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Books About Bicycling
Comments
are by Doug Mink unless otherwise noted.
Massachusetts On-Road Bicycling
Short
Bike Rides in Eastern Massachusetts
and Short
Bike Rides in Western Massachusetts by Howard Stone, Globe
Pequot Press Lots
of good short rides on well-tested routes.
Exploring
In and Around Boston on Bike and Foot, by Lee Sinai, Appalachian
Mountain Club Books, 1996 Globe Pequot Press.
I bought this from the author at Bike to Work Day in Boston, three
weeks after it was published. It contains 11 on-road, 10 off-road,
and 19 walking loop trips in Boston and its suburbs, all inside
I-495, many inside Route 128. I haven't tried any of the rides
as listed in the book, but I have ridden many of the trips and
found the routing and commentary in the book quite helpful. There
is a bit more description than in Howard Stone's books, and I
like the inclusion of both the Minuteman Bikeway (on-road) and
its extension to Concord (off-road).
Bicycling
the Atlantic Coast: A Complete Route Guide, Florida to Maine,
by Donna Ikenberry Aitkenhead, Seattle: The
Mountaineers, 1993. In
my days as LAW State Touring Information Directory, the most common
request from out of state was for a route along Massachusetts'
seacoast. The Massachusetts portion of the route described, with
maps and points of interest, in this book is a good first step
toward such a route, though it bypasses the scenic and historic
South Shore by taking the ferry to Boston from Provincetown.
The
Cape Cod Bike Book, by William E. Peace (P.O. Box 627,
South Dennis, MA 02660).
This little book covers Cape Cod, including the Cape Cod Rail
Trail, with very detailed maps which let you get off the routes
and explore without getting lost.
Short
Bike Rides on Cape Cod, Nantucket and the Vineyard, by
Edwin Mullen, Globe Pequot Press I
have used earlier editions to find interesting places to ride
when visiting unfamiliar parts of the Cape, and found it an OK
starting book, especially when used with Andy Rubel's map. The
new sixth edition includes more routes and should be an improvement
over the earlier editions I've used.
The Boston
Basin Bicycle Book, by Edward Goldfrank, Janice Goldfrank,
Alexander Humez, and Nicholas Humez (1975, David R. Godine, 300
Mass. Ave., Boston) It's
now out of print, but is worth tracking down in used book stores.
It contains 30 rides within the basin defined by the hills through
which Route 128 (now I-95 and I-93) runs. Cue sheets are provided,
and the routes are laid out on sections of U.S. Geological Survey
maps with added information about local geology. The authors not
only tell you where the hills are, but why they're there, as well
as what many interesting rock outcroppings are made of. Following
these routes is a good way to explore the city in a systematic
way; later, when you have to get to a specific place, by bike
or by car, you'll know where it is in the grand scheme of things.
Contact the publisher in Boston to ask them to reprint this book.
Bicycle
Touring in the Pioneer Valley, Nancy Jane, University of Massachusetts
Press, 1978. ISBN 0-87023-248-7; 88 pages; $6.95 A
good little book which is useful if you are riding around the
Connecticut River valley. There are 16 rides ranging from 5 to
25 miles. There are distances and riding times for each loop,
and good maps which show other roads in the area, a helpful feature
if a turn is missed. A useful appendix describes interesting sites
and indicates which rides to take to get to them.
The
Bicyclist's Guide to the Southern Berkshires by Steve Lyons
(1993, Freewheel Publications, Lenox, P.O. Box 2322, Lenox, MA
01240. ISBN 0-9632585-5-9; 272 pages, paperback, $14.95. The
southern part of the Berkshire valley is quite FLAT unless you
choose to go up into the hills. The Southern Berkshires are rural
and crammed with cultural and scenic attractions. Tanglewood,
the Norman Rockwell museum in Stockbridge with a bike path right
through the grounds (Rockwell was a bicyclist!) and the Albert
Schweitzer Center are just a few of the area's many noteworthy
stops. One ride from the book retraces the route of Arlo Guthrie's
Alice's Restaurant littering crime expedition, complete with a
hilarious photo of Arlo. (John Allen)
Short Bike
Rides in the Berkshire Hills by Lewis Cuyler (1991, Berkshire
House, Box 297, Stockbridge, MA. ISBN 0-936399-02-3; 200 pages;
$8.95) This
is a nice book of rides for all of Berkshire county, including
the superb, challenging ride up and down Mt. Greylock. You can
also ride all the way around Mt. Greylock without any serious
climbing. (John Allen)
New
England On-Road Bicycling
The
Best Bike Rides in New England, by Paul Thomas and Paul
Angiolillo, Globe Pequot Press Shameless
plug: I rode one of "The Best Bike Rides in New England" by Paul
Angiolillo, published by Globe Pequot Press. I thoroughly
enjoyed my ride and am told I am credited in the book, though
I've not yet heard of its release. You might just ask if the revised
edition is available. Check
out this interview
with author Paul Angiolillo.
