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Mick Gambling On Cycling, Mick Gambling (1981)
Forest Publishing Paperback 66pp
Humorous articles depicting the life of a provincial tester originally
published in Cycling (Weekly) in the preceding sixteen years.

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Mick Gambling is one in a succession of writers who have provided a
funny column in Britain's most important cycling magazine, Cycling (known
as Cycling Weekly in recent times). Others have included Ragged Staff,
Tony Bell and the current incumbent Michael Hutchinson.
Looking back over them as a whole, the striking thing is how similar
is their choice of subject matter. All deal, for a good deal of the time,
with the slightly obsessive relationship many keen cyclists have with
cycling. Much of the comic juice is squeezed from the difficulties that
this creates in relationships - particularly those with wives and girlfriends.
It is a seam that Gambling works with considerable craft - although,
emblematically, as a cycle racer and a writer, he was an amateur. Indeed,
his character - a long-in-the-tooth racing man who feels every effort
- is far from original. But, in part, he is successful because there was
scant contrivance. When he complains about moving house and his superstition
about the street number of his new home - he was writing about his actual
home. Likewise, the roving cast of supporting characters he introduces
- most notably, wife Sylvia and son Fraser - give every impression of
being pretty close to the real thing.
The scenes he conjures up are enjoyable precisely because they are common
place - at least to club cyclists: long drives to events, training snuck
into busy family schedules, home workshops that provide a private domain
and, the inevitable club dinners. His great skill is to induce smiles,
and the occasional belly laugh, while steering a carefully course to avoid
the offensive - even considered by today's much changed standards.
Here he is complaining about the weather during the summer of 1977.
"Well how many really good mornings were there? You could count
them on your brake levers rather than on the teeth of your small cog.
Even the forecasters were getting their predictions in a twist. Several
Saturdays, after checking carefully with the TV weatherman, newspapers
and the local RAF, not to mention putting my head out of the door every
half an hour, I went to bed with a selection or fine promises and in a
euphoria of what I call July optimism. Then, in the still watches of the
night, when the brain freewheels, it has been jerked into action by a
shrieking in the telephone cables. Later, at the event, there has not
been a sky in the clouds and a gale has soon had my frail body pleading
for relief."
Occasionally his contrivances show signs of the effort of a weekly slot
to fill, but for the most part his original turn of phrase and confidence
with his material carry his tales rolling along. His pieces are enjoyable
today, as they were when they were minted, as distractions from everyday
life in the company of one whose world view is very close to your own.
PS November 09
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