
A month or so ago, I had an
Amazon voucher to spend, and after choosing a
couple of
CD’s plus a
DVD of the classic, free
Hyde Park concert, given by the
Rolling Stones in
1969, there was still some credit remaining. My purchases
were insufficient to qualify for free delivery, so in order to take me over the
threshold, I plumped for a book, in the form of the
Good Pub Guide 2019.
Some might argue that the latter is a publication to rival
CAMRA’s Good Beer
Guide, but having flicked through the pages of my purchase, I don’t think that
CAMRA has anything to worry about. For a start, the two guides are totally
different from one another, with one concentrating solely on beer, and the
other on the outlets selling the stuff; although to be fair neither is mutually
exclusive from the other.
To be truthful, I bought the
Good Pub Guide as an alternative to the
GBG, primarily because
the latter seemed to be morphing into the good micro-pub and micro-brewery tap
guide and I wanted to see what
alternatives were on offer. However, having
parted with
£8.00 for my purchase I’m
extremely glad I didn’t pay the cover-price of
£16.00.
Running to over
1,700 pages, and listing around
5,000 pubs the
GPG, is an
unwieldy publication, and definitely not one for carrying around, or even
leaving in the glove-compartment of the car. Apart from some mono-chrome maps
at the rear, the guide is totally devoid of illustrations, making it an
extremely boring read, with about as much appeal as a telephone directory, but
before dismissing it totally out of hand, let’s look at what it has to offer.

Now in its
37th edition the
Good Pub Guide claims to be
"Britain's
bestselling travel guide", and the only truly independent guide of its kind. It
also claims that its yearly updates, and reader recommendations ensure that
only the best pubs make the grade.
Its publishers state that
not only
will you find a
“fantastic range of countryside havens, bustling inns and
riverside retreats, but also a growing number of gastropubs and pubs
specialising in malt whiskey and craft beers,” – all very different from what
CAMRA’s guide has to offer, but do the publisher’s claims stack up, and how do
they compare with what
CAMRA has to say about its own guide?
For a start,
CAMRA’s Good Beer Guide is also truly independent and almost
certainly far better researched than its erstwhile rival. It too is updated on
a yearly basis, following recommendations from local
CAMRA members, who monitor
and provide feedback on pubs within their local branch area, over the year.
Most branches encourage members to nominate pubs for the guide, on a yearly
basis, and once a list has been drawn up, detailed inspections will be carried
out, followed by a democratic selection process, in order to ensure that only
the top-notch pubs go into the guide.
I’m not sure how selection for the
GPG works, but according to the
publishers the
2019 edition contains 1,140 fully inspected main entries plus
1,931 entries recommended by readers. Interestingly these are entries which
“Have yet to be inspected”.
Personally, I found these reader’s recommendations far more interesting, and
useful, than the main entries; especially as the latter place far too much
focus on what’s on the menu, to the extent
of listing the dishes available. Surely that’s what the individual pub websites are
for? But on the subject of on-line viewing, the
Good Pub Guide maintains its
own website, listing
55,000 pubs, and what’s more it’s free to access. So why on earth
would people shell out for the paper and ink version?
I envisage using the
Good Pub Guide on an occasional basis, mainly as a reference
to find a decent pub in an unfamiliar part of the country. But with the
Good
Beer Guide App on my phone, plus access to
CAMRA’s WhatPub; both of which give
the information I am looking for in a concise, illustrated and much more
portable form, I don’t really see me making that much use of it.