched with excerpts from her candid personal letters. The
journey proved to be a test of the Wulsin's endurance and of
their relationship.
Flavours
of the Middle Kingdom: The Origins of Traditional Chinese Dishes
Flavours of the Middle Kingdom: The Origins of Traditional Chinese
Dishes" comes with a comprehensive illustrated glossary
of ingredients and a section on cooking tips to guide readers
on this culinary adventure. Readers now have a chance to learn
about the background of those famous Chinese dishes with fascinating
names. The background of each dish is explained and the recipes
are clearly presented so they can be easily reproduced in any
kitchen.
Liu
Zheng: The Chinese
Liu seeks out moments in which archetypal Chinese characters
are encountered in extreme and unexpected situations. His photographs
are divided among a number of topics which betray a dark vision,
albeit one that is laced with mordant humor.
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