Rating: Summary: True to Life, Fun and Funny Review: The First Big Ride is easy to read, easy to feel "with" the author, as she decides to do the ride and proceeds. Many humorous moments along the way. (And scary ones going over the snowy mountains!) Great book to stuff in your travel bag or to enjoy on a rainy afternoon. My family of 3 passed it around--everybody said, "good read"!
Rating: Summary: True to Life, Fun and Funny Review: The First Big Ride is easy to read, easy to feel "with" the author, as she decides to do the ride and proceeds. Many humorous moments along the way. (And scary ones going over the snowy mountains!) Great book to stuff in your travel bag or to enjoy on a rainy afternoon. My family of 3 passed it around--everybody said, "good read"!
Rating: Summary: True to Life, Fun and Funny Review: The First Big Ride is easy to read, easy to feel "with" the author, as she decides to do the ride and proceeds. Many humorous moments along the way. (And scary ones going over the snowy mountains!) Great book to stuff in your travel bag or to enjoy on a rainy afternoon. My family of 3 passed it around--everybody said, "good read"!
Rating: Summary: Thorougly enjoyable ride (oops - "read") Review: The reader is drawn into the journey and experience of an incredible challenge. From a non-cycler point of view one cannot help but wonder "why" but with each new chapter an understanding begins to surface. It is more than a travelogue, more than the chronicle of an experience, it is a mid-life examination we all have or must go through with a search for very basic answers to the nagging questions of life. Thorougly enjoyable and engrossing!
Rating: Summary: An inspiring but fun, easy read Review: This is a wonderful travelogue for men and women who hope to challenge their way of thinking and approach to life. Most of us would laugh off a bike ride across America with responses such as "why bother, what's the point?" But as you read on, you get clear answers to such questions. The reader feel privileged to be included in the journey -- there's no other way to understand the depths of the author's challenge. It's a motivational book, but a fun, easy one to pedal through!
Rating: Summary: A personal perspective Review: This is the most favorable review this book will receive. I was on the Big Ride in 1998, so I can tell you that Eloise Hanner's personal accounts of her reactions to riding a bicycle across the U.S. ring true and let me relive much of the trip. This is in spite of the fact that I am a male (A Woman's Journey?) I might have suggested "One Woman's Journey." Her accounts of personal experiences with the emotional and physical challenges of the journey are compelling reading. Her realization that she was one of the lucky ones at MacDonald Pass was great. Weather kept more than 600 people from even riding that day. I wasn't one of the lucky ones who got to ride. She let me experience a part of the ride that I was looking forward to as much as the ride into DC itself. Thank you Eloise. As a first time writer, her prose style is well suited to reflect the wonder and awe of a powerful new experience.However, when reading this book you must understand that Eloise Hanner is not a reporter. Her description of events she "heard" about and some sweeping generalizations about how all the riders felt this way or that, are way off base. One incident she "reports" on is simply a list of egregious errors in fact and uneducated supposition - the crash of a recumbent and two other cyclists. I was the rider of the recumbent bicycle. There were two other cyclists involved. That is about the only thing she gets right. She goes on to state that recumbent bicycles are dangerous and gives a medical opinion about muscular/skeletal effects of riding a recumbent bike. This is from a person who is new to cycling, who had never seen a recumbent (let along ridden one) and makes no claim to any background in medicine. She completely forgot to mention that a standard bike went down breaking the leg of its rider. Bicycling, no matter the kind of machine you are on, is potentially dangerous. However, for riding on roads, recumbents are the safest, fastest, and most comfortable pedal powered vehicle available. If anyone - including the author - is interested in the facts (like the fact that at least 3 "normal" bicycles were thrown away during the ride because the bikes were hurting the riders) please feel free to contact me at rlg@cnw.com So there you have it. I can think of no higher praise than when the villain of the book likes it and recommends that you read it.
Rating: Summary: Over the Hill, NOT! Review: Written in a diary-like format, it seemed like the writer was talking directly to me. I identified with her uncertainty in being able to accomplish this feat and was inspired by her willingness to take on the challenge---and to succeed on her own terms! Great detail in each step of the journey which made it an easy, enjoyable read---tangible and believable. It is evident that through such personal challenges one gets really close to living life to its fullest.
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