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Ragbrai: Everyone Pronounces It Wrong

Ragbrai: Everyone Pronounces It Wrong

List Price: $19.22
Your Price: $19.22
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: This is RAGBRAI
Review: This book was great-it really captured the spirit of the ride! It was very interesting to read about the evolution of the "Grand-daddy" of all bike rides. RAGBRAI is many things to many people and this book touches on quite a few. If you have ridden in the ride, you will enjoy this book-it even makes you hungry for a POOOORK-CHOOOOP! You'll want a copy of this.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: RAGBRAI-Like a favorite relation who drops by once a year.
Review: When we first found out that RAGBRAI #27 was going to come to Tripoli, IA on the morning of July 29, 1999 for breakfast, I was tapped to develop the web pages for the Tripoli RAGBRAI Committee. This is not terribly surprising because I'm really the only one here who does this stuff. Anyhow, RAGBRAI has long been sort of a not-quite-so-cottage-anymore industry in this state. Personally, I've never really ridden it from end to end. I've managed to get away and ride it for a day or two ever now and then over the years and that, unfortunately, has been about it. I recall when it first started back in 1973. I think we all thought it was pretty amazing that anybody would want to ride from one end to the state to the other on a bycicle. In those days, I think a lot of people viewed it with just a bit of suspicion. I suppose there a few who still view it with a bit of suspicion. In the years since, I've moved away, moved back, moved away, and moved back to Iowa. Some places where I've been, the only things they know about Iowa have to do with the Presidential Primaries and RAGBRAI. And, no, we don't grow potatos here...that's Idaho your're thinking of. Buckeye State?...that's Ohio. RAGBRAI has cured a lot of people of the notion that Iowa is flat, by the by. There have been times, over the years, when I think I found RAGBRAI to be irritating as well as interesting. When you have to get somewhere in a car, and RAGBRAI is between you and your destination...you might want to reconsider your travel plans. But, mostly, we just love RAGBRAI, in this state. John Karras (formally of the Des Moines Register and along with Donald Kaul one of the RAGBRAI "key instigators") has written a pretty good book, here. If you've never heard of RAGBRAI, or witnessed the spectacle of 7 or 8,000 people moving down the road enmass on byicycles you might not think this to be a remarkable thing. But, after reading this book you will probably feel like you want to get acquainted. No doubt, you, too, will probably show up here, one of these summers huffing and puffing along with everybody else down Iowa's sylvan highways and byways (hopefully with the wind to your back) from west to east where you will triumphantly dip your bike tires in the Mississippi River. If you want to experience a "Moment Of Triumph" in your life...this is probably a good one to aim for. I felt pretty triumphant doing that, one time, and I didn't even go the whole trip. If you've ridden RAGBRAI, this book should bring back some good memories. RAGBRAI has become kind of like an old friend who comes around just once a year. But it's an old friend with unusual grace. It comes by, it visits for a while, and then it leaves. When it's gone you tend to think, "Well...that was okay."


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