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Higher Calling: Road Cycling’s Obsession with the Mountains

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Why do road cyclists go to the mountains?

After all, cycling up a mountain is hard – so hard that, to many non-cyclists, it can seem absurd. But, for some, climbing a mountain gracefully (and beating your competitors up the slope) represents the pinnacle of cycling achievement. The mountains are where legends are forged and cycling’s greats make their names.

Many books tell you where the mountains are, or how long and how high. None of them ask ‘Why?’

Why are Europe’s mountain ranges professional cycling’s Wembley Stadium or its Colosseum? Why do amateurs also make a pilgrimage to these high, remote roads and what do we see and feel when we do?
Why are the roads there in the first place?

Higher Calling explores the central place of mountains in the folklore of road cycling. Blending adventure and travel writing with the rich narrative of pro racing, Max Leonard takes the reader from the battles that created the Alpine roads to the shepherds tending their flocks on the peaks, and to a Grand Tour climax on the ‘highest road in Europe’. And he tells stories of courage and sacrifice, war and love, obsession and elephants along the way.

326 pages, Kindle Edition

Published May 25, 2017

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443 people want to read

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Max Leonard

25 books8 followers

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5 stars
46 (21%)
4 stars
87 (39%)
3 stars
72 (32%)
2 stars
13 (5%)
1 star
1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 25 of 25 reviews
310 reviews4 followers
December 27, 2017
I received this book from a goodreads giveaway.

As a fan of the Grand Tours, this book is right up my alley. I like books that encompass natural history/local history around events/landmarks, etc., so this book also fit that description as well. Double win for me.

This book is very well written and extremely well researched. I had an advanced readers copy so there were a few grammatical/typographical errors that I'm sure will be corrected before the final version is released. Aside from that, I have no real negative points to make.

I really loved the history elements from the Giro, Vuelta and Tour that are woven throughout the story and the real time elements of the current bike races/racers as well as the behind the scenes topics that the author included like plowing the high roads, the shepherds/environmental issues as well as the war/border historical related topics as well. Really well done and enjoyable to read.

This just makes me more excited for the upcoming 2017 cycling season!
Profile Image for Michael.
587 reviews12 followers
February 17, 2018
Oddly there is no record for the hardback print edition published in the U.S. with this title, just the "ebook" and Kindle versions.

Whatever.

I read 145 pages, or about half, and found I was consistently being distracted by other books, so I wouldn't continue to pretend I was going to resume reading this. I am slightly annoyed I even got 145 pages into this before stopping - but I usually get engaged with books about cycling history at some point.

And I liked the author's previous "Lanterne Rouge" (about the Tour de France) well enough. This book just seemed disjoint. It had a theme, yes, but the narrative doesn't flow in a proportional way. When i gave up, it appeared the author was endlessly lost in some mountain pass in the snow, recreating some racing experience, but not really. What the heck?

Profile Image for Dave Gerrard.
9 reviews1 follower
April 23, 2019
A bit of travelogue; anecdotes from someone who knows someone who came third in a stage of the Giro; some history of bike racing over mountains. I liked the description of how they clear the roads of snow. Writing weak.
Profile Image for Peter Kuin.
50 reviews1 follower
July 30, 2020
Interessant boek, best leuk om te lezen maar mist net de volgende stap in diepgang. Waar zit nou echt die psychologische drive van mensen om die bergen op te fietsen?
38 reviews
January 6, 2019
For a cyclist some very good chapters in the first two thirds, but then some rather dull stuff about shepherds.
Profile Image for Andrés P. Mohorte.
18 reviews14 followers
December 18, 2024
Me ha fascinado a muchos niveles. Leonard utiliza el ciclismo como proxy para muchas otras obsesiones: la historia, la geografía, el desempeño humano de cualquier tipo en espacios tan remotos y salvajes como las montañas, la psicología del sufrimiento, la obsesión por metas banales e imposibles... He conectado con este libro de forma muy personal.

Hay otros pasajes menos inspirados y Leonard, en general, adolece de esa mirada acrítica y un tanto infantil del periodismo anglosajón hacia el ciclismo (2015-2017, hablamos del pináculo de la era Sky). Mi interés ha sido dispar en función de la temática del capítulo. Algunos me han atrapado (los encargados de retirar la nieve de La Bonette, los planes bélicos de Napoleón III como fuerza primordial para el nacimiento del Galibier o del Izoard) y otros no (Joe Dombrowski, en general, es una persona muy aburrida).

