You don't need to be an 'investor' to invest in Singletrack: 6 days left: 95% of target - Find out more
Last year there were loads but keen to read more adventure type books rather than a cyclist's life story. Any recommendations please?
Thanks. 🙂
Neither of the sort you mentioned, but I enjoyed Ned Boulting's book from the inside of the tour, and he has a new one that's on my Xmas list. Interesting and funny.
Faster: The Obsession, Science and Luck Behind the World's Fastest Cyclists by Michael Hutchinson (2014) is an excellent read even if you don't race. Witty, entertaining and very informative.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Faster-Obsession-Science-Fastest-Cyclists/dp/1408843757
Another vote for Faster too.
I appear to have bought a few cycling/adventure related books recently - the past 6 months shows this on my Kindle account 🙂
Life Cycles - A London bike courier decided to cycle around the world. 169 days later, he came back with a world record.
Julian Sayarer
Roads Were Not Built For Cars: How cyclists were the first to push for good roads & became the pioneers of motoring
Carlton Reid, Martin Rickerd, Edmund King
The Monuments: The Grit and the Glory of Cycling’s Greatest One-day Races
Peter Cossins
We Were Young and Carefree: The Autobiography of Laurent Fignon
Laurent Fignon, William Fotheringham
Mid-life Cyclists
Chris McHutchison, Neil Blundell
Crossing Europe on a Bike Called Reggie
Andrew P. Sykes
Cycle of Lies: The Fall of Lance Armstrong
Juliet Macur
The Cycling Anthology: Volume One
Lionel Birnie, Ellis Bacon
Breaking The Chain: Drugs and Cycling - The True Story
Willy Voet
Along The Med on a Bike Called Reggie
Andrew P. Sykes
8,000 Miles Across Alaska: A Runner's Journeys on the Iditarod Trail
Jill Homer
Arctic Glass: Six Years of Adventure in Alaska and Beyond
Jill Homer
Ghost Trails: Journeys Through a Lifetime
Jill Homer
Be Brave, Be Strong: A Journey Across the Great Divide
Jill Homer
One Day Ahead: A Tour de France Misadventure
Richard Grady
The Hour
Michael Hutchinson
The Race to Truth: Blowing the whistle on Lance Armstrong and cycling's doping culture
Emma O'Reilly
Shadows on the Road: Life at the Heart of the Peloton, from US Postal to Team Sky
Michael Barry
The Climb: The Autobiography
Chris Froome
Sean Yates: It's All About the Bike: My Autobiography
Sean Yates
Not read them all yet, and they aren't all from this year, but a few to get started with perhaps!
Cheers, Rich
Fat Tire Flyer is very good 😀 If you don't want to immediately go out and throw yourself down a hill on a SS clunker after reading it I'll eat my hat 😆
Thanks very much all especially Rich with his huge list! 😀
Mid-life Cyclists
Chris McHutchison, Neil Blundell
Quite enjoyed this. Very much the life of your average cycling enthusiast, very much like Obsessive Compulsive Cycling Disorder, which I think has been well read on this forum.
Chris Froome book I enjoyed too. But obviously very much about Chris Froome.
I'd have to plug this one coz I wrote some of it:
Perfect bathroom reading 🙂
And as mentioned, Roads were not built for cars by Carlton Reid is very good
Apparently I bought a few in the previous 18 months too 😀
Gironimo!: Riding the Very Terrible 1914 Tour of Italy
Tim Moore
Lanterne Rouge: The Last Man in the Tour de France
Max Leonard
Domestique: The Real-life Ups and Downs of a Tour Pro
Charly Wegelius
Accidental Ironman
Martyn Brunt
I'm Here To Win: A World Champion's Advice for Peak Performance
Chris McCormack
Inside Team Sky
David Walsh
Seven Deadly Sins: My Pursuit of Lance Armstrong
David Walsh
Swim, Bike, Run, Laugh!:A Lighthearted Look at the Serious Sport of Triathlon and the Ironman Experience
Dan Madson
Strength and Conditioning for Triathlon: The 4th Discipline
Mark Jarvis
The Perfect Race
Charles Howard
Road to Endorphia: Running and Ranting from John O'Groats to Land's End
Joe Donnachie
Ironman:Jam, Gels and Isotonic
Mark Kennedy
Never Wipe Your Ass with a Squirrel: A trail running, ultramarathon, and wilderness survival guide for weird folks
Jason Robillard
The Long Run (Kindle Single)
Mishka Shubaly
Run or Die
Jornet Kilian
Run!