Bed, Breakfast,
and Bike in New England: A Cycling Guide to Country Inns by
Alex & Nancy May (1991, White Meadow Press, P.O. Box 56, Boonton,
NJ, 07005. ISBN 0-933855-05-2; 224 pages; $12.95) Available from Adventure Cycling.
One
of my favorites; it has a selection of nice B & B's, not cheap,
several bike routes near the B&B's, and breakfast recipes
in the back (my favorite part). (Bonnie Friedman).
Touring
New England by Bicycle, by Peter Powers, Terragraphics, 1991
I have
not tried the routes in this book, but it is interesting in giving
route altitude profiles and computer-generated 3D "maps" of route
terrain. (Anne Anderson)
New England
Over the Handlebars, by Michael H. Farny (1975, Little, Brown,
Boston). Contains
41 rides through five of the six New England states. This one
might be in stock at the Lincoln Guide Service, where author Farny
presides. For each ride, a map and cue sheet is augmented by a
running narrative describing points of interest and obstacles
along the route.
25 Bicycle
Tours in Vermont, John S. Freidin, Backcountry Publications,
1993 The earlier edition of this book inspired me to take my 15-year-old
nephew bicycle touring for eight days in Vermont. We had a wonderful
trip, using some routes from Freidin's book. (Anne Anderson)
New
England Bike Paths and Trails
Great Rail-Trails
in the Northeast, by Craig Della Penna, $12.95 Good descriptions
of trails. Adventure
Cycling carries this.
Lost Railroads
of New England, by Ronald Dale Karr, Branch Line Press, Pepperell,
MA, 1996
Focusing on abandoned railroad lines, this is the second edition
of a book which was first published in 1989. The included maps
delineate an enticing array of present or future rail trails.
The contorted corporate and geographical history of the maze of
rail lines in New England makes for interesting reading. Being
involved in the Wayside Trail, I was particularly interested in
the history of the Central Mass. Line. The history of every existing
or proposed rail trail (that I know of) is included. The author
is on the library staff at U. Mass Lowell. He has done a lot of
work researching railroad history in New England and has written
books on several subjects including railroading. It is available
from the publisher for $12.95+$3.00 S&H, 1st book, $1.50/copy
for subsequent books (MA residents add 5% sales tax). It is also
available in many bookstores, including some Barnes & Noble,
WaldenBooks, etc. (Richard C. Williamson)
The Rail
Lines of Southern New England, by Ronald Dale Karr, Branch
Line Press, Pepperell, MA, 1995 As
the title indicates, the book focuses on Massachusetts, Rhode
Island and Connecticut. All rail lines are described including
those still active, those out of service, and those abandoned.
As with the other book, there are lots of maps, photos, and interesting
history. It is available from the publisher for $22.95+$3.00 S&H,
1st book, $1.50/copy for subsequent books (MA residents add 5%
sales tax). (Richard C. Williamson)
The Turnpikes
of New England, by Fredric Wood, updated by Ronald Dale Karr,
Branch Line Press, 13 Cross St., Pepperell, MA 01463 This
is the first paperback edition of a book first published in 1919.
I've abridged it somewhat, and modified the maps. Some of these
old turnpikes may be of interest to cyclists. It is available
from the publisher for $22.95+$3.00 S&H, 1st book, $1.50/copy
for subsequent books (MA residents add 5% sales tax). (Ron Karr)
New
England Off-Road Bicycling
Mountain Biking
in Southern New England (or The Mountain Biker's Guide to
Southern New England) and Mountain Biking in Northern New
England (or The Mountain Biker's Guide to Northern New England)
by Paul Angiolillo Falcon Press. Available from Ingram. Both in
third printing, with a total of over 100 rides throughout New England.
Mountain
Bike Rides Around Boston, by Stuart Johnstone.
