This is a well-considered manifesto about the absurdity of allowing bike racing culture to dominate the thinking of the everyday bike rider. I can see how this little book would upset a lot of the high priests and acolytes of the bicycle world, but for the rest of us, it's a good, common-sense guide. Ride in everyday clothes, carbon fiber works for racers but can fail spectacularly and suddenly for everyone else, exercise doesn't help you lose weight, use steady lights instead of blinkers, baskets are a good thing, etc. You won't necessarily agree with everything Petersen says, and that's fine. Take what works for you.
Reviews and Comments
It's not a hard and fast rule, but I read mostly non-fiction.
Most of my fantasy reading is Terry Pratchett.
Theme parks. World's Fairs. Miniature buildings. Stereoscopy. Science and science history. How-to and maker books, and the occasional "For Dummies" book if I want to learn a specific skill.
I seem to be reading a lot of cat books lately. I once went to a Japanese restaurant where the owner had a TV in the corner, and I noticed that there were often cat videos showing. I asked him if I was seeing this just by chance and if he watched other things, and he said, "Sometimes other thing; mostly cat."
@ridetheory@mastodon.social
This link opens in a pop-up window
Ride Theory reviewed Just ride by Grant Petersen
Ride Theory commented on Mort: a novel of Discworld by Terry Pratchett (Discworld, #4)
Ride Theory reviewed Another science fiction by Megan Shaw Prelinger
Interesting art; very dry prose
2 stars
In the unlikely event you're interested in the hiring practices of the aerospace industry during the early space race, and their relationship to advertising and commercial art, this is the book for you. It is, however, both exhaustive and exhausting, and even the best of the artwork gets a bit dull by about the halfway mark. This isn't helped by the dreary duotone and spot color reproduction on the original ads, which were typically designed to be printed with black and one other color of ink.
The text is mostly statistics and dates, with very little human interest.
Ride Theory wants to read 50 Secrets of Magic Craftsmanship by Salvador Dali
Ride Theory commented on Just ride by Grant Petersen
About 1/3 of a book's worth of cat content
2 stars
The author devotes about a third of this book to the 1980s farm crisis and its effects on a Midwest small town, another third to her own personal history, and the remaining third to Dewey the cat and his effect on the citizens of Spencer. Dewey was essentially a therapy cat to the entire depressed community, and he was exceptionally good at his job. I would have liked to read more about that, but I got the feeling there just weren't enough anecdotes to fill an entire book. It was a bit tiring to read a biography that tilted the balance more toward "his times and life" rather than "his life and times."
Ride Theory rated An Arbitrary Point P = Nin'i no Ten P: 5 stars
An Arbitrary Point P = Nin'i no Ten P by Keio University Masahiko Sato Laboratory, Masahiko Sato, Norio Nakamura
Stereoscopic drawings. Book has stereoscopic lenses built into the cover.
Ride Theory rated A Street Cat Named Bob: 3 stars
Dewey : The Small-Town Library Cat Who Touched the World by Vicki Myron, Bret Witter
The story of Dewey the celebrated library cat is now available for the youngest of readers in this new, fully-illustrated …
Ride Theory rated Revolucion ! : cuban poster art: 4 stars
Ride Theory rated A Street Cat Named Bob: 4 stars
Ride Theory rated Raising Steam: 5 stars
Raising Steam by Terry Pratchett
Raising Steam is the 40th Discworld novel, written by Terry Pratchett. It was the penultimate one, published before his death …