Dean Karnazes
My Life on the Run: The Wit, Wisdom, and Insights of a Road Racing Icon
Bart Yasso, Amby Burfoot
IronFit Strength Training and Nutrition for Endurance Athletes: Time Efficient Training Secrets for Breakthrough Fitness
Don Fink, Melanie Fink
Eat and Run: My Unlikely Journey to Ultramarathon Greatness
Jurek, Scott
Order Details Printable Order Summary
Qualifying for Kona: The Road to Ironman Triathlon World Championship in Hawaii
Raymond Britt
Finding Ultra: Rejecting Middle Age, Becoming One of the World's Fittest Men, and Discovering Myself
Rich Roll
Marathon
Hal Higdon
Zen and the Art of Running: The Path to Making Peace with Your Pace
Larry Shapiro
Iron War: Two Incredible Athletes. One Epic Rivalry. The Greatest Race of All Time.
Matt Fitzgerald
Eat and Run: My Unlikely Journey to Ultramarathon Greatness
Scott Jurek, Steve Friedman
Hunger: The Sean Kelly Autobiography
Sean Kelly
Racing Hard
William Fotheringham
On the Road Bike: The Search For a Nation's Cycling Soul
Ned Boulting
Wide-Eyed and Legless: Inside the Tour de France
Jeff Connor
Merckx: Half Man, Half Bike
William Fotheringham
Sex, Lies and Handlebar Tape: The Remarkable Life of Jacques Anquetil, the First Five-Times Winner of the Tour de France
Paul Howard
Put Me Back On My Bike: In Search of Tom Simpson (Yellow Jersey Cycling Classics)
William Fotheringham
Fallen Angel: The Passion of Fausto Coppi (Yellow Jersey Cycling Classics)
William Fotheringham
In Search of Robert Millar: Unravelling the Mystery Surrounding Britain's Most Successful Tour de France Cyclist: Unravelling the Mystery Surrounding Britain's Most Successful Tour De France Cyclist
Richard Moore
Racing Hard
William Fotheringham
Ravings of a Runner
Greg May
Mud, Sweat and Gears: Cycling From Land's End to John O'Groats (Via the Pub)
Ellie Bennett
Cycling's Greatest Misadventures
Erich Schweikher, Erich Schweikher, Paul Diamond
Ultramarathon Man: Confessions of an All-Night Runner
Dean Karnazes
One Man and LEJOG
Antony Last
Swim, Bike, Run: Our Triathlon Story
Alistair Brownlee, Jonathan Brownlee
Born to Run: The hidden tribe, the ultra-runners, and the greatest race the world has never seen
Christopher McDougall
The Death of Marco Pantani: A Biography
Matt Rendell
Paris-Roubaix: The Inside Story. All the bumps of cycling's cobbled classic.
Les Woodland
Eddy Merckx: The Cannibal
Daniel Friebe
Chris Hoy: The Autobiography
Chris Hoy
Cheers, Rich
Oh, have to plug another STW's work DavidB: [url= http://phased.co.uk/obsessive-compulsive-cycling-disorder/ ]Obsessive Compulsive Cycling Disorder[/url] a great selection of articles.
Cheers, Rich
Thank you Rich but can I also massively plug "Faster" by Michael Hutchinson which I read in 3 sittings it was so interesting.
