What does it mean to be happy, to be sated, to live a meaningful life? Is wanderlust curable? Is depression? Echoing the sensation of riding a bicycle, Cyclettes is a multidisciplinary contemplation on the borderlands of adulthood. Part travelogue, part philosophical musing, Tree Abraham's work probes the millennial experience, asking what a young life can be when unshackled from traditional role expectations yet still living in consistent economic and environmental uncertainty. Text is interspersed between drawings, scientific charts, ephemera, maps, arcane designs, and diagrams of cycles—of vehicles and of life, from the Buddhist Eightfold path to patterns of depression, desire, and motion. The result is a disarming, welcoming work that asks us to consider what the interflux of exploration and ennui mean to our locality within the universe. Cyclettes is an original, insightful artifact of modern life.
CYCLETTES by Tree Abraham is a really interesting book! I really enjoyed this one! It’s a memoir told through cycling. We ride along from her first childhood bike to traveling and many different bicycles along the way. It was great to see the creativity in this book that includes photos and illustrations. I read it quite quickly because it was so fun to turn the page and read a little vignette or see a cool image.
Thank you to Book*hug Press for my gifted review copy!
A delightful ode to cycling that lifts the spirits just as the pedaling itself does through a series of vignettes (cyclettes)! Written super creatively challenging the reader to take a different perspective through movement on the page as you traverse each leaf!
I was fortunate enough to read an early draft of Cyclettes and I loved it immediately. The finished product is even better, with imaginative visuals, gorgeous photos, and a love of cycling that leaps off the page. It's honest, funny, sweet, and entirely original.
Cyclettes consists of a series of vignettes, photographs, drawings and diagrams. The collection serves as a sincere and intimate memoir in which designer, illustrator and writer Tree Abraham invites you into her life and mind.
A lifelong cyclist, I enjoyed the author's genuine celebration of the bicycle. The book is particularly compelling due to her rejection of cycling fads, styles, fashion and related Peloton classes. Instead, she proves herself an authentic pedal pusher who's likely ridden more bicycles on more continents more miles than many weekend warriors with their high-end steeds and obsessive Strava posts will ever approach.
An English major, I love the fact she sent me to a dictionary repeatedly while reading. Although I've been reading (and writing) for decades, I appreciate being challenged and she was up to the task with her thoughtful and revealing yet crisp and approachable writing.
This memoir is a rare and unique treasure and one I'm thankful to have found and experienced. She reinforces my conviction I need not be a racer or crazed stationary bike enthusiast to consider the bicycle and cycling a major component of my health, personality and soul. But you need not be interested in bicycles or cycling to enjoy this book. If you enjoy memoirs, travel stories, New York City experiences or sincere works in which the author shares interior thoughts in ways that can also help you better manage life, you will likely rate this work high, too.
At its best this is whimsical and entertaining with some thoughtful observations. It's vaguely about the author growing up and becoming infatuated with cycling. It also revolves around the authors' personal life. She grew up in Ottawa, Canada, and has visited places around the globe – India, Bangladesh, Vietnam, Great Britain…
But I started to skim after reading half of it. It's just too rambling, too personal, with non sequiturs from paragraph to paragraph.
There are lots of illustrations. Overall, there is a lack of unity and purpose
I loved this little book so much. It’s a life book disguised as a bike book written by a bike person for bike people (or anyone with a soul that craves to wander). I’m a bike person- an unlikely one, as I didn’t ride a bike from age 9 to 29 and was too afraid to ride on the road for nearly a full year. But my bike gets me everywhere- to work, to run errands, to see friends, to explore. I have a wandering soul- always looking for the next adventure, the next place, settling down but never feeling settled. This book scratched that part of me in the most comforting way.
Cyclettes is a memoir in fragments, largely using the author's relationship with bicycles to reflect on home, wandering, love... Some really striking observations and turns of phrase. Creative, experimental, conversational, especially great for short reading sessions as you can pick it up and put it down without losing track of a longer arc.
Very original.
You don't need to be a bike person to enjoy this, though that would certainly give extra appeal.
Giving a numerical score feels weird but I guess 4.5 rounded up..?
This books threads a careful needle between sharing too much and not sharing enough. Common among “makers of things” is a desire to share everything but at the same time be invisible. Tree orbits that tension here. The short fragmented stories allow you to spend any amount of time with the book, so I found myself reading for 10 minutes here or there, excited to read it again but having a good place to set it down. All the drawings and images are fantastic and I only wish there were more.
A gorgeous and thoughtful memoir that weaves together contemplations of home and longing in words and pictures. Tree Abraham has written and designed a book that feels the same way as riding your bike down a perfectly paved path on a cool summer’s night. I always feel like I’m flying when I’m on a good ride; this book felt like that.
Her memoir includes lots of places that she traveled, however, her meanderings don't entice me to follow in her footsteps. Her choices in equipment are also not in keeping with safety or efficiency and since she gives no reason for her choices, they are not helpful to others interested in bicycling. But she did have several good points and interesting thoughts sprinkled throughout, making is a worthy read that might be of interest to others.
This book is for all my bike lovers out there, it’s a beautiful memoir, short stories of the authors life between her childhood to present and how much biking means to her. The short stories are broken up between paragraphs that are numbered and there are images/graphics as well which makes it a quick read.
I absolutely loved this book. Abraham uses a wildly creative format to showcase her original ideas and musings— exploring life’s circuitous trajectory, travel, love, through a lifelong connection to bicycles. It’s truly a little triumph.
Loved this little book. Thoughts and life on two wheels. I loved the way the book looked and it was so relatable. Everything I've felt about riding bicycles and travel and existing was captured so well. It made me want to write my own little cyclettes.
Enjoyed this so much I purchased the hardcover before finishing my TPL loaner. Grabbed an extra copy as a wedding gift for some cycling friends too. Perfect little before-bed read for when you may only be able to get a few pages in before nodding off.
A sweet and delightful book that made me nostalgic for a life I never lived. I learned a lot of vocabulary words from it, as well as more worldly artistic and conceptual things (e.g., Indo-Saracen architecture and Kierkegaard’s artistic rotation method)
Loved this quirky look at cycling and world travel and the pandemic and friendship and science. Filled with drawings and charts and photos. A wonderful book.