|
|
 | Put
Me Back On My Bike In Search Of Tom Simpson, William FotheringhamYellow
Jersey Press 978 0224 08018 7 Paperback 254pp £8.99
An account of the life of the British star of 1960s cycling that
raises the bar for cycling biography

|
It is curious to reflect now on what an enigma
Tom Simpson was during the 35 years after his demise as he raced up Ventoux in
the 1967 Tour de France. Fotheringham opens with a screening of Ray Pascoes
film Something To Aim At. For most of us, this was the only source of biographical
information about the man widely described as Britains greatest cyclist.
By the late 1990s, when Fotheringham started work on this book, the
precise details of Simpsons death had achieved a plane of part knowledge,
part rumour. Even his fans would assert that it was drugs that killed
him, but it was rare to meet anyone who could recite the details
with any kind of accuracy. The surprise is that it took as long as it
did for someone of Fothinghams talent to address themselves to this
subject. But then, in the past decade, British cycling has been unusually
blessed with high quality writers applying themselves to a whole range
of bicycle-related subject matter. Of them, Fotheringham is among the
best.
The narrative follows Simpson from the Nottinghamshire mining village,
where he grew up to the top of the European cycle racing scene, drawing
on dozens of interviews with friends, family members and professional
colleagues. Along the way, the author paints evocative pictures of everything
from the amateur cycling scene in northern England in the mid-1950s to
the experience of moving to and living in Europe.
There is much in this book from which Simpsons humour and humanity
shines out. He was clearly a gifted athlete and an engaging personality.
It is in his account of the sometime world champions demise, however,
that Fotheringham excels himself. His analysis is forensic and his evidence
far too weighty for his conclusion to be in doubt a massive dose
of amphetamines caused Simpsons body to fatally overheat. Indeed,
the shock of the revised edition of 2007 is the revelation that Simpson
experienced a drug-induced collapse during the Vuelta earlier in 1967.
Contemporaty accounts relate that he zig zagging across the road in what
was pretty much a rehearsal for the more famous incident.
That this
book so successfully nails the drug issue is reason enough to commend it, but
it is, nonetheless, a hugely enjoyable read. At the end, however, it is impossible
to argue with Fotheringhams conclusion:Simpson should be
remembered as an impulsive, intelligent, articulate and supremely charismatic
man who had a single blind spot: his need to win at any cost. He was not a bad
man, nor a foolish one, nor was he unprofessional in his approach to his sport,
but he chose to join others in cheating and got caught in the most dramatic way
imaginable.
PS Mar 09
|
Bookmark this on Delicious
Follow the site!
Join our list we will let you known when new reviews
are added to the site. We will never share your email address with
third parties.
tim@timdawsn.demon.co.uk
You can also follow us on Facebook
|
Visit our sister site
for dispassionate, expert advice on general cycling
issues
|
How this site is organised
As reviews are added, they are featured on the
front page. All titles are listed in the master index and cross-referenced
in the other indicies.
The subject line contains the title, author and
date of each book's publication. As a general rule, we list the
date of the actual edition that we read, unless there is an obvious
reason to use the original date (say where we read a reprint).
The first line of the main text contains the name
of the publisher, the ISBN
number, where it exists, an indication of the book's
size and the number of printed pages that it contains. Finally,
where it is clear, I list the published price of the work in the
currency that is most prominently displayed.
We summarise the book in a single sentence or two
in the next line. The rest of the review is then intended as a self-contained
piece.
|
|