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This classic, once hard-to-find travelogue recalls one of the very
first around-the-world bicycle treks. Filled with rarely matched
feats of endurance and determination, Around the World on a Bicycle
tells of a young cyclist's ever-changing and maturing worldview as
he ventures through forty countries on the eve of World War II. It
is an exuberant, youthful account, harking back to a time when the
exploits of Richard Byrd, Amelia Earhart, and other adventurers
stirred the popular imagination. In 1935 Fred A. Birchmore left the
small American town of Athens, Georgia, to continue his college
studies in Europe. In his spare time, Birchmore toured the
continent on a one-speed bike he called Bucephalus (after the name
of Alexander the Great's horse). A born wanderer, Birchmore
broadened his travels to include the British Isles and even the
Mediterranean. After a lengthy, unplanned detour in Egypt,
Birchmore put his studies on hold, pointed Bucephalus eastward, and
just kept going. From desert valleys to frozen peaks, from palace
promenades to muddy jungle trails, Birchmore saw it all on his
eighteen-month, twenty-five-thousand-mile odyssey. Some of the
people he encountered had never seen a bike - or, for that matter,
an Anglo-European. As a good travel experience should, Birchmore's
trip changed his outlook on strangers. Always daring, outgoing, and
energetic, he now saw an innate goodness in people. In between
bone-breaking spills, wild animal attacks, and privation of all
kinds, Birchmore learned that he had little to fear from human
encounters. That he traveled through a world on the brink of global
war makes this lesson even more remarkable - and timeless.
The first comprehensive history of the bicycle-lavishly illustrated
with images spanning two centuries During the nineteenth century,
the bicycle evoked an exciting new world in which even a poor
person could travel afar and at will. But was the "mechanical
horse" truly destined to usher in a new era of road travel or would
it remain merely a plaything for dandies and schoolboys? In
Bicycle: The History (named by Outside magazine as the #1 book on
bicycles), David Herlihy recounts the saga of this far-reaching
invention and the passions it aroused. The pioneer racer James
Moore insisted the bicycle would become "as common as umbrellas."
Mark Twain was more skeptical, enjoining his readers to "get a
bicycle. You will not regret it-if you live." Because we live in an
age of cross-country bicycle racing and high-tech mountain bikes,
we may overlook the decades of development and ingenuity that
transformed the basic concept of human-powered transportation into
a marvel of engineering. This lively and engrossing history
retraces the extraordinary story of the bicycle-a history of
disputed patents, brilliant inventions, and missed opportunities.
Herlihy shows us why the bicycle captured the public's imagination
and the myriad ways in which it reshaped our world.
In the late 1880s, Frank Lenz of Pittsburgh, a renowned
high-wheel racer and long-distance tourist, dreamed of cycling
around the world. He finally got his chance by recasting himself as
a champion of the downsized "safety-bicycle" with inflatable tires,
the forerunner of the modern road bike that was about to become
wildly popular. In the spring of 1892 he quit his accounting job
and gamely set out west to cover twenty thousand miles over three
continents as a correspondent for "Outing" magazine. Two years
later, after having survived countless near disasters and
unimaginable hardships, he approached Europe for the final leg.
He never made it. His mysterious disappearance in eastern Turkey
sparked an international outcry and compelled "Outing" to send
William Sachtleben, another larger-than-life cyclist, on Lenz's
trail. Bringing to light a wealth of information, Herlihy's
gripping narrative captures the soaring joys and constant dangers
accompanying the bicycle adventurer in the days before paved roads
and automobiles. This untold story culminates with Sachtleben's
heroic effort to bring Lenz's accused murderers to justice, even as
troubled Turkey teetered on the edge of collapse.
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