Whats your favourite bike book?
#51
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2015
Location: Lacey, WA
Posts: 1,652
Bikes: Stevenson Custom, Stevenson Custom Tandem, Nishiki Professional
Mentioned: 33 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 348 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 151 Times
in
99 Posts
Blazing Saddles: The Cruel and Unusual History of the Tour de France.
You have to laugh not to cry they're not making any of this stuff up.
You have to laugh not to cry they're not making any of this stuff up.
#52
Member
Nice coffee table book. But very Francophile, not one Italian maker. The title should read: "The Golden Age of French Handbuilt Bicycles." Sample pix are from the end, book starts in 1900s.









Likes For ltokuno:
#54
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2014
Location: Ann Arbor Michigan
Posts: 152
Bikes: miyata 83 1000,84 1000,83 610,88 ridge runner ,Schwinn 84 high sierra,88 Cimmeron,86 Passage,84 Stumplumper ,83 Mt Whitney,83 Trek 850,Merckx Century,PX10, RB1,XO 1 XO 4,bunch of stuff like that
Mentioned: 3 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 54 Post(s)
Liked 44 Times
in
36 Posts
catalogs
If they havent already done it ...I wish they would take all the old Bridgestone catalogs from the 80s and 90s and bind them together into book form......I use to read them over and over......great stories and information...........and generally speaking its amazing how much you can learn about bike repair.by reading a Park tool catalog.......and old miyata catalogs can educate you about technology and frame design and geometry and how it changed through the years..........I think there should be a catalog database somewhere or at least a sticky............just think if you posted..every catalog from shimano ...campy....tange ...ishiwata..columbus......schwinn ...pinnarello.....trek.....etc etc etc....no more questions no more arguments no more explaining nothing no guess work........BFers could spend all their time riding and wrenching as god intended
#55
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Medford MA
Posts: 1,154
Bikes: Ron Cooper touring, 1959 Jack Taylor 650b ladyback touring tandem, Vitus 979, Joe Bell painted Claud Butler Dalesman, Colin Laing curved tube tandem, heavily-Dilberted 1982 Trek 6xx, René Herse tandem
Mentioned: 39 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 493 Post(s)
Liked 588 Times
in
348 Posts
I read The Dancing Chain cover to cover in 2000, when it came out. I was 12. Didn't know good writing from bad at that age. Didn't care either! For me, there can be no other favorite cycling book. Two years later, I was lucky enough to see the bicycle museum in Nijmegen - and I recognized all the derailleurs there by sight, like old friends!
It's provided a foundational knowledge that I am foreverstuck with grateful for. Caused me to get fired from my first job at a bike shop (I corrected my boss one too many times - think it made him insecure that he couldn't compete with the 16 year old lackey in recalling derailleur esoterica
). Same thing when I went to college. I found myself creepily perusing the racks of campus clunkers looking at old Simplex and bull moose bars, and slowly coming to the realization that The Dancing Chain had left an indelible mark on me, that years would not erase.
If only I'd had the good sense to buy up Nivex derailleurs back then, when you could get them for $200...
It's provided a foundational knowledge that I am forever

If only I'd had the good sense to buy up Nivex derailleurs back then, when you could get them for $200...
#56
Senior Member
I don't have a favorite bike book. But: I do have a favorite bike song.
My own. It, I will modestly say, is superbyly written and performed by an 18 piece jazz orchestra. My singer tells the following story, about a zen monk and his five bicycle riding students, which I found searching the internet for something that Albert Einstein allegedly said, but apparnently didn't, which was "the three greatest inventions of the modern world are the three masted sailing ship, the refrigerator, and the bicycle."
I modified the story, author unknown, slightly to better fit the music, though if you google, you can find multiple version of it. ON the same album, I also included two things Einstein DID say: "Life is like riding a bicycle, to keep your balance, you must keep moving" and "I thought of that while riding my bicycle".Why Do You Ride?
Why Do You Ride?
Darrell Katz (from a Zen story, author unknown)
A Zen teacher saw five of his students, returning from market on their bicycles.
When they arrived at the monastery
the teacher asked his students, “why do you ride?
Why do you ride?”
The first student said
“The bicycle is carrying the sack of potatoes
I'm glad to get them off my back”
The teacher praised him:
“You are a smart boy
when you grow old
you will not walk hunched over like I do.”
The second student replied:
“I love to watch the trees and fields pass by as I roll down
the path!”
The teacher commended him:
"your eyes are open and you see the world".
