The Good Pub Guide probably provides the widest choice. A fat, packed volume from Ebury Press that isn't cheap at around £15, it covers over 5,000 pubs. The guide combines main entries and 'lucky dips' - establishments that have been recommended but haven't been fully checked out. Symbols pick out highlights like exceptional food or wine, while a detailed entry gives a description of the pub, a good feel for the food available (including prices) and useful details like the attitude to children and the opening hours.

    About the only thing wrong with The Good Pub Guide is the directions. If I had a pound for each time I've got lost following these brisk and rarely illuminating remarks I'd be able to go to pub more frequently than I do. Still, the maps are good and it's invariably worth the search. Take, for example, The Good Pub Guide's unspoilt pub of the year, the Harrow at Steep (Hampshire). Finding this place is a treasure hunt in its own right, but you've only got to see the remarkably old fashioned rooms, or taste the huge bowls of soup and mind-blowing meatloaf to know that it was all worthwhile.