Producing a new edition of a guidebook happens in seemingly 101  stages, many of which had not even occurred to me. Since October last  year, Max and I (with a little help from our Russian-speaking friends)  have been updating Bradt's travel guides to Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan so  that 2nd editions of each book can be published in November this year.  Kazakhstan is the first to go to press and so the first edition we've  seen through from start to finish. 
Paul Brummell, Britain's  former Ambassador to Kazakhstan, wrote Bradt's original guide to  Kazakhstan in 2008. It is a hefty tome (not surprisingly given that  Kazakhstan is the same size as western Europe) and densely filled with  detail, but Brummell's writing style is fluid and entertaining. The  historical and cultural stories, as well as Brummell's own anecdotes of  his travels, make for a pleasurable read.
The downside of so much  detail is that when it comes to updating the book there are literally  thousands of facts to check. Every bus station, hotel, shopping mall and  travel agent needs to be called, not to mention the endless museums,  cafes and nightclubs. Not all of these companies have phones, and those  that do have often changed their numbers or simply gone out of business.  During this research stage you feel as much like Sherlock Holmes or a  character in CSI as a writer. 
In some cases there is no  alternative but to turn up on the doorstep to find out if XYZ still  exists. This is particularly useful with hotels and restaurants as you  can do a quality check at the same time. Pitching up in town is also  advantageous as you can check out any new places that have sprung up  since the previous edition was published: restaurants, cafes and bars in  particular seem to pop up and down like rabbits in a burrow.
Once the facts are checked and organised (we write the info up into  Excel so it is all in one place), it's time to edit the original  manuscript. Fortunately these days everything is digital, which speeds  this part of the process up no end. We remove everything that has gone,  change what needs to be changed, and add in the new entries. In the case  of the Kazakhstan guide there was also some entirely new content: new  sections on education and photography, a map of Turkestan, and added  info on driving into/out of and across Kazakhstan.The manuscript is  edited as a Word file, and all the changes are tracked so the project  manager can see what's going on.
When we sent off the manuscript , we breathed a huge sigh of relief:  the heavy lift on the edition was done. The project manager checks the  manuscript, emails over any questions or other matters raised during the  proof reading for correction, and we respond by email. That's all  pretty straight forward, and the book can then be typeset. The difficult  bits come next.
Maps. Every decent size town mentioned in the Kazakh guide has a map  which, as well as giving the major street names, shows the location of  every company and site mentioned in the guide. Removing defunct  companies from the map is relatively straightforward: you just cross  them off. Adding new sites in is a little more problematic. In some  respects, the Soviet Union was great at cartography. The topographical  maps produced, and those showing mineral deposits, are exceptionally  detailed and still great resources today. Sadly, this attention to  detail doesn't continue to town plans. Buildings are often not actually  located on the street mentioned in their address, and its common for  more than one name (usually Soviet and post-Soviet choices) to refer to  the same physical street. Plotting an address accurately on a map  without out actually walking the street is nigh on impossible, and  Google Maps only goes part of the way to clarifying the issue.
Armed with different colour biros, Tipex and multiple copies of the  same maps, we slowly plotted, checked, re-plotted and re-checked the  position of every new site. It was painstaking. Our humble drawings,  hopefully sufficiently clear in their final draft, were dispatched to  Bradt's cartographer to be rendered in their house style. We await the  final result.
 Although companies cannot pay for inclusion in the core text of Bradt's travel guides, and certainly cannot pay for a more favourable review, there are a few pages at the end of each guide given over to paid advertisers. This is usually a national airline and one or two high-end hotels that are looking to increase their exposure to potential customers. We made ourselves a 'hit-list' of potential advertisers and, via phone, email, fax and, on occasions, meetings in person, attempted to reel them in. Now I know we are in a recession, but there are a limited number of places where you can actually advertise companies in Kazakhstan, and the advertising rates are minute compared to those in magazines. The level of lethargy we met with was outstanding, and even once companies had decided to advertise, getting them to hand over their artwork at the correct spec was like pulling teeth. Fortunately Max had rather more patience in this area than I did. 
The final job on the update list (with the exception of choosing pictures) was to take the final, type-set PDF of the text and to cross-reference and index the text. Even with the invaluable 'Find' option in Word and Adobe, this tasks seems to take forever, not helped by the fact it is incredibly dull. It is not enough simply to list in the index every occurrence of the name "Dostoevsky" or the town "Aktobe": the vast majority of the listings are simply street names or throw-away references. It is necessary to trawl through each of these individually, pulling out for the index only those which add to the reader's understanding of the topic or enable them to find a specific piece of information. Even with Amy Winehouse blaring in the background, the task is mind-numbing.
Our tasks complete, Bradt is doing their final checks and assembling the colour photos that are one of the most popular highlights in any guidebook. Humans are very visual creatures and, no matter how eloquent the prose, a good selection of pictures will always swing your choice of where to go. We're excited to see the finished product but, like readers everywhere, will be waiting until Nov. 20th to see our book in print.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Kazakhstan-Bradt-Travel-Guides-Brummell/dp/1841623695/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1311685580&sr=8-2
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