Se lo recomendaría a cualquier apasionado al ciclismo como actividad deportiva, no tanto a los aficionados al ciclismo como espectáculo televisivo.
Profile Image for Matt.
92 reviews3 followers
July 24, 2017
Leonard explores the desire of cyclists, from amateurs to pros, to ride mountain roads. This is a wide ranging book that covers everything from the fitness and strategy needed to ride at high altitudes to WWI and WWII history, which is required to understand why roads even exist on some Alpine peaks. Along the way he befriends the U.S. cyclist Joe Dombrowski and charts the young rider's progression through the pro peloton. Leonard even observes the hard work of the road clearing crews that dig out deep snow drifts in the Spring from his favorite climb on the Col de la Bonnette. This jumping between aspects of cycling, fitness, and history adds depth to the book, but also makes it feel scattered and a little distracted. It is certainly less focused than Leonard's "Lanterne Rouge" book about the last placed rider in the Tour de France. Still, any cycling enthusiast should enjoy this venture on the steep roads less traveled.
Profile Image for Rauno Villberg.
215 reviews2 followers
March 21, 2024
I enjoy Leonard's writing, but the chapters were too scattershot for my liking.
I mean, I came here for the cycling, so while I did find the chapter talking about how the immense amounts of snow get cleared fascinating, I wasn't quite as taken by the long penultimate chapter focusing on shepherds.
On the other hand, the chapters that focused on at-the-time-pro Joe Dombrowski were a treat!
Especially the last chapter, about the 20th stage of the 2016 Giro - especially awesome reading as an Estonian, because Rein Taaramäe and Tanel Kangert come into play in a major way. Thanks to that, I did end up finishing the book on a high, but I can't quite stretch it to four stars (I'd be a coward and give it 3.5 if possible)
3 reviews
July 11, 2018
This is a great account of what the mountains mean to cylists and, personally, really captured the awe and wonder that leaves me in a constant state of wanting to be back in the Alps and Dolomites on my bike. There's some fascinating insight and history in here and so much to learn about the recovery of the roads from the winter. As well as following Joe Dombrowski closely in his early career, Max Leonard brilliantly portrays the role the mountains have played in history, as well as the role shepherds and other locals continue to play.
Profile Image for Matt Reynolds.
31 reviews3 followers
April 21, 2019
Equal parts journalism and autobiography, Higher Calling takes a deep dive into what it means to climb a mountain on a road bicycle. Although the subject matter is broad, the book is guided by the author’s own personal perspective, and informed by the experience of several friends (including pro cyclist Joe Dombrowski of EF, Education First). In an unmistakably modern account, Leonard mixes strava and instagram with the folklore and history of cycling.
Profile Image for Ben.
88 reviews2 followers
June 30, 2020
With the exception of a few authors, I usually go into a new cycling book with low expectations. This book was exactly what I was hoping all it would be -- a very thoroughly researched study of why cyclists climb, with a mix of all the elements that play a role in this obsession interwoven with the story of one man's search for a stage win at the tour. There's some expert story telling here with lots of facts and history to make a fully rounded book. Very well done.
Profile Image for Kris Lucius.
19 reviews
November 1, 2024
I really enjoyed this book. The balance of reflection and storytelling, the wide range of subjects that collage to explain a singularity: a mountain.

To my taste I would’ve compressed some of the 2016 Giro coverage, and it left me wanting to know ALOT more about Pierre Kraemer (I think that cliche painting got more ink in this book than him) but overall this was a great first read for my cycling offseason.
Profile Image for Maya.
24 reviews
August 14, 2023
Great topic, horrible writing. Each chapter focuses on a set of random anecdotes, and it's difficult to follow unless you pay close attention to which character was a professional cyclist in the 80s versus which character is a random dude the author met at a birthday party in Nice last summer. I persevered because I thought it would get better, but it didn't.
66 reviews13 followers
July 4, 2019
Perhaps one of the most beautifully written books I have read in a long time. Leonard paints scenes with words that move the reader and make one long for the mountains. Plus the history, the stories, and the personal experiences make for a varied and rich read.
51 reviews
June 20, 2022
If you love cycling, mountains, history, Tour de France and hill climbing this is the book for you . Really well written and fascinating insight into how and why the high mountain roads were built and maintained and into the local life in the mountains . Also a bit of me into why I love climbing .
87 reviews1 follower
August 20, 2017
Actually actual interesting writing. It has voice, as they say. 3.97
Profile Image for Peter.
291 reviews3 followers
October 20, 2018
A good read that goes beyond cycling and into the realms of philosophy. Recommended.
269 reviews1 follower
August 14, 2019
I enjoyed this book. At times it does wander. The sections on then road clearing, military history and mountain life were the most interesting to me.
Profile Image for KendraLee.
71 reviews2 followers
March 1, 2020
I read this at the tail end of winter in my mountain town and it made me desperate to get back on my bike. Dreaming of sunshine and hills to climb!
Profile Image for Filip Olšovský.
352 reviews24 followers
July 23, 2023
Interesting chapters mixed with absolutely useless stories about showeling snow.
86 reviews
January 2, 2025
Higher Calling: Cycling's Obsession with Mountains by Max Leonard 320 pages 4/5

I loved this book. It's fun to read. This book I read slowly, enjoying it one chapter at a time. The writer takes us on a fun journey on a road bike around the European mountains. We learn some of what motivates professional riders. It's well-researched. We history of some famous riders. But also what it is like to live in these areas. Plowing snow or being a sheep herder. It's written for the general public, so one gets to learn a whole new vocabulary if aren't familiar with road bike culture. Now my husband is reading and enjoying it just as much as I did. I started as part of #nonfictionnovember.
Profile Image for Steve Chilton.
Author 13 books21 followers
August 11, 2021
What might have been boring, as it concentrates heavily on the geography and history of the Col de la Bonette, turned out to be interesting as it included some good history on the mountains in cycling's Grand Tours. An informative book which engaged me throughout. It includes a few grainy black and white photos which weren't always captioned so you had to guess from the context within the text.
42 reviews1 follower
January 2, 2022
This is peak reading season, at least for me anyway. So far my reading much at all, so I will take the time to write a review for this book which I read some time ago. I have read my share of cycling books including several biographies about famous racing cyclists , I have found they have several things in common, the major factor is ; you guessed it, they all started seriously riding their bikes a lot at an early age and continued professionally into their thirties so I have had my share of biographies of famous cyclists. Books on the Tour re France are alike, you read about some of the same legendary stories and riders, teams over again. Now, onto this book. Donned good book, very original and interesting from whole new perspective, for example; a great section on the European Alps and what is was like for soldiers trekking through the alps on recon missions and firefights and hand to hand combat against allies and the axis of evil during a time when there was no competivebike races happening in Europe.
Displaying 1 - 25 of 25 reviews

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