The Rough Guide to Madeira and the Azores
The current Rough Guide covering both Madeira and the Azores, with regional coverage, itineraries, walking suggestions and practical information, plus a free eBook.
Topic
14 books about Madeira tagged “travel”.
The current Rough Guide covering both Madeira and the Azores, with regional coverage, itineraries, walking suggestions and practical information, plus a free eBook.
The latest edition of Lonely Planet’s compact pocket guide to Madeira, with detailed itineraries and coverage of Funchal, the north coast, east Madeira and Porto Santo.
DK Eyewitness’s Top 10 pocket guide ranking Madeira’s best attractions, beaches, hiking trails and wine outlets, with a pull-out map and seven ready-made itineraries.
A compact Marco Polo pocket guide to Madeira packed with insider tips and a pull-out map, good for a short, well-organised trip.
A concise full-colour Insight pocket guide with curated itineraries, top attractions, a perfect-tour route, eating-out listings, a pull-out map and a free eBook.
A compact Berlitz pocket guide covering Madeira’s highlights — Monte, the Jardim Botânico and Pico do Arieiro — with a perfect-day itinerary and practical information.
An AA Spiral Guide to Madeira with themed sightseeing coverage, walks and tours, and the practical information needed to plan an island trip.
Fodor’s full-colour guide to Portugal with a dedicated chapter on Madeira and Funchal — a current, in-print option for travellers combining the island with the mainland.
A classic Victorian guide and personal account of touring Madeira — how to see the island, letters from a year’s residence, and lists of its trees, flowers, ferns and seaweeds. Available as a facsimile reprint.
W. H. Koebel’s engaging Edwardian portrait of Madeira, weaving the island’s history with contemporary life and travel, illustrated with photographs by Mildred Cossart.
Anthony Drexel Biddle’s turn-of-the-century account of the Madeira Islands — history, scenery, vine-culture and society — with full-page illustrations and maps.
A mid-Victorian traveller’s sketch of Madeira for visitors and invalids seeking the island’s restorative climate, with practical and descriptive information.
American statesman John Adams Dix’s narrative of a winter spent in Madeira, recording the island’s climate, scenery and society from an invalid-traveller’s perspective.
American naval chaplain Walter Colton’s travel sketches, opening with Madeira before Lisbon and the Mediterranean — the island as seen by a mid-century sea voyager.