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Brazil Is Not For Amateurs
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Disponible dans votre compte client Decitre ou Furet du Nord dès validation de votre commande. Le format ePub est :
- Compatible avec une lecture sur My Vivlio (smartphone, tablette, ordinateur)
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8233076398
- EAN9798233076398
- Date de parution14/01/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurLinda Balsamo
Résumé
Brazil Is Not For AmateursA Survival Guide for First-Time TravelersBrazil is not dangerous by default. But it has very little patience for bad assumptions. This is not a sightseeing guide, a bucket list, or a curated experience. It won't tell you where to go, what to photograph, or which beach is "unmissable." Brazil already has enough people doing that. This book explains why things that should work often don't - and why Brazilians are rarely surprised when they don't.
Written for first-time visitors (and repeat visitors who still feel confused), Brazil Is Not For Amateurs focuses on everyday friction: transportation that runs on flow, not precision; systems that punish urgency; politeness that can be expensive; and rules that are flexible until they suddenly aren't. You'll learn: Why trying to move fast creates problems How tourist traps actually function (spoiler: they're rarely dangerous, just annoying and overpriced) How food, payments, technology, and logistics work in real life - not on travel blogs When flexibility helps, and when it absolutely doesn't Why some places reward preparation instead of enthusiasm This book doesn't try to make Brazil look easy.
It assumes you're capable of adapting. You won't master Brazil. But you'll stop fighting it - which turns out to be the real upgrade.
Written for first-time visitors (and repeat visitors who still feel confused), Brazil Is Not For Amateurs focuses on everyday friction: transportation that runs on flow, not precision; systems that punish urgency; politeness that can be expensive; and rules that are flexible until they suddenly aren't. You'll learn: Why trying to move fast creates problems How tourist traps actually function (spoiler: they're rarely dangerous, just annoying and overpriced) How food, payments, technology, and logistics work in real life - not on travel blogs When flexibility helps, and when it absolutely doesn't Why some places reward preparation instead of enthusiasm This book doesn't try to make Brazil look easy.
It assumes you're capable of adapting. You won't master Brazil. But you'll stop fighting it - which turns out to be the real upgrade.



