This seemed an interesting concept, but its execution exceeded my expectations and I thought this was excellent. This looked at 20 individual stages of the Tour, but the interviews with the cyclists elevated this from a good idea to a genuinely original work.
Naturally, prominent Brits feature heavily, but Moore cast his net wide to include the greats like Hinault and Lemond, to cyclists I had never heard of previously. Sometimes the context seemed more important, as in the case of Millar, and in others such as Chiapucci's it was the stage itself. This stopped it being too formulaic, in a format that leant itself to this trap.
Instead Moore interviewed stage winners and other key figures to tell each story in an engaging manner, while touching on the post-cycling lives of his interviewees. Enough detail is included of the stage itself to ensure that the race was still the main feature, but it never feels like a list of timegaps, and Moore acknowledges the difficulty of piecing together the actual events before TV coverage, armed only with contrasting Chinese whispers.
The interviews add extra colour, but also allow riders' more honest thoughts to be expressed, without the emotion or team duty at the time. Armstrong unsurprisingly comes across terribly, whereas Cavendish comes off well. Millar is more of an enigma, and also part of my only criticism, which is that too much praise is put on him for admitting to doping. I should have expected this given Moore's opinions in his book on Sky, but I didn't realise this was the same author as I thought the writing in this was far superior.
You'd have to be into cycling to understand the context of each ride, and not just see a list of European names each page, but otherwise I don't know what else you could want. The 20 chapters seem ideal for reading a couple at a time, but I read it all on the same day, and after a few dud books in a row, this was a welcome tonic.