Winter reading recommendations?
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Re: Winter reading recommendations?
Shackleton's Boat Journey. By Frank Wolesey., the captain of the Endurance. In terms of books about hardship endured the best I have read.
- In Reverse
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Re: Winter reading recommendations?
Nope, he's *spoiler* by then. It's deffo Guy Pearce.restlessnative wrote:PaulB2 wrote:The look that Guy Pierce gives at the end of the film .
err Vigo Mortenssen?
Nailed it Reg. And as much as I loved Zen and the Art of.. I think I'd find that even more of a slog under certain circumstances. A bit of fast-moving escapism in the bivvy for me.RIP wrote:Strikes me that if I was under a tarp in the p1ssing rain in the darkness probably the last thing I'd want to be reading would be about someone else sitting under a tarp in the p1ssing rain.

Titchmarsh's autobiography "Trowel and Error" is decent. His mum has to give up the bell-ringing because of rheumatoid arthritis in her wrists but she's a stubborn old cow.
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Re: Winter reading recommendations?
Ah yeah I remember now!
Re: Winter reading recommendations?
No, Guy Pearce - he’s the father in the group that Vigo’s son ends up withrestlessnative wrote:PaulB2 wrote:The look that Guy Pierce gives at the end of the film .
err Vigo Mortenssen?
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Re: Winter reading recommendations?
Most of the cycling books I read are a bit of a let down if I'm honest apart from Unsurpassed about Tommy Godwin and the Year Book by Dave Barter.
One of the best books for adventure I've read is The Last of the Gentleman Adventurers by Edward Beauclerk Maurice. At 16 he was apprenticed for 5 years in the Hudson Bay company in the 1930's and was one of the last his kind and the end of an era. The book takes you on his journey from rural England to a remote fir trading post in Baffin Bay which was so remote it was resupplied by ship once a year, living with, learning survival from and trading with the Inuit and coming of age in the arctic. I've read the book twice so far and wouldn't hesitate to read it again.
One of the best books for adventure I've read is The Last of the Gentleman Adventurers by Edward Beauclerk Maurice. At 16 he was apprenticed for 5 years in the Hudson Bay company in the 1930's and was one of the last his kind and the end of an era. The book takes you on his journey from rural England to a remote fir trading post in Baffin Bay which was so remote it was resupplied by ship once a year, living with, learning survival from and trading with the Inuit and coming of age in the arctic. I've read the book twice so far and wouldn't hesitate to read it again.
Re: Winter reading recommendations?
Thread revival ... been away for a week and took Dervla Murphy's Full Tilt with me. I'm now wondering how I got through so many other cycling/touring books before reading this. Genuinely inspiring and probably the touring book I've enjoyed most so far. A number of times I found myself re-reading a line thinking how far? and thinking she not only put in days that would have most of us done-in afterwards, but also did it as a lone woman in that part of the world in 1965.
I've thought before there's a lack of bold or risk-taking bike adventures to read about. This is perhaps the classic of that type, yet was done purely in the spirit of adventure and curiosity for people and cultures, there's not a single mention of the epic or performance-brag. I always had an interest in that area, read it as it covers part of the world that would be my 'if you can go to one place tomorrow' pick, and now after getting back and having a decent kip I'm sat here genuinely struggling to face work on Monday, rather than give notice and set off
The bike geek in me had to look up her bike as she only mentions it as 'Roz', her name for it -

- Total heroine. She rode a single speed : ) in the book she mentions the gradients that were the point between riding and walking - while reading I thought that was fair enough, on a geared tourer...
I've thought before there's a lack of bold or risk-taking bike adventures to read about. This is perhaps the classic of that type, yet was done purely in the spirit of adventure and curiosity for people and cultures, there's not a single mention of the epic or performance-brag. I always had an interest in that area, read it as it covers part of the world that would be my 'if you can go to one place tomorrow' pick, and now after getting back and having a decent kip I'm sat here genuinely struggling to face work on Monday, rather than give notice and set off

The bike geek in me had to look up her bike as she only mentions it as 'Roz', her name for it -

