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Gironimo!

Riding the Very Terrible 1914 Tour of Italy

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The 1914 Giro d'Italia was the most difficult bike race in history; eighty-one riders started and only eight finished. Now Tim Moore is going to attempt it himself, and he's committed to total authenticity.

Twelve years after Tim Moore toiled around the route of the Tour de France, he senses his achievement being undermined by the truth about "Horrid Lance." His rash response is to take on a fearsome challenge from an age of untarnished heroes: the notorious 1914 Giro d'Italia. History's most appalling bike race was an ordeal of 400-kilometer stages filled with cataclysmic storms, roads strewn with nails, and even the loss of an eye by one competitor—and it was all on a diet of raw eggs and red wine.

Of the eighty-one riders who rolled out of Milan, only eight made it back. To truly capture the essence of what these riders endured a century ago, Tim acquires the ruined husk of a gearless, wooden-wheeled 1914 road bike, some maps, and an alarming period outfit topped off with a pair of blue-lensed welding goggles. As Moore rides up and over the Alps and then down to the Adriatic (with only wine corks for brakes), Gironimo! is an adventure that is by turns bold, beautiful, and madly inspiring.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Retracing a 1914 route of more than 3,000 kilometers through Italy with a century-old bicycle sounds painful. That's especially true with this audiobook because narrator Gildart Jackson gives Moore's first-person travelogue a sarcastic, self-deprecating tone that might lead some listeners to expect that the endeavor was a failure. However, it gradually sinks in that Moore is going to make it. He's competed in the Tour de France, after all, and, somewhere in middle age, he's not quite as old as the bike. It's not a smooth ride; repairs, traffic, and a leg freezing up are among Moore's troubles. Toward the end, the droll self-mockery gives way to reveal Moore's pride in completing the tour on a bike he refurbished himself. Listeners probably won't want to try Moore's journey themselves, but listening is fun. J.A.S. © AudioFile 2015, Portland, Maine

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