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A Race for Madmen: The Extraordinary History of the Tour de France |  | Author: Chris Sidwells Publisher: Collins Category: Book
List Price: £20.00 (20.74EUR) Buy New: £11.50 (11.93EUR) as of 9/9/2010 12:40 IST details You Save: £8.50 (8.82EUR) (42%)
New (21) Used (1) from £9.99 (10.36EUR)
Seller: Amazon.co.uk Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 5262
Media: Hardcover Pages: 480 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5 Dimensions (in): 9.4 x 6.1 x 1.6
ISBN: 0007321414 EAN: 9780007321414 ASIN: 0007321414
Publication Date: May 27, 2010 Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description No sporting event has had its past and present, its highs and lows so intricately entwined with those of a country like the Tour has with France.
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 6
Excellent September 3, 2010 Mark Swindell (Bolton, UK) I bought this with only a passing interest in cycling and the Tour De France. What a great book! Informative and interesting without ever being overly technical I would imagine it would appeal to hard core cycling fans right through to your average Joe. The book has made me look forward to next years tour as well as given me a new interest in the Pyrenees and surrounding areas.
great read September 2, 2010 jim Terrific read whether you are a cycling nut or not..
Its very well written and the author strikes a good balance between giving enough interesting detail and not too much just to give the anoraks a hard on.. and god knows he must have been under pressure to do so as cycling seems to have an abundance of them..
Well done Chris.. look forward to you next book.
Makes the extraordinary accessible and real August 16, 2010 David Herdson (Shipley, Yorkshire, England) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Endurance cyclists are a deceptive looking bunch. In their quest for the perfect power to weight ratios, their upper bodies go undeveloped and are sometimes positively scrawny. Even their legs don't have the tree-trunk-like solidity of their cousins sprinting in the velodrome. Yet they are amongst the fittest sportsmen in the world, competing over distances and timespans way beyond any other major sport and the Tour de France is their ultimate challenge. Chris Sidwells' book is a very enjoyable and interesting homage to both those extraordinary cyclists and the Tour itself.
It's an accessible and easy read, following a chronological narrative through the more than a century of the Tour. Inevitably, some incidents and years get more coverage than others but that's only right. In fact, writing a history of the Tour presents something of a challenge, not in terms of what to include but what to leave out given the near 100 tours, thousands of stages and thousands of competitors. Sidwells makes mention of every single tour but with rare exceptions doesn't make them the focus of the story - that focus is firmly on the riders themselves and particularly the great ones, the champions.
In doing so, he moves slightly away from a true history for better and worse. The 'worse' is that it means that there are omissions. The Tour itself begins as very much a key player in its own right but as it becomes established, there's less space devoted to the organisation, the teams, the media coverage, the technology, the Tour's place in France's national consciousness and so on. It would certainly be possible to write a more thorough and perhaps better 'history' of the race but it wouldn't necessarily be an improved book. The 'better' is that it means apart from where absolutely necessary - e.g. the intervention of war, the doping scandal - the focus is on the cycling and cyclists, which keeps the momentum rolling and is, after all, what the Tour is about.
It also provides for a very workable structure as eras tended to be dominated by individual riders and these form the basis of most chapters. We get some good background biography of all the great champions as well as description of their careers and the key moments in them. Those moments are the essence of the challenge; the times when the great prove their worth. Sidwells makes good choices in focussing on relatively few stages but ones that mattered.
The one other criticism I'd make is that the author becomes an increasingly prominent participant in his own story. He is a journalist, has written about cycling for years and knows and has interviewed many of the racers in the second half of the book. It's a purely personal view but I found the references to his own articles or interviews intrusive; others may feel they add colour or authenticity. They do have a side-effect though of concentrating the action even more on the front of the peloton. The early chapters include interesting asides to look at some of the people that had no chance of winning but added character.
Overall, it's well worth a read for anyone interested in cycling. Those who already have a good knowledge of the subject will find it covers familiar ground (literally) but it does so well enough to make it worth while. Those who don't should find it a very good introduction.
a race for mad men August 10, 2010 al This book gives a good insight to how the race began.Gives good ifo as to how the in fighting started and still continues.Great price from Amazon ,well worth buying.
Superb! July 26, 2010 Neal (United Kingdom) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I wanted to learn about the Tour and those riders who secured their place in history by taking part in it. This book does that brilliantly.
The book chronologically moves through the Tour's rich history describing each Tour, some in more detail than others, as well as the key battles and riders who competed. The writing is succinct and colourful and at times a little too familiar, nonetheless it flows off the page into your mind, where you can recreate some of cycling's greatest battles. In the middle of the book there are a dozen pages with pictures that enable you to see some of famous riders and landmarks.
I now feel I understand much more about cycling history, the Tour and would recommend the book to anyone who would like to learn about such things too.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 6
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