- Total heroine. She rode a single speed : ) in the book she mentions the gradients that were the point between riding and walking - while reading I thought that was fair enough, on a geared tourer...
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Re: Winter reading recommendations?
I might give that a go James when I finish what I am reading just now. Books written by women have been largely missing from my reading
I lived quite near Lismore where she is from for years yet somehow never got round to reading one of her books.
I read 'The year' as recommended which was great.
Julian Sayarer's book I just could not get on with

I lived quite near Lismore where she is from for years yet somehow never got round to reading one of her books.
I read 'The year' as recommended which was great.
Julian Sayarer's book I just could not get on with
Re: Winter reading recommendations?
Which one? I've not read any of his yet. He seems quite politically opinionated (which I don't mind in itself) but something about the RTW thing a while back, can't even remember what now, where he seemed generally a bit angry about a lot of things put me off maybe. Adventure and politics can mix of course, I perhaps unfairly judged the content based on that. Also the fact that the RTW record seems the polar opposite attitude to any interest I'd have in riding RTW.restlessnative wrote:Julian Sayarer's book I just could not get on with
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Re: Winter reading recommendations?
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00 ... UTF8&psc=1
Like some kind of weird rant as far as I got. Just could not gel with him.
Like some kind of weird rant as far as I got. Just could not gel with him.
Re: Winter reading recommendations?
I also enjoyed reading Full Tilt. Dervla Murphy was indeed an extraordinary person and her books are from a different era of travel, made even more interesting because she was a woman travelling alone at a time when that was pioneering. To me, Full Tilt is also interesting from a history and geography angle, both social and political as well as physical. As a hippy traveller a decade later it has always fascinated me since how the political boundaries are meaningless to the indigenous peoples of the regions she travels through; their tribal, family and religious bonds not recognising lines on maps except for the presence of soldiers controlling those borders. Interesting in reading the book to learn how much Irish missionaries had reached out into those regions in earlier years and the welcome that that history afforded Dervla on her travels.
A good book, well worth reading.
A good book, well worth reading.
We go out into the hills to lose ourselves, not to get lost. You are only lost if you need to be somewhere else and if you really need to be somewhere else then you're probably in the wrong place to begin with.
Re: Winter reading recommendations?
^ yes, it had me paused for thought a number of times on both of those points. Whether a journey like that is possible for you or I now due to political climates, her gender and the time as well as (as you say) the positives linked to her nationality by the nuns in the area, I'm really not sure. She certainly comes across as a person who'd be most welcome anywhere she found herself, able to handle the situations naturally.
Re: Winter reading recommendations?
That reminds me, the thing I read that put me off was a blog post or similar he wrote about corporate branding taking over the RTW record, or something along those lines. I guess he meant Mark Beaumont. Can't say it registered with me. Some of Chris Bonnington's expeditions were sponsored by banks and they were inspiring, the sponsor was an aside. I guess for Sayarer, as someone who is into politics, did register - now I'm interested now to know more. Fancy a 'duff book' swap?! I have Tim More's Gironimo here, others really like it but I didn't finish it.restlessnative wrote:https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00 ... UTF8&psc=1
Like some kind of weird rant as far as I got. Just could not gel with him.
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Re: Winter reading recommendations?
I only buy on kindle nowdays which stops that :(Fancy a 'duff book' swap?!
I quite liked gironimo for an easy read, his book "out in the cold" or something like that I gave up on
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Re: Winter reading recommendations?
I'm glad this thread was resurrected as I've just rebuggered by back so going to be inactive for a little bit (hopefully very short term!) and so have just bought/downloaded Dave's OCCD - so far (3 pages) it's mightily entertaining.
Let the horizontal literary therapy commence.....*
*I am pursuing non-literary therapies too
Let the horizontal literary therapy commence.....*
*I am pursuing non-literary therapies too

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Re: Winter reading recommendations?
It goes seriously downhill after page 5
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Re: Winter reading recommendations?
Oh well, at least he's got one more good page yet...
We go out into the hills to lose ourselves, not to get lost. You are only lost if you need to be somewhere else and if you really need to be somewhere else then you're probably in the wrong place to begin with.
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Re: Winter reading recommendations?
This reminds me - how was your photo comp prize book James? Any good or straight into Oxfam?
May the bridges you burn light your way
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Re: Winter reading recommendations?
Dave Barter wrote:It goes seriously downhill after page 5

psling wrote:Oh well, at least he's got one more good page yet...

