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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Not a Lamb but a Tiger,
By A Customer
This review is from: Over the Hills: A Midlife Escape Across America by Bicycle (Large Print) (Hardcover)
Over the Hills is the product of a seasoned communicator relating an adventure that many may consider but few pursue. Though he portrays himself as an ordinary guy, riding alone on his Trek from Virgina to California is a high accomplishment. He aptly describes the physical and psychological demands of such a long time on the road. He also deftly weaves the history of cycling, his professional life as foreign correspodnet with the Los Angeles Times and his experiences on the road to provide a very entertaining book for both the general reader and those that have suffered through a multiple-day tour. I put down his book while he was in Arizona because I wanted the book to last. He could have circled north to Seattle or just turned around and gone back to the East Coast and I would have eagerly read his tale. Lamb, or his editor, shows the good sense to not provide a day to day diary. He excludes a daily recounting of mileage, weather and road conditions, diet and equipment reports. Instead he gives us bits and pieces that really convey the feel of the trip. We come to appreciate how hard it is to get on that bike day after day. He also shows us a part of America that you never see unless you are on a bicyle. So in the end it not only a story about David Lamb's great adventure, it is another telling of the unsatiable spirit for new horizons and a cultural tour of the country. Lamb's observations of the Heartland versus the Coasts couldn't be more relevant than it is today, most recently seen on the blue and red presidential electoral college map. His accounts of his encounters reinforces that the kindness of strangers is abundant. He left me wondering as to some of his motivation, what he did in the months prior to his trip and his life with his wife. Yet all in all it was a most enjoyable read. I thank him for his work and welcome a sequel!
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A fine book: cycling through a vanishing country -- the US,
By A Customer
This review is from: Over the Hills: A Midlife Escape Across America by Bicycle (Hardcover)
Not really a book about "cycle touring" because it doesn't have the technology-and-technique stuff that cyclists love, Over the Hills is an "active meditation" on several themes: the spirit of adventure, vanishing rural America, and the delights (and problems) of meeting life on the road. I particularly liked it because, at least in part, it's a celebration of the bicycle, an almost forgotten device that is coming into its own as an efficient, simple vehicle -- and a hell of a lot of fun. Lamb has the direct, salty style of the journalist-sportswriter that he is, and the sympathetic perceptiveness of a guy who obviously likes people. I enjoyed the book immensely
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
OK cycling book. Not all that exciting,
By Bob Neubauer (Pennsylvania) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Over the Hills: A Midlife Escape Across America by Bicycle (Large Print) (Hardcover)
I liked the idea that David Lamb rode across the country without getting in shape, buying all the latest gear, obsessing over his diet, etc. And the fact that he did not bore us with reports of his daily mileage figures, equipment details, etc. was refreshing. Yet I expected more of a story out of a reporter. He does meet some people and give details about them and their towns, but somehow his trip is just not that exciting. I would have liked to learn more about the people he met and their lives.
Granted, he does provide interesting observations of rural America and some nice history on the sport of bicycling and past pioneers in the cross-country biking realm, but as a story about a bike trip, this one does not entirely satisfy. That said, I could identify with many of his observations (e.g. any time a non-biker describes the road ahead they are ALWAYS wrong). And he does give a good sense of what goes through a long-distance cyclist's mind (loneliness, the desire for people to find him interesting and ask about his trip, aprehension of the long distance ahead). The history of cycling, though interesting, didn't always fit and took me away from his narrative. At times I was rushing through it to get back to his story. I also wish he had spent more time mapping out a route along interesting back roads rather than being forced through lack of planning to ride on interstates. How boring. It is an OK account of a cross country trip through the south, but not the best account by any means.
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