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Women's Fiction
Off the Map: Bicycling Across Siberia

Off the Map: Bicycling Across Siberia

List Price: $13.00
Your Price: $13.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Adventure and storytelling at its best.
Review: Having visited Russia shortly after Communism fell, I became intrigued with its people and its culture. This book, written shortly before the fall of Communism, captures a unique period of time in the history of this country that will never again be repeated. There is the obvious socio-political observations -- which from my perspective of having been there were dead on target -- but also adventure and stories rich with characters and emotions and pathos. Every chapter takes you into a new set of characters and a new story. Sort of reminded me of Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn in that way. A very enjoyable read

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An inspiring adventure story
Review: Jenkins does an excellent job of conveying the feelings he experienced during this trip. Sometimes spirits were low and sometimes they were high. His writing captures the reality of the trip and reveals the spirit of the Russian people with great emotion. I disagree with the review above that states Jenkins hated Siberia. He clearly had a great appreciation for the people he met there and valued his experience. It was obvious that he had a problem with Communism, and hence did not understand the Soviets. This is a book about people. Who cares whether they were the first group to ride across the country? The objective of the book was to describe a journey, and that has been done very well.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An inspiring adventure story
Review: Jenkins does an excellent job of conveying the feelings he experienced during this trip. Sometimes spirits were low and sometimes they were high. His writing captures the reality of the trip and reveals the spirit of the Russian people with great emotion. I disagree with the review above that states Jenkins hated Siberia. He clearly had a great appreciation for the people he met there and valued his experience. It was obvious that he had a problem with Communism, and hence did not understand the Soviets. This is a book about people. Who cares whether they were the first group to ride across the country? The objective of the book was to describe a journey, and that has been done very well.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A record not made in a country not liked
Review: Mark Jenkins clearly did not like Russia and the system. I agree on his view of the old system, but my thoughts were again and again: What does he do there. He don't like it at all. In spite of all the trouble of Mark Jenkins, the fact is that a Russian biker crossed Russia one sea to another in 1967, 22 years before Jenkins. The first do cross all of Russia was a Dane, me, who did it in 1997 from Magadan to Kaleningrad (more to the East and more to the West than Jenkins route). The brother of Fjordor Koinikov (who followed Jenkins), Nikolai, tried to do it before me. He failed because of cold. I succeed because I loved Siberia. Jenkins hated it.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: I Did not find this book entertaining at all.
Review: Seems like the author is trying to pretend to be this geat hero riding his iron stallion across the frozen reaches of Siberia.

I found him to be a true bore. Out running and out smarting Soviet KGB agents on a bicycle? Oh please!

If you want to read a true adventure, read Miles From Nowhere by the late Barbara Savage.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An interesting and captivating adventure.
Review: This book is amazing for the way Mark Jenkins moves his readers from village to village and along one stretch of trail to another. His emphasis on, and respect for, the cultural backdrop of this trip was what held my attention the most. I felt like I was there. The cultural emphasis also makes the reader realize that there is a more important aspect to a ride like this than the athletic accomplishment. This adventure gave me an understanding for another culture that I most likely will never experience, especially as a tourist. If nothing else, it gave me a whole different perspective on what cycling could be.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: I've borrowed this one from the library a dozen times.
Review: This is an excellent book. It offers a brief peek into the vast Russian hinterland that plodded along under the Soviet shroud. Russia is not Moscow. It's written sometime in the late 80's, not long before the USSR collapsed, and shows us people who's main priority is survival, not Communism. Jenkins writes in a rambling style that paints a vivid picture. Having gone to Russia since reading it for the first time, I can say the picture is very accurate.


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