|
|
 |
The Spring Classics, Phillippe Bouvet et al (2010)
VeloPress 9781934030608 26cmx32.5cm 224pp lavishly illustrated
$39.95
A collection of pictures and essays celebrating cycling's great
one-day races

|
The Classics are the second great joy of cycle racing as a spectator sport.
The Tour, of course, is the route into cycle fandom for most of us. But
as your thirst for watching stick thin men thrashing their legs on carbon-fibre
confections grows, the year-long programme of one-day races starts to
shape your season.
This book is a glorious celebration of those races, rather than dissection
of their importance. For the most part it is a picture book, full of large
reproductions of shots from the earliest days of the classics to the present
day. Most, of course, have not appeared in an English publication before.
They are fascinating at several levels. Eddy Merckx dead-at-the handlebars
look as he completed the 35km solo break that brought him victory in Roubaix
in 1970, a throng of bike-carrying riders on the Koppenberg and Bernard
Hinault ploughing through a blizzard to win in Liège in 1979 are
all worth revisiting.
But these pictures contain much more besides. Because road cycling occurs
on ordinary roads, through the centre of towns and watched at very close
quarters by its fans, these shots also provide an evocative social history
of the past century. The cars, the clothes and even the buildings that
surround the racers show a continent that has changed profoundly since
these spectacles were first run - mainly in the late years of the nineteenth
century.
The accompanying essays provide an entertaining spin through the high
points of each races histories written by L'Équipe's journalists.
These are nicely rendered into English - retaining a hint of descriptive
power of French, without the absurdity of literal translation. They did
leave me wanting more, however. It is interesting to note, for example,
that Bordeaux-Paris was last run in 1985 - but why was this the last time
that this race was run?
This book also promotes the slightly Anglo-centric view that the Classics
are a year-long series. It has long been the ambition of the UCI and others
to make this so, but the reality is rather different. For Flanderanians,
for example, the races across their soil are of dramatically greater importance
that those run elsewhere.
Minor quibbles aside, this is the perfect fireside book to keep you
going until the peleton next assembles in the shadow of Milan's Duomo
at the start of next season.
PS Oct 10
|
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.
|
|