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My guest today is an old friend and perhaps someone many of you might consider your friend too.
If you subscribed to Winning Magazine or Velo News back in the day, you relished Maynard Hershon’s column, “Tales from the Bike Shop,” at the back of each issue.
Maynard is the bicycle world’s storyteller and, in many ways, is keeping the story of proper bike riding alive.
His now out-of-print book “Tales from the Bike Shop,” is a classic – mixing his astute observations about bike-shop-behavior with humor and a plainspoken honesty about what went on in our shops back in the day.
In his new book, “The Dysfunctional Cycling Club and Other Stories. Maynard turns his thoughts to today’s cycling club culture, such that it is, and what has been lost from the days of his bicycling education.
Unlike Tales from the Bike Shop, where most of the stories, while based on his observations and experiences, were fiction, this book describes the real people he’s met, the actual rides he’s done, and his candid thoughts about the many changes that he’s experienced in today’s bike club culture.
You’ll probably find our conversation a lot like two old fogies who haven’t seen each other for a very long time – yapping, even sometimes interrupting one another, and just generally having a good time. I’m delighted to be able to share our conversation with you.
By Audio – WJCUMy guest today is an old friend and perhaps someone many of you might consider your friend too.
If you subscribed to Winning Magazine or Velo News back in the day, you relished Maynard Hershon’s column, “Tales from the Bike Shop,” at the back of each issue.
Maynard is the bicycle world’s storyteller and, in many ways, is keeping the story of proper bike riding alive.
His now out-of-print book “Tales from the Bike Shop,” is a classic – mixing his astute observations about bike-shop-behavior with humor and a plainspoken honesty about what went on in our shops back in the day.
In his new book, “The Dysfunctional Cycling Club and Other Stories. Maynard turns his thoughts to today’s cycling club culture, such that it is, and what has been lost from the days of his bicycling education.
Unlike Tales from the Bike Shop, where most of the stories, while based on his observations and experiences, were fiction, this book describes the real people he’s met, the actual rides he’s done, and his candid thoughts about the many changes that he’s experienced in today’s bike club culture.
You’ll probably find our conversation a lot like two old fogies who haven’t seen each other for a very long time – yapping, even sometimes interrupting one another, and just generally having a good time. I’m delighted to be able to share our conversation with you.