Bicycle
Maintenance and Repair
Anybody's
Bike Book, by Tom Cuthbertson, 10-Speed Press. When
I was 13 or so, I got a book called Anybody's Bike Book by Tom
Cuthbertson published by 10-Speed Press. I recently saw it out
in a second edition. It's very approachable for the not-so-mechanically-inclined.
My first thought puts it in the category of repair manual, but
if I recall it also has other good advice like equipment selection,
locks, technique, etc. (Joel Parks)
The Bike
Bag Book - A Manual for Emergency Roadside Bicycle Repair,
by Tom Cuthbertson and Rick Morrall, Ten Speed Press, 1981.
Small, clearly-written book with essential repair operations detailed.
(Anne Anderson)
Sutherland's
Handbook .Great
but it's expensive and really geared for professional mechanics
not beginners. (Joel Parks)
Glenn's
NewComplete Bicycle Manual, by Clarence W. Coles, Harold T.
Glenn, and John Allen; published by Crown Publishers.
I rewrote much of the book for the 1986 edition. It is unusual
among repair manuals in covering geared hubs. Sutherland's also
does, including newer ones, but at a higher price. (John Allen)
Richard's
Bicycle Book, by Richard Ballentine, Ballentine Books. A
fairly complete listing of different kinds of bikes, as well as
a second half devoted to maintaining them. Much more history than
most of the other books, and not nearly so technical as my description
might lead you to believe. It's my favorite general book about
bikes. (David Wittenberg)
Building
Bicycle Wheels, by Robert Wright, Anderson World, Inc., 1982
Small
book, but packed with information. (Anne Anderson)
Bicycling
Skills
Effective
Cycling, by John Forester, MIT Press. The
bible on cycling in traffic, this book also includes quite a bit
on maintenance, repair, and safety.
Bicycling
Street Smarts, by John S. Allen, published by Rubel
BikeMaps All
the information you need to hit the street on a bike. Available
online or in print at bike shops and from MassBike. This 46-page booklet
covers the nuts and bolts of safe and legal on-road cycling including
lane-positioning, navigating intersections, expert control of
brakes and steering, emergency maneuvers, and dealing with difficult
situations ( ordering information).
The Complete
Book of Bicycle Commuting, by John S. Allen. Rodale Press.
1981. "Street Smarts" is actually a much-abridged version of this
book, which I think is better than Forester's, but which Rodale
Press let go out of print after one edition. Copies occasionally
turn up; grab one if you can. Check Amazon's used books.
Bicycle Touring
The Road of Dreams, by Bruce B. Junek. Fascinating, well-written account
of a couple's two-year bicycle tour of Australia, New Zealand, Southeast
Asia and Northern India, focusing on the Asian and Indian segments.
Incredible scenery, incredible experiences, all by bike. A coworker
loaned this to me last year, and I read it cover-to-cover. Adventure
Cycling carries this. (Anne Anderson)
Bicycle Racing
Beginning Bicycle Racing, by Fred Matheny, Velo-news, Brattleboro, VT,
ISBN 0-941950-04-2, 1983 A
good introduction, explaining the various types of bicycle races,
tactics, training, etc. (Anne Anderson)
Complete
Bicycle Time Trialing Book, by editors of Bike World Magazine,
World Publications, Box 366, Mountain View, CA 94042, ISBN 0-89037-123-7.
Has
some good information, although equipment coverage is out of date.
(Anne Anderson)
Other Books About Bicycling
Bicycling
Science, by Frank Whitt and David Gordon Wilson, MIT Press.
Full of high-powered analysis and lots of other good stuff. (Joel
Parks) David Gordon Wilson is older in years than in spirit. That
just shows what a daily bicycle ride will do for a man. (John Allen)
Cycling
Science, on-line magazine.
BikeCult,
by David B. Perry; publisher 4 walls, eight windows.
ISBN 1-56 858-027-4 570 pages, $23.95.
Lots of short biographical snippets on riders, and discussion
of historic races. "Neat
all around stuff about bikes" (David Wittenberg)
Guidebook
Issue, from Recumbent Cycling News. Recumbent
Cycling. A very thorough look at what is available as cycling
alternatives. Given how popular feet first bikes are with the
health club crowd, they just might convert some people that were
turned off 15 years ago by a saddle suited to a 100km of training
daily European racer. (Jeff Del Papa)
Pedal
Power in Work, Leisure, and Transportation, by James C. McCullagh,
ed., Rodale Press, 1977.
