Edmonton Journal

Berlitz offers 300 ship reviews

- Visit portsandbo­ws.com for daily updates on the latest cruise news, best deals and behind- the- scenes stories from the industry. You can also sign up for an email newsletter on the site for even more cruise informatio­n. Phil can be contacted directly at

If there is a godfather of the cruise writing business, that title must belong to Englishman Douglas Ward.

He is the author of the industry bible the Berlitz Complete Guide to Cruising and Cruise Ships, and the 2013 edition is now online and on bookshelve­s across the country.

Douglas — I just can’t bring myself to call an Englishman “Doug” — spends more time cruising than I spend at home. His passion for being on cruise ships goes back a long way to when he worked as an employee for several cruise lines before finding out that writing about cruising was a lot more fun and a lot less work.

I’ve had a chance to talk to Douglas on several occasions and, in fact, when I started Ports and Bows, my first call was to his home in England. Luckily for me he was home, because he spends 200 days a year cruising. That annual allotment has turned into 5,800 days (almost 16 years) on 1,020 cruises.

While many writers are turning out their first app or online book on cruising, this is No. 28 for Douglas.

I went onto Indigo’s website and found the book selling for $19.95, on Amazon’s for $16.62, and I bought one for my Kindle at $9.99. Better still, thumb through it at your local bookstore (should be on shelves Oct. 1). The app is available at iTunes for $9.99.

Ward makes a good point when it comes to saving money. Many new ships, especially in the early years, charge a premium. He points out that working through a travel agent — or shopping online — you may find the same cruise, or some variation of it, less expensive on one of the line’s older ships.

The book is a rising tide of informatio­n. You will find reviews for almost 300 cruise ships ranked in an easy-to-understand format from the best to worst. A ship you probably haven’t heard of — Hapag-Lloyd’s Europa — has been ranked No. 1 by Douglas for 13 years.

Reading between the lines, I have a feeling that he prefers the smaller ships, but he has lots to say about the mega-ships, or as he likes to call them the “resort ships.”

He leaves nothing to the imaginatio­n in his reviews. Everything from each ship’s accommodat­ion, food, service, entertainm­ent and overall experience is ranked individual­ly by point value, giving you a quick overview of every ship.

In the preface, he offers sage advice on a variety of cruise questions that should lead you into deciding what ship fits your style or family needs. He also offers up an entire section on river cruising.

Douglas and I probably don’t totally agree on some ship reviews, but then the entire art of cruising is quite subjective, from passenger to passenger and critic to critic.

He points out that the basic cost of cruising offers today’s best value in travelling and he is right.

However, that basic cost of cruising can quickly rise when, without thinking, you consider the extras — things like currency conversion, extra gratuities, transfer buses, mineral water, navigation bridge tours, bingo cards.

I look forward to hearing your comments.

 ??  ?? The basic cost of cruising offers today’s best value in travelling.
The basic cost of cruising offers today’s best value in travelling.
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