I think I may need help for an unhealthy Kindle habit 😯
Ned Boultings new book , 101 damnations, yep thats how is spelt, looks good.
"The Giant Singletrack book of Answers" will be out soon.
Followed by the "Singletrack, im always right and youre wrong compendium"
Confessions of a Moderator,looks intresting,
as does,
Tyres for any sort of weather,
and,
Cameroon and how a bike forum defeated the Conservatives,
Given you're asking for recommendations as well as just a list of people's Kindle content...
Wegelius' book is very good and novel in not being the story of a winner or a doping confessional.
Gironimo was entertaining but probably the worst (or least entertaining) Tim Moore book I've read.
Fallen Angel equally interesting as a story about a country and a time as it is about a legendary cyclist.
Seven Deadly Sins adds new material and a new perspective to an overtold story.
The Race to Truth by Emma O'Reilly, another LA story. Munqe Chick read it and really enjoyed it, reckons O'Reilly is far more pragmatic than you'd think and feels as hurt by journalists who used and burned her as by LA's attitude.
Roule Britannia by William Foringtham is crap. A lazily updated and re-hashed book with new chapters tacked on covering more recent riders and cashing in on Wiggomania, but with no editing of older chapters (so the Robert Millar chapter describes him in the present tense as Britains most successful Tour rider).
At Speed, Cav's second autobiography, is written in a conversational manner and also entertaining if taken for what it is (a story of recent events, the rest of his life's already been done). Not worth hardback prices, we got it out of the library (old skool).
Etape by Richard Moore is a recent release, not read it yet, expecting to receive it this year!
Two best I've read this year were At Speed and Mid-Life Cyclists.
If you've not read it, Geoff Thomas' Riding Through the Storm is a good read.
I think I want to read the one about not wiping your ass with a squirrel. I can see it being a great companion piece to "How to Shit in the Woods"
Not a new book but not sure anyone has mentioned 'cycling home from Siberia' by Rob Lilwall.
No big fanfare and written in a fairly understated sometimes almost irritatingly too humble way but...wow.
Its not new but i cant believe its not on the list already! Tyler Hamilton - The Secret Race. If you haven't read it then you surely must!
I'd recommend [url= http://www.lulu.com/shop/scott-thigpen/trail-magic-and-the-art-of-soft-pedaling/paperback/product-21910158.html ]Trail Magic and the Art of Soft Pedaling[/url].
Blimey, how do you lot find the time to read AND post on 'here??
Thanks again for the suggestions, it was really ideas for my kids pressie to me. I'm kinda done in with books on road riding, got 3 for Xmas last year, did treat myself to Seven Deadly Sins which had me hooked but didn't know that Emma O'Reilly had written a book.
Didn't know that DavidB is famous, will read your website properly. Looks interesting though!
Feeling that I'm needing a different perspective with cycling books hence the mention of travel.
Thanks again!
If you haven't read DavidB's book, definitely do. There's not many books that you can so easily relate to. And like I say, Mid-life cyclists is similar. Both up there with my favourite reads in the past couple of years.
Fat Tire Flyer is very good If you don't want to immediately go out and throw yourself down a hill on a SS clunker after reading it I'll eat my hat
Thanks for the compliment. [url= http://online.wsj.com/articles/book-review-fat-tire-flyer-by-charlie-kelly-1416605611 ]Wall Street Journal[/url] liked it also. I had the good fortune of having my work reviewed in the WSJ by a friend, Rob Penn, who wrote "[url= http://www.robpenn.net/?page_id=16 ]It's All About the Bike[/url]," and produced the BBC programme, "[url= https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4GI1YZmFe48 ]The Ride of My Life[/url]," in which I get about ten minutes out of the hour show.
I have some favourite bike books, not all of them recent. However I concur that Tyler Hamilton's "Secret Race" is pretty good. If you want to go all the way back to last year, Andy Homan did a biography of a top six-day racer at the turn of the 19th Century, "Life in the Slipstream: the Bobby Walthour Jr. Story."