French Revolutions: Cycling the Tour De France

by Tim Moore | Travel |
ISBN: 0099433826 Global Overview for this book
Registered by abitstormyout of Ely, Cambridgeshire United Kingdom on 5/13/2007
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3 journalers for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by abitstormyout from Ely, Cambridgeshire United Kingdom on Sunday, May 13, 2007
Amazon.co.uk Review:

Comic writer Tim Moore trades his ailing Rolls Royce for a bicycle, a map and a water bottle in French Revolutions. This is a quest to pedal the route of the Tour de France, no mean feat for the fit, let alone a self-described suburban slouch. The resulting 2,256-haphazard-mile journey transforms Moore into an incredibly fit and passionately proud cyclist. Initially, Moore takes the "I will do it and it probably will kill me" approach. His normal perspective, as a stooge to life's misfortunes, plays well as he prepares to ride the route of the 2000 Tour de France. Moore is the everyman who pedalled in youth and now wouldn't ride a bike to the corner store. But unlike a traveller by car, train or plane, Moore has to navigate France under his own steam. Somewhere around the Ventoux, the world's windiest place, Moore starts to change. He becomes enraptured by the feat itself as mile by mile he realises he is no longer an accidental cyclist but a lean, mean cycling machine. Gradually, the narrative turns from travel to a personal quest. Along the route, Moore's details of the heroes of the Tour make an excellent primer on this gruelling race and helps the uninitiated understand the frenzy that grips France each July as the races meanders through incidental villages, over mountains and, finally, into Paris. It is worth reading for that alone. Having survived mountains of pain, a disgusting diet and motels of dubious value, a new, muscular Moore concludes that "I might never leave my mark on the Tour, but that didn't matter. It has left its mark on me". To follow Moore's path of perspiration is certainly not a vacation. Yet, this curmudgeonly clever and inspirational book makes one want to do just that. "Old Father Time was catching up with Old Father Tim. If I didn't do it this year, I wouldn't because maybe next year I couldn't," he says before starting out. And that, as Tim Moore so surely points out, is what pushes any true traveller out the door. --Kathleen Buckley

Journal Entry 2 by abitstormyout at on Sunday, June 10, 2007

Released 16 yrs ago (6/11/2007 UTC) at

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Posting to anani-kalea in Sri Lanka!

Journal Entry 3 by BC2009012001 on Tuesday, June 19, 2007
I've been looking forward to reading this book and am so glad that "turquoisefloyd" agreed to send it to me - thanks turquoisefloyd!

Journal Entry 4 by BC2009012001 on Wednesday, June 27, 2007
This is such a great read. It was laugh out loud funny at places (I wonder what the neighbours thought when they heard me at 1 in the morning...) and I am now a fully fledged fan of the Tour de France.

Released 16 yrs ago (6/28/2007 UTC) at N/A in To a friend, -- By post or by hand/ in person -- Sri Lanka

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Have given this book to my friend M.

Journal Entry 6 by BC2009012001 on Friday, May 23, 2008
I finally got my belongings back so I can now move this book to my TBR pile. I am really looking forward to reading this.

Journal Entry 7 by BC2009012001 at natural medi clinic in Nugegoda, Central Province Sri Lanka on Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Released 15 yrs ago (7/15/2008 UTC) at natural medi clinic in Nugegoda, Central Province Sri Lanka

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Journal Entry 8 by missdhammi at Colombo, Western Province Sri Lanka on Monday, July 26, 2010
Looking fwd to reading this!

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