“Indulge in the JOY. This is a FIVE STAR read!" Motorcycle News review, April 22, 2021. Hang on! With an off beat sensibility, this bike ride may be bumpy.
From the deserts of the Middle East to the U.S. and Canada, Michael Stewart has chased the allure of motorcycles for much of his life. Through them came a wealth of experience, and this what is the truth about motorcycling? Told with humor and wit, Scraping Pegs is a bold narrative; including “rules” to help you survive the art of riding and life.
Press an experienced rider beyond their glory stories, and they’ll tell you about the miles of nothingness. While showing off their road rash, they may share special moments, cruising down the road to joy, accelerating out of a corner, riding across desert sand, or up a mountain trail. The shift that happens before-motorcycle to o n-motorcycle . The constant swing between nothingness and awareness that can happen when riding. The perfect ride doesn’t last long, life is like that. There are disastrous mechanical failures, broken bones, weather battles, monotony, soured relationships, bad attitudes, and even death in store for some who seek to tame their wild beasts on iron horses. The worst rides make the best stories, they say. Riding is a quest, like life condensed in time. Is that the truth about motorcycles?
Excellent treatise on How you Can Die and Why we Ride Anyway!
I'm a 50 year old mom, former ER-Trauma nurse and brand new Bike owner. When my adult kids, fellow nurses and countless other friends and family met my, "I'm getting a motorcycle" statement with varying degrees of horror, head shaking, wailing and gnashing of teeth (not to mention suggestions of getting my head checked out by a shrink) I reassured them with, "yes, I know I can die", "yes I'll be careful" and "no-I'm not having a midlife crisis." But it was harder to define for them exactly WHY I wanted to ride. Scraping Pegs helped me define that answer. I've always been a gal who goes against the grain, doesn't really understand the words, "no you shouldn't do that" or societal limitations on what "good girls" do or do not do. I've always soaked life in and enjoyed the small moments as much as the pivotal ones. JOY was my mantra, though undefined. Scraping Pegs condensed my understanding of just why I love to ride. And why, as soon as all my kids were grown and self-sufficient I decided it was my turn to live a little more on the edge. Obviously I'll be as responsible as possible. But as an ER nurse you know that death is the great equalizer. You go out for a quick run to the grocery store in your minivan, a truck crosses into your lane and now I'm handing your family information on how to call the medical examiner's office on Monday to get your body to the right funeral home. Death happens to us all. But not all of us truly live. JOY is the answer to why we ride. And the best lesson I learned in Scraping Pegs. Stewart is delightfully curmudgeonly and honest. His place is steady yet knows when to slow down to savor a nice curve and speed up through the straightaways. They say people who cuss are more honest. Stewart is a prime example! Great read. Great lessons. Use your noggin!
I loved this book, which teaches (or reminds) you of the ten Motorcycle Riding Rules. No, these are not the same rules you’ll find in the Motorcycle Manual you downloaded in order to pass the test and get your riding license. These are the unspoken rules that riders never talk about, because they don’t have to. It’s communicated among us telepathically.
Yes, I’m a rider (dirt bike). I’ve got a brother who owns a Harley and two long-gone (not dead) boyfriends who perched me on the rider’s seat behind them. This author makes me think of my bike-riding men. In true down-to-earth, no-holds barred, pull-no-punches, road-brother fashion, author Michael Stewart tells us: “The reality is that crappy weather, careless drivers, sore asses, flat tires, death, and other aggravations creep into both life and riding.”
The author isn’t just talking about motorcycles. The rambling logic in this book, he insists, can be applied “to trout fishing or any undertaking.” I soon began to realize that this book should be read in short chunks, rather like an Eckhart Tolle book, because it was taking my mind some contemplation time to fully understand and appreciate what I was reading. The language is fresh, phenomenal, engaging. I recommend this book to all riders—and their families! I received an advance review copy at no cost and without obligation from the author.
I joined Good Reads to rate this "book" and write a review. This collection of pages is in serious need of an editor. The author rambles and pursues pointless tangents, sometimes for pages before getting back to what was ostensibly the point of the chapter. He repeats himself often - especially his jokes, and is obviously entertaining himself as he writes. Good for him; creative writing is a wonderful outlet. However, one shouldn't be allowed to inflict amateur prose for money upon the reading public. For that, they had blogs in the early millennium. Additionally, the author seems to find stories about people dying or being maimed in motorcycle accidents to be an endless source of comedy; a tone deaf misstep in a book which claims to offer the ten Motorcycle Riding Rules.
The nadir of self publishing. I don't begrudge Mr. Stewart the opportunity to sell his terrible, unedited writing to a buying public. There's a sucker born every minute. I just won't be one of them in the future for his 4 other "books", and counting.
Great read. Glad I didn't know all the rules before i rode on the back of a motorcycle in my younger days! I liked how the author weaved in the characters who shared his love of riding, and how he questioned the untimely death by riding of a good friend. I found the descriptions of JOY in riding compelling, and look forward to next installment in the series.
Didn't finish this book. Too many lame repetitive jokes. Writer seems like the guy who tells the same 10 jokes at every rest stop on a long ride. After the third day you are ready to leave him.
The tips are not bad. If you have been riding any length of time you will already know these. But honestly this feels more like blog post material than a book. The writing style would probably work better as a series of blog entries to be honest.
I found this book boring. I ride motorcycles for more that 40 years and what I think this book was about, is the frustration of a biker who had too many accidents.
Not bad - some good insights on motorcycling and life in general. In particular, Stewart has some insightful advice on avoiding motorbike crashes that I wish I had read years ago. Two crashes too late, but maybe just in time to save me from a third! Not sure that I agree with all of his observations, but I enjoyed his irreverent approach to virtually everything.