The third student replied “when I ride my bicycle, I am content to chant
nam myoho renge kyo.”
The teacher gave praise to his student: "your mind
will roll with the ease of a newly trued wheel.”
The fourth student replied to the question, "When I
ride my bicycle I live in harmony with all
sentient beings. That's why I ride.”
The teacher was pleased, and said to him, "You are
riding on the golden path of non harming."
The fifth student replied "I ride my bicycle to ride my
bicycle. I ride my bicycle to ride my bicycle "
The Zen teacher sat at the feet of his fifth student and
said, "Master! Master, I am your student.
I am your student!”
Why do you ride?
Why do you ride?
My own. It, I will modestly say, is superbyly written and performed by an 18 piece jazz orchestra. My singer tells the following story, about a zen monk and his five bicycle riding students, which I found searching the internet for something that Albert Einstein allegedly said, but apparnently didn't, which was "the three greatest inventions of the modern world are the three masted sailing ship, the refrigerator, and the bicycle."
I modified the story, author unknown, slightly to better fit the music, though if you google, you can find multiple version of it. ON the same album, I also included two things Einstein DID say: "Life is like riding a bicycle, to keep your balance, you must keep moving" and "I thought of that while riding my bicycle".Why Do You Ride?
Why Do You Ride?
Darrell Katz (from a Zen story, author unknown)
A Zen teacher saw five of his students, returning from market on their bicycles.
When they arrived at the monastery
the teacher asked his students, “why do you ride?
Why do you ride?”
The first student said
“The bicycle is carrying the sack of potatoes
I'm glad to get them off my back”
The teacher praised him:
“You are a smart boy
when you grow old
you will not walk hunched over like I do.”
The second student replied:
“I love to watch the trees and fields pass by as I roll down
the path!”
The teacher commended him:
"your eyes are open and you see the world".
The third student replied “when I ride my bicycle, I am content to chant
nam myoho renge kyo.”
The teacher gave praise to his student: "your mind
will roll with the ease of a newly trued wheel.”
The fourth student replied to the question, "When I
ride my bicycle I live in harmony with all
sentient beings. That's why I ride.”
The teacher was pleased, and said to him, "You are
riding on the golden path of non harming."
The fifth student replied "I ride my bicycle to ride my
bicycle. I ride my bicycle to ride my bicycle "
The Zen teacher sat at the feet of his fifth student and
said, "Master! Master, I am your student.
I am your student!”
Why do you ride?
Why do you ride?
Likes For dkatz1:
#57
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2016
Location: Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Posts: 634
Bikes: 1990 Raleigh Flyer; 2014 Trek 7.6 FX (size 15"); 2014 Trek 7.6 FX (size 17.5"); 2019 Dahon Mu D9
Mentioned: 5 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 273 Post(s)
Liked 135 Times
in
69 Posts
The first and only one I ever read - Everybody's Book of Bicycle Riding by Thom Lieb. There was a copy at my college library that I went through multiple times in the mid-1990s. It's very informative with many moments of hilarity.
#58
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2019
Location: Seattle
Posts: 202
Bikes: 1986 Trek 700
Mentioned: 6 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 85 Post(s)
Liked 102 Times
in
63 Posts
+1 for Japanese Steel
Great history and photography
As a pixel peeper, I'm rarely impressed by image print quality (not limited to cycling and art books), but this one is first rate.
Great history and photography
As a pixel peeper, I'm rarely impressed by image print quality (not limited to cycling and art books), but this one is first rate.
#59
Newbie
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1
Bikes: Specialized Roubaix, Barcroft Columbia, Seven Axiom (being built)
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 0 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 0 Times
in
0 Posts
Catfish and Mandala
Not a bicycle book per se, but a great story about refugee immigrant from Vietnam to California's bike tour return to the homeland in search of who he is.
