I can't recall the author, but there is a great nonfiction book called Twenty-One Days In July.
It is a very interesting and engaging book about the TdF. Well written and lots of fun...not dry, but also very informative.
I can't recall the author, but there is a great nonfiction book called Twenty-One Days In July.
It is a very interesting and engaging book about the TdF. Well written and lots of fun...not dry, but also very informative.
"The best rides are the ones where you bite off much more than you can chew, and live through it." ~ Doug Bradbury
I agree with all the recommendations for Miles From Nowhere -- it's my all-time favorite bicycle book. I still re-read it every so often. I also enjoyed the Hey Mom book.
A few other suggestions:
It's Not About The Tapas: A Spanish Adventure on Two Wheels. I very much enjoyed it, although some people didn't like all the history trivia she included in her narrative. I liked it, she describes the historical events in a very humorous way.
Bicycle Love: Stories of Passion, Joy, and Sweat. A wonderful collection of bicycling-themed short stories, personal essays really. There are a lot of people out there just as crazy about cycling as we are!
The Long Season: One Year of Bicycle Racing in California. An interesting inside look at bicycle racing (non-fiction), and what a tough road it is to move up in the ranks.
Tour de Life: From Coma to Competition. I know there's a recent thread about Saul, this book describes his amazing recovery from a life-threatening head injury he suffered while racing.
Happy reading!
There's a book by Neal Peart called the masked rider - its about his bike trip in africa. he's a really good writer
I also liked metal cowboy (i think mentioned already)
there's also Wheel within a wheel which is a short narrative about a woman learning to ride in the 1800's (or was it early 1900's). its a great read
On the trail of marco polo by fotheringham is about the authors ride along the silk road. another great read.
one gear no breaks by Lori Ann muenzer
if you want a no bike book that's funny read Julie and Julia, its a riot!
Happy reading!
han
"The greater the obstacle, the more glory in overcoming it."-Moliere
"Our greatest weakness lies in giving up. The most certain way to succeed is always to try just one more time." -Thomas A. Edison
Shorty's Adventure - Blog
I'll second the suggestion for Llamas and Empanadas, I really enjoyed Eleanor's story.![]()
It is never too late to be what you might have been. ~ George Elliot
My podcast about being a rookie triathlete:Kelownagurl Tris Podcast
I had to put Riding with The Blue Moth down....I tried and got 2/3 of the way through...but the writing was so incredibly numb, affectless and sentimental that I couldn't finish it. His homilies and metaphors were so overwrought, they read like afterthoughts.
I was drawn to it because I loved the title..."blue moth" is a great metaphor for depression....but he doesn't go deep enough to do more than say I was depressed.
I kept waiting to share the bike and the feelings of grief... but it all stayed on the surface...Anyway...
I did start reading Dan Coyle's Lance Armstrong's War...what a thriller! And he's a good writer...
Discipline is remembering what you want.
Tim Mulliner's Long Ride For A Pie
It's the story of an expat NZlander who bikes from London to NZ..Not a bad book!
c
what a great title!!!
Discipline is remembering what you want.
Besides It's Not About the Bike which I liked a lot.
I've read Miles From Nowhere and I liked it a lot too.
Weird thing about reading that book my daughter and sil were on their honeymoon in Tahiti and Moorea just as I was finishing the book! That's where the bike journey finishes for the Savages too. When they came home and told me all about the islands I really felt I had been there too.
I have but yet to read this book; A Crossing by Brian Newhouse
A ride from the Pacific to the Atlantic. I'll keep it out and start reading it tonight. Thanks for the reminder!
And thanks for the good suggestions!
Life is like a 10 speed bike, we all have gears we never use.
Charles Schultz
"The bicycle is just as good company as most husbands and, when it gets old and shabby, a woman can dispose of it and get a new one without shocking the entire community." — Ann Strong, Minneapolis Tribune, 1895