Anything that keeps me from contemplating my impending two day drive back to the UK with 3 kids in this amount of pain is a very welcome distraction!
Re: Winter reading recommendations?
I'm reading a climbing one atm & so far it's brilliant- PsychoVertical by Andy Kirkpatrick
If you ever get chance to see one of his 'talks', go, he's really good
Films good too!
http://www.psychoverticalfilm.com/
If you ever get chance to see one of his 'talks', go, he's really good

Films good too!
http://www.psychoverticalfilm.com/
Ever Feel Like You're Being Orbited?!
Re: Winter reading recommendations?
Will let you know when I get onto it, just started Max Leonard's Higher Calling, then that (High Horizons - looks good, thanks) - a summer of getting high it seems : ) There's a brilliant Oxfam bookshop near where I live so I tend to buy books faster than I can read them. Picked up a wonderful book on the lost ways of the Alps a few weeks ago.Bearbonesnorm wrote:This reminds me - how was your photo comp prize book James? Any good or straight into Oxfam?
While I was looking at the heaving book shelf last night I spotted Matt Lamy's 'Rides of Passage'. Recommended. The book is about a father and son tour in France, done when Matt was young then repeated in his 30s. It's an entertaining account of traditional touring in France, funny in a natural style. A really good read by a very nice guy, a cycling journalist I've met a number of times, I've met his father Arthur also, he owns a bike shop in Jersey and came to Madison's shows. Was especially good to read knowing them both, made me laugh.
Re: Winter reading recommendations?
A climber friend recommended this, it's good isn't it - you wonder how he stays in 1 pc but under all that must be an incredibly talented climber.Wotsits wrote:I'm reading a climbing one atm & so far it's brilliant- PsychoVertical by Andy Kirkpatrick
If you ever get chance to see one of his 'talks', go, he's really good![]()
Films good too!
http://www.psychoverticalfilm.com/
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Re: Winter reading recommendations?
I saw Andy Kirkpatrick give a lecture just as he came to prominence - very, very funny.
The last climbing book I read was The Tower by Kelly Cordes - basically the climbing history of a single mountain, Cerro Torre in Patagonia.
The last climbing book I read was The Tower by Kelly Cordes - basically the climbing history of a single mountain, Cerro Torre in Patagonia.
Better weight than wisdom, a traveller cannot carry
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Re: Winter reading recommendations?
The Sunshine Kid by Harry Baker
Be warned, it's poetry
https://wordery.com/the-sunshine-kid-ha ... gJ38PD_BwE
Be warned, it's poetry

https://wordery.com/the-sunshine-kid-ha ... gJ38PD_BwE
Re: Winter reading recommendations?
It's brill James, heart warmingly honest is the best way i can desrcibe it. Apparently he wrote it to try & explain his actions to his children. To look at him you'd think he'd be out of breath climbing stairs, but his sheer determination & (like you say) talent as a climber has seen him through.. There's an interesting section at the beginning of the book where he takes a test, scores 99% in the spatial awareness, but 16% in the other part..jameso wrote:A climber friend recommended this, it's good isn't it - you wonder how he stays in 1 pc but under all that must be an incredibly talented climber.Wotsits wrote:I'm reading a climbing one atm & so far it's brilliant- PsychoVertical by Andy Kirkpatrick
If you ever get chance to see one of his 'talks', go, he's really good![]()
Films good too!
http://www.psychoverticalfilm.com/
I think it's his character that shines through on stage, a genuinely engaging & funny guy. I managed to get a copy of the book signed by him, his spelling really is as bad as he says!whitestone wrote:I saw Andy Kirkpatrick give a lecture just as he came to prominence - very, very funny.

Ever Feel Like You're Being Orbited?!
- Dave Barter
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Re: Winter reading recommendations?
I have a very big box full of climbing books I'd be willing to give away if anyone is interested.
But I am not posting them.
Includes all of Andy Kirkpatrick's books, Andy Cave, Simon Yates etc... but the deal is you take them all.
I could possibly bring to WRT and Stu if you wanted them for the raffle you have first shout.
But I am not posting them.
Includes all of Andy Kirkpatrick's books, Andy Cave, Simon Yates etc... but the deal is you take them all.
I could possibly bring to WRT and Stu if you wanted them for the raffle you have first shout.
Elite keyboard warrior, DNF'er, Swearer