flatfishy wrote:I'm awaiting Bothy Culture from Lulu at the moment.
The small amour I read seemed quite entertaining.
I'll be interested hear what you think of it - the author showed up on the unofficial MBA forums when the book released. He seems to have quite strong errr opinons!
I thought so too, he actually put me off buying his book with they way he went on... Oh and he has previously written a book on Aleister Crowley and MAGYCK!
Mine arrived today. I'm still reading the Tom Simpson book at the moment "Put me back on my bike" but I don't think that will last much longer as it's pretty good.
I finished this a week or so ago. Very enjoyable, written with enough humour to stop it feeling too American* but also plenty of honesty and openness without going all spiritual, deep and borderline hippydipshit ... it's a story about a bloke riding his bike a long way over a number of weeks, not about him trying to find himself, connect with the lord or some such bollox.
s8tannorm wrote:I finished this a week or so ago. Very enjoyable, written with enough humour to stop it feeling too American* but also plenty of honesty and openness without going all spiritual, deep and borderline hippydipshit ... it's a story about a bloke riding his bike a long way over a number of weeks, not about him trying to find himself, connect with the lord or some such bollox.
*No offence
I also liked how he was quite honest about his own failings and how he became 'not a nice person' at times. There was very little detail about his bike or the kit he used. That may or may not be a good thing depending on your perspective.
There was very little detail about his bike or the kit he used. That may or may not be a good thing depending on your perspective.
All I knew was he was riding a single speed and it may have possibly been red. I didn't feel that not knowing more detail detracted, actually it was quite refreshing not knowing what gear ratio he was running, the make of his tyres or why he chose to use 3 stem spacers rather than 4
There was very little detail about his bike or the kit he used. That may or may not be a good thing depending on your perspective.
All I knew was he was riding a single speed and it may have possibly been red. I didn't feel that not knowing more detail detracted, actually it was quite refreshing not knowing what gear ratio he was running, the make of his tyres or why he chose to use 3 stem spacers rather than 4
Indeed, I liked the kit round up survey in Cordillera V5 but not having the text read like a brochure isn't a bad thing!