#60
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: PDX
Posts: 7,114
Bikes: Merz x 5 + Specialized Merz Allez x 2, Strawberry/Newlands/DiNucci/Ti x3, Gordon, Fuso/Moulton x2, Bornstein, Paisley,1958-74 Paramounts x3, 3rensho, 74 Moto TC, 73-78 Raleigh Pro's x5, Marinoni x2, 1960 Cinelli SC, 1980 Bianchi SC, PX-10 X 2
Mentioned: 145 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2122 Post(s)
Liked 1,183 Times
in
822 Posts
Hands down the Ruff Stuff Fellowship Archive (I sprang for the beautiful hardcover collectors edition in slip case but here is the regular edition: https://www.isolapress.com/shop/rsf-archives-2)
Followed by the Golden Age of Hand-built Bicycles (focuses on mid century french randonneurs and their constructeurs): https://www.renehersecycles.com/shop...uilt-bicycles/
And of course the Bicycle Quarterly magazine subscription: https://www.renehersecycles.com/shop...-subscription/
Japanese Steel is also a gorgeous book and photographed by Scott Ryder who posts here regularly: https://www.rizzoliusa.com/book/9780847861705/
The Renee Herse book would probably be in my list if I had it. Soon enough. https://www.renehersecycles.com/shop...er-the-riders/
Followed by the Golden Age of Hand-built Bicycles (focuses on mid century french randonneurs and their constructeurs): https://www.renehersecycles.com/shop...uilt-bicycles/
And of course the Bicycle Quarterly magazine subscription: https://www.renehersecycles.com/shop...-subscription/
Japanese Steel is also a gorgeous book and photographed by Scott Ryder who posts here regularly: https://www.rizzoliusa.com/book/9780847861705/
The Renee Herse book would probably be in my list if I had it. Soon enough. https://www.renehersecycles.com/shop...er-the-riders/

#61
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: San Luis Obispo, CA
Posts: 97
Bikes: 1988 Bottecchia Professional (for Eroica), 2011 Ridley Noah ISP (main road bike), 2020 Soma Fog Cutter (gravel), 2020 Guerciotti Record build in-progress
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 38 Post(s)
Liked 16 Times
in
7 Posts
The Beast, The Emperor and The Milkman
Currently reading this:

#62
Senior Member
Currently re-reading The Rider by Tim Krabbe, and enjoying it even more the second time. Great first paragraph.
Also liked The Secret Race by Tyler Hamilton. The Armstrong saga told by a victim without acrimony. A friend of mine tells a personal story about Hamilton that backs up the humility revealed in the writing.
And Anybody's Bike Book by Cuthbertson, sure.
Also liked The Secret Race by Tyler Hamilton. The Armstrong saga told by a victim without acrimony. A friend of mine tells a personal story about Hamilton that backs up the humility revealed in the writing.
And Anybody's Bike Book by Cuthbertson, sure.
#63
Ferengii
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: Loveland, CO
Posts: 7
Bikes: Co-Motion tandem
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 0 Post(s)
Liked 0 Times
in
0 Posts
Miles From Nowhere is the book that inspired me to become a cycle tourist - I highly recommend it as well.
#64
Newbie
Join Date: Oct 2014
Posts: 1
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 0 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 0 Times
in
0 Posts
For ficton fans
OK, so winter/covid is keeping all of our heads down - so whats your favourite bike based book? The kind of thing you find yourself re-reading after a couple of years, maybe quoting to a buddy...
For me its a toss up between Crabbes "The Rider", Kimmages "Rough Ride" and then "8 Seconds" recounting the `89 TDF...
Hard to choose, The Rider really puts you in the mindset of a top amateur racer, Kimmage makes you realise why most pro riders turned to drugs to perform (imagine getting to a hotel at 9.30pm after a hard stage to find there`s no food and forced to dine on energy bars whilst washing your only pair of team shorts... grab me the rocket fuel...), just love the `89 tour for all its drama and the book drills down into each stage as well as the big picture, you can almost feel the sun as you read it.
mmm..... yep, * seconds.... no, wait, Rough Ride...
Let me know what you all love to read, might give me some new books to search out, Dan.
For me its a toss up between Crabbes "The Rider", Kimmages "Rough Ride" and then "8 Seconds" recounting the `89 TDF...
Hard to choose, The Rider really puts you in the mindset of a top amateur racer, Kimmage makes you realise why most pro riders turned to drugs to perform (imagine getting to a hotel at 9.30pm after a hard stage to find there`s no food and forced to dine on energy bars whilst washing your only pair of team shorts... grab me the rocket fuel...), just love the `89 tour for all its drama and the book drills down into each stage as well as the big picture, you can almost feel the sun as you read it.
mmm..... yep, * seconds.... no, wait, Rough Ride...
Let me know what you all love to read, might give me some new books to search out, Dan.
Claire Huchet Bishop’s The Big Loop.
#65
Junior Member
Join Date: Jun 2015
Location: Edmonton
Posts: 13
Bikes: 2015 Marinoni SL, 1991 GT Tachyon
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 4 Times
in
3 Posts
+1 for Slaying the Badger.
"Fallen Angel"--the story of Fausto Coppi. Provides a good contrast to Bartali.
