Shop

I don’t hold with abroad and think that foreigners speak English when our backs are turned.
Quentin Crisp

 

*** GUILD SHOP ***

Here we sell copies of our yearbook, and a few other things as well.

 

 

Payment options: At checkout you can choose to pay online by credit/debit card, or to receive a pro forma invoice which can be paid through the secretariat by cheque or bank transfer.

 

Tip: Like most online shops, if you make a purchase you will need to register with your delivery/billing address, which means you become a user with a shopping login (handy for future visits). If you have difficulty logging in, please check your browser is accepting cookies. Our system uses cookies to keep track of sessions. The shopper login only works in the shopper login form on the left hand side of the shop page. It does not work in the site login forms (any other page).

 

Browse

Buy whole tables, or tickets for individual places at the BGTW's annual Gala Awards, held at The Savoy on the eve of World Travel Market.

 



2010 Gala Awards Dinner Table for 10

Book a table for ten people at the BGTW Awards Dinner on 7 Nov 10, the eve of World Travel Market, at The Savoy, London.  Product Details...

£1,945.80 (including 17.5 % VAT)
Average customer rating:
0 stars Total votes: 0
 

2010 Gala Awards Dinner Ticket

Individual ticket for the BGTW Awards Dinner on 7 Nov 09, the eve of World Travel Market, at The Savoy, London.  Product Details...

£194.58 (including 17.5 % VAT)
Average customer rating:
0 stars Total votes: 0
 


Yearbook Sample

Click for full story

Over the years, the BGTW Yearbook has become one of the most valuable tools in the British travel trade. Not only does it have detailed biographies and contact information for all Guild members, around 270 of the UK’s top travel journalists, but it also includes a comprehensive directory of over 2,700 specialist PR companies, publications, broadcast media, tourist offices, tour and transport operators and other useful companies and organisations operating in the UK travel...
Read more...

 
     

(Click photo to enlarge)

"Mr Safi Ullah was a tall thin man in white beard and white punjabi. He gave me tea and a copy of the headmaster’s report from 1948. As I left I pressed him to accept a 1000 taka note – a little less than £9. “For books,” I insisted. He took it under protest. “For books,” he agreed. I reflected afterwards that I had given him enough to keep a 10-year-old in school for a year." 

© Peter Hughes, Bangladesh, Condé Nast Traveller, 2008

 

 

Link to our general newsfeed...

RSS 2.0 button