Apparently
out of print, but a fascinating collection of pedal-powered tools
and adaptations of standard tools to pedal power. Has given my
8-year-old daughter and me hours of design ideas, including a
pedal-powered snowplow for our driveway which we have never built,
but continue to design every time we shovel snow. (Anne Anderson).
Bicycles
and Tricycles, by Archibald Sharp, reprinted by MIT Press.
Interesting
history and mechanics. (David Wittenberg)
EnCYCLEopedia,
Open Road Press EnCycleopedia describes bikes they find "interesting". Some are
quite practical, others pure racers, but always interesting. They
have more information on recumbents than most other sources. EnCycleopedia
is an annual put out by the same folks who publish the Bicycle
Culture Quarterly. (David Wittenberg)
Bike
Culture Quarterly, Open
Road Press "Published
in Britain, Bike Culture Quarterly (BCQ) reports on the latest
technological advances in bicycling and alternative bicycling
products available, covers cycling advocacy efforts around the
globe and includes features on the world's fastest and wildest
human-powered vehicles and their designers. Commentary, photo
essays, bicycle art, humor and fictional pieces round out BCQ
making it the only magazine that thoroughly examines all types
of cycling everywhere." (BCQ website)
Tales
from the Bike Shop, by Marynard Hershon; published by Vitesse
Press.
A warm, friendly collection of stories set in a bike shop, but
more about the people than the bikes. Requires a little knowledge
of bicycling to make sense. (David Wittenberg)
Sources for Bicycle Books
Chelmsford
Paperback Booksmith, 7 Summer St., Chelmsford, MA 01824-3063.
(978)256-3514. This
is the store that loans us books to sell during Bike to Work Week.
I have found them friendly and helpful, and they have a reasonable
selection. (Anne Anderson)
Globe
Corner Bookstore Harvard Square, Cambridge. Guidebooks
and maps to everywhere. They sponsor lectures by people who have
traveled and written the guidebooks.
Eastern
Mountain Sports (EMS). A
good assortment of bicycle books as well as other useful wilderness
access books.
Eastern New
England Council of HI-American Youth Hostels.
617-779-0900 x17
Adventure
Cycling Association. Excellent
source for bicycle maps and books. Publishes Cyclist's Yellow
Pages annually, a collection of sources for bicycle tours,
maps, advocacy, etc. in the U.S. and around the world. As an organization,
Adventure Cycling develops bicycle routes and advocates for bicycle
access and awareness. Publishes a good monthly magazine for members
in addition to Yellow Pages. (Anne Anderson)
Adventurous
Traveler Bookstore, 1-800-282-3963
A search
on the word bicycle returns a long list of bike books,
including several of those mentioned above, and you can order
from the comfort of your SSL-enabled web browser using their secure
server.
CycleBooks David
White-Lief has many of the books listed above and says that he "will try to work all of the ones in print into my list."
Pedaling History Bicycling Museum 3943 North Buffalo Road,
Orchard Park, NY 14127-1841, 716.662.3853. A great collection
of historical information about bicycling, including vintage and
collector books, reprints, and proceedings of the annual Cycling
History Conferences, as well as other bicycle books.
Pete & Ed Books 5506 Madison Ave., Indianapolis, IN 46227,
(800)793-7801 An extensive assortment of books about bicycling
available by mail or phone order through their web page. Their
catalog seems to cover the Midwest quite thoroughly, including
maps as well as guidebooks, but they have books covering the whole
world, sorted logically, with a brief description of each book.
Tamassee
Guidebooks, Maps, & More, 401 West Main Street Walhalla,
South Carolina 29691 Toll Free 888 770-5463, Fax 864 718-0042,
email guides@tamassee.com
They carry the bulk of bike titles and give wonderful service.
(Madeleine Noland).
The
Globe Pequot Press They publish a lot of bicycle
touring and route books, including several covering New England.
You can order from their Web site if your local bikeshop or bookstore
doesn't carry the books you want. They suggest ways
to find a bookstore from which to buy their books.
Rubel
BikeMaps, 617.776.6567 info@bikemaps.com.
Andy Rubel now publishes great bike maps of Eastern, Western,
and Central Massachusetts as well as the second edition of his
Cape Cod and Cape Ann map. He has also updated David Weaver's
Boston Bike Map, originally done for the Boston Area Bicycle
Coalition in the late 1970's.
Bicycle
Books, San Francisco, CA.
A few interesting books, including Cycling
in Cyberspace.
Seidler Productions,
Crawfordville, FL.
Producers of the Effective Cycling Video and a long list of others.
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