Added bonuses include better road and communications infrastructure, fascinating modern-day Maya culture, colonial art and architecture, and the ruined remains of the great Maya cities dotting vast portions of the landscape.
Surprised? In his book Guatemalan Journey, author Stephen Connelly Benz describes his own culture shock upon his return to the country after a 10-year absence. He writes, “It was something of a shock to have made the long journey to a Third World country—one of the poorest in the hemisphere, according to the statistics I had seen—only to discover landscaped avenues and speeding BMWs.” He adds, “What I learned that first weekend, or rather what I began to learn, was one of the important lessons of my sojourn: you cannot anticipate a place like Guatemala; it defies facile definition.”
From the chic cafés and high-rise hotels of Guatemala City to the mountain trails and quaint dirt-floor huts of the most remote Mayan village, Guatemala is an enigmatic land of culture and contrasts offering an incomparable palette of pleasures for any visitor.
Excerpted from the Third Edition of Moon Guatemala.