Hola tangueros/as In the event that you are planning to getaway and fly south to Buenos Aires, I would like to share with you my review of "Tango Lover's Guide to Buenos Aires: Insights and Recommendations" by Migdalia Romero.
I really found this book to be a little gem. In fact, I wish I had had it when I first went to BsAs several years ago. I remember, as the author states how "I floundered around for too long" trying to figure out the city and where to go. Just like her, by the time I figured out what to do almost a week had passed. This guide would have spared me the grief. It is filled with valuable information to help "tango junkies" like myself, to make the most of their limited and precious experience in BsAs. It will also help those people who can spend lots of time, to feel the music and the dance outside of the regular milongas in bars, clubs, restaurants and cultural centers where most portenos attend. The book covers milongas to dance, the schools and the sought after highly respected teachers; stores to shop for music, shoes, clothes and tango accessories. But what makes this guide so special were the vignettes that the author presented derived from her personal experience learning the milonga etiquette so not to be embarrassed, and trying to understand what makes the milonguero in BsAs so sought after by women and respected by others. The portrait of the milonguero that the author paints indeed is special. Although I am a native Spanish speaker and as an experienced dual-language immersion teacher, I can also see how this guide would support the people who do not speak Spanish, for it presents, the "sprinkling" of Spanish vocabulary that travelers, shoppers and dancers would need to feel comfortable in the Spanish world of tango. This book is all about tango in the Buenos Aires experience. A la pista! Angela Maria Suero