"Fallen Angel"--the story of Fausto Coppi. Provides a good contrast to Bartali.
#66
Newbie
Join Date: Feb 2018
Posts: 1
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 0 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 0 Times
in
0 Posts
The Fastest Bicycle Rider in the World
Major Taylor was the USA's first black champion athlete. He was the world champion when the sport of cycling was extremely popular with the general public. His story is both amazing and sad
#67
Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Columbus GA
Posts: 17
Bikes: Jamis Aurora
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 0 Times
in
0 Posts
Bicycle - The Definitive Visual History
I reviewed it on the CL Bicycling forum; this link might work: https://forums.craigslist.org/?act=Q&ID=273570708
I see lots of other good suggestions on here, including Zinn. You should have enough to read for a long time.
One I wouldn't recommend is "It's Not About the Bike" by Lance Armstrong. No, Lance, it's about the drugs.
I see lots of other good suggestions on here, including Zinn. You should have enough to read for a long time.
One I wouldn't recommend is "It's Not About the Bike" by Lance Armstrong. No, Lance, it's about the drugs.
#68
Junior Member
#69
Bike hoarder.
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: 700 Ft. above sea level.
Posts: 2,400
Bikes: Just as many as there were awhile ago.
Mentioned: 11 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 340 Post(s)
Liked 364 Times
in
203 Posts
This will seem an odd choice but it has it's basis in nostalgia. I was given a copy of the 1971 edition (green cover) when I bought my new 1971 Raleigh Grand Prix from them, I was 16. I wore it out, I've been looking for a reasonably priced copy for a long time and I finally had to settle for this 1973 edition for now. It's also a great reference book for my early 70's bikes.

__________________
".....distasteful and easily triggered."
".....distasteful and easily triggered."
#70
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Posts: 1,251
Mentioned: 19 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 578 Post(s)
Liked 548 Times
in
332 Posts
Road to Valor: A True Story of WWII Italy, the Nazis, and the Cyclist Who Inspired a Nation
this guy is about the coolest hard as nails dude that ever was, Gino Bartali.
He won races: T de F & Giro etc. etc.
He smuggled documents,
He fought Fascism / Hated Mussolini
He risked his own life for others,
He saved lives
this guy is about the coolest hard as nails dude that ever was, Gino Bartali.
He won races: T de F & Giro etc. etc.
He smuggled documents,
He fought Fascism / Hated Mussolini
He risked his own life for others,
He saved lives
Likes For P!N20:
#71
my nice bike is at home
Agreed the world does, especially right now! Glad you read it. He should be Sainted.
__________________
BMC's Race Machine & Team Machine / "White Lable" Rossin Record / 80's Pinarello Traviso / Merlin MTB / Raleigh Folding 20 / Trek's: 2300,1200,800
BMC's Race Machine & Team Machine / "White Lable" Rossin Record / 80's Pinarello Traviso / Merlin MTB / Raleigh Folding 20 / Trek's: 2300,1200,800
#72
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Greenwood SC USA
Posts: 1,380
Bikes: 2002 Mercian Vincitore, 1982 Mercian Colorado, 1976 Puch Royal X, 1974 Allegro No. 76, 1973 Raleigh Competition, 1973 Raleigh GS, 1971 Gitane Tour de France and others
Mentioned: 43 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 460 Post(s)
Liked 427 Times
in
242 Posts
#74
Happy banana slug
Join Date: Sep 2015
Location: Arcata, California, U.S., North America, Earth, Saggitarius Arm, Milky Way
Posts: 2,106
Bikes: 1992 Specialized Rockhopper Sport, 2016 Giant Liv Rove Lite, 1995 Trek Singletrack 930, 1994 Trek Multitrack 750
Mentioned: 24 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 780 Post(s)
Liked 440 Times
in
299 Posts
My first thought was Anybody's Bike Book; I love his humor and unpretentious writing.
Has anyone read Being Gary Fisher? Diane Jenks interviewed him on The Outspoken Cyclist podcast, and he sounds like a hoot. I should just suck it up and buy a copy, only available from Trek.
Has anyone read Being Gary Fisher? Diane Jenks interviewed him on The Outspoken Cyclist podcast, and he sounds like a hoot. I should just suck it up and buy a copy, only available from Trek.
#75
Senior Member
Mentioned before, but Japanese Steel is an absolutely great book. Good read, very nice pictures ...and of course an interesting subject: Japanese Steel. Can also recommend it to people who like classic road bikes in general.