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Tour De France: The History, the Legend, the Riders | 
enlarge | Author: Graeme Fife Publisher: Mainstream Publishing Category: Book
List Price: £10.99 Buy New: £4.71 You Save: £6.28 (57%)
New (38) Used (6) from £4.70
Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 231484
Media: Paperback Edition: Reprint Pages: 412 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.5
ISBN: 1845962567 Dewey Decimal Number: 796 EAN: 9781845962562 ASIN: 1845962567
Publication Date: November 1, 2007 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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| • | Paperback - Tour De France: The History, the Legend, the Riders | | • | Hardcover - Tour de France: The History, the Legend, the Riders | | • | Paperback - Tour De France: The History, the Legend, the Riders (Mainstream Sport) | | • | Paperback - Tour De France: The History, the Legend, the Riders (Mainstream sport) | | • | Paperback - Tour De France: The History, the Legend, the Riders | | • | Paperback - Tour De France: The History, the Legend, the Riders | | • | Paperback - Tour De France: The History, the Legend, the Riders | | • | Paperback - Tour De France: The History, The Legend, The Riders | | • | Paperback - Tour De France: The History, the Legend, the Riders | | • | Paperback - Tour De France: The History, the Legend, the Riders |
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| Customer Reviews: Read 2 more reviews...
First half is great - shame about the second half January 26, 2008 D. Ballard (Ramsbury Wiltshire UK) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The book changes radically half way through. I loved the first half of this book (4 stars) but would only give the second half 2 stars. The first half is a description of the tour's great climbs which allows the author to delve into the fascinating history of this extraordinary event. So climbs in the Pyrenees give him the opportunity to pay homage to Fabio Casartelli who was killed in 1995 on a descent, the Mont Ventoux of course brings in Tommy Simpson. Eddy Mercx, Raymond Poulidor, Jacques Anquetil, Fausto Coppi, all the great names feature. Further back in the tour's history we come across extraordinary tales. For instance, the tour leader whose front forks broke on a descent. He carried the bike down the mountain until he found a village with a forge. He then welded new front forks from scratch, himself, completely unaided for the most part. This added hours to his time. Throughout this ordeal, he was watched by officials to ensure that he didn't get any assistance. He was then penalised an extra 20 minutes because he allowed a boy to help him by blowing bellows to fan the fire - something he could not possibly have done unaided. He continued, several hours behind the lead. Quite extraordinary resourcefulness. There are loads of stories like this. And Fife suffering the same climbs - albeit on better road surfaces and without the risk of being eaten by bears or being lost in a blizzard - bridges between these extraordinary people and what a good but not exceptional cyclist could do today. It works well and I was enthralled. The main complaint so far is that the emphasis is on the mountain stages and not on the sprint stages or on the timetrials to anything like the smae extent. But I suppose that the drama of the mountains is the essence of the tour. And Fife clearly has people he doesn't care for - for instance Greg Lemond comes across in a very unsympathetic light. And to quibble a bit more, Fife comes across as a bit of a bighead. OK so he got to the top of the climbs quicker than his touring companions - so what? But overall the first half was a pleasure and kept me turning the pages. Shame about the second half. We then go into a poorly edited and highly opinionated account of the tours since 1999. Unfortunately this is the era of domination by Lance Armstrong so many of the races are relatively unexciting (compared for instance to 1989 or some of the tours described briefly earlier in the book - e.g. the Poulidor/Anquetil struggles). Not all of them by any means, but a period of seven straight wins, followed by a tour tainted by drugs, is not the most engaging of reads. The editing is poor. Each account seems to have been written shortly after the end of the tour and earlier accounts could have done with a review to bring them up to date. And some extraordinary statements come out on drugs. Fife is very unsympathetic towards people who opposed the drugs culture in the sport and claims at one point that no sport has as strong anti drugs controls as cycling. Er, what? Compare rowing, which has nothing like the same drugs culture, or the efforts made to clean up athletics. This was before the 2006 and 2007 tours and frankly such statements are embarrassing and should have been edited out, or at least reflected upon. I love the tour but it is not served by its obvious problems being minimised. The book is worth buying for the first half. If I were the publishers, I would ask for a complete revision of the second half before I published another edition.
History and atmosphere November 4, 2007 Reader / writer Many books tell of Tour history, but this one is outstanding. The hardship and suffering of past and present competitors is reinforced by the author's experience of riding the famous cols and sharing his feelings with us as he recalls legendary rides by the professionals. It combines interest with a literary style which is sadly lacking in most other accounts which are ploddingly prosaic by comparison. A previous review complained of Graeme Fife's literary use of English - an understandable complaint, given the reviewer's poor vocabulary (e.g. 'under mind' instead of undermined.)
Wanted: A good editor February 28, 2007 Cyclebeetle (Watford) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
In amongst the words lies a really good read, detailing the history, the stories, the experiences. Unfortunately getting to them requires a great deal of effort, and as a keen cyclist but not on intimate terms with the history of the tour, it became increasingly frustrating trying to keep track of his ramblings. Part of this was due to his attack on Paul Kimmage's Rough Ride where he abuses the author for breaking the rule of peleton by talking about doping. Frankly, after that, his credibility for me dived.
A text book on the tour October 12, 2004 Mr. Simon Paddon (Barnstaple, UK) 6 out of 8 found this review helpful
You don't have to know much about me to know that I love cycling, especially the tour. 3 weeks a year, I lose myself in hills and wheels- brilliant. So it was with interest that I bought this book.This interest soon wained, though. I found this book very hard going- to the point of nearly being boring. It is complete, and very knowledgeable, but is a bit nerdy. I am passionate about cycling- but this is the next stage. It is almost as if the author wanted to show everyone how much he knows. And there is little continuity throughout. It rambles like a pub conversation, jumping from year to year, decade to decade, like an alcoholic slips from grape to hop. Like many cycling books, it mixes the authors experiences with history- and suffers for this. Another thing I found discerning is the bolt on at the end of the last tours since 1988- in year progression. Yes, these sections were well wrote, and interesting, but it marks a complete polar change in the writing style off the book, which under minds it. It is obvious that they are added on each year, which is fine- but the events of the previous year are not up dated. I also find it interesting that the dehydration, which Lance Armstrong (which the author is clearly not the biggest fan of) suffered in 2003 is not touched on. Did I learn from the book? Yes. But it suffers from the coldness of a text book, without the warmth of a biography.
Rambling Prose March 7, 2003 S. Down 8 out of 9 found this review helpful
I am no master of the pen but will try to keep to one subject per sentence. If Mr Fife had also tried to keep to this maxim I would have enjoyed the very entertaining stories in his book all the more.On many occasions I was forced to re-read sections, as the prose darted off to introduce thoughts that were obviously circulating around the authors head and just had to be pinned down there and then. This was the first book I had read about the world of Pro cycling, and I was very taken with the excitement of the events and the results, which came through despite the writing. The Unknown TDF by Les Woodland makes an interesting counter to this book; less partisan, more readable and certainly better proofed than this volume. One for cyclists only.
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