Product Details
Inside the Postal Bus: My Ride with Lance Armstrong and the U.S. Postal Cycling Team

Inside the Postal Bus: My Ride with Lance Armstrong and the U.S. Postal Cycling Team
By Michael Barry

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Product Description

During the professional cycling season, the members of the United States Postal Team live, train, and work together for weeks on end while traveling to competitions throughout Europe. With wit and singular insight, Michael Barry, a professional cyclist and member of the United States Postal Team, shares his first-hand knowledge of the sport and of his fellow cyclists, describing intricate pre-race orchestrations; the efforts of the coach, mechanics, team chef, and other staff members; the personalities and idiosyncrasies of his international teammates, including six-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong; and the thrilling races themselves.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #148555 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-04-10
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 240 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher
"From winter training camp to the Tour de France, Inside the Postal Bus offers an accurate, behind-the-scenes view of our team."—Lance Armstrong

"A great read!"—Phil Liggett

"Inside the Postal Bus is so descriptive I felt I knew the riders and staff on the team before I actually met them. Chapter after chapter you really feel like you become a member of the team and get the sensation of what it is like to be on the bus with the boys."—Tom Danielson

"Michael's no jaded pro. His love of the sport is both evident and inspiring, and we are lucky indeed to be privy to his unique insights on being 'Inside The Postal Bus'."—Davis Phinney

"Michael is so eloquent about cycling. He really told me how it felt to be a cyclist… When you look at it objectively, at the risks and rewards, nobody should be a professional biker. But speaking to Michael Barry I realized why they do it."—Daniel Coyle, author of Lance Armstrong's War


Customer Reviews

a flat tire. 2
*Note I wish I could have given this book 2.5 stars*

I so wanted to like this book. As a cycling junkie since 1985, I have tried to get my hands on anything that involves European cycling. Especially first hand accounts of the European peloton. (peloton = main group or pack in a race)

I just finished Michael's book and to be honest, I was disappointed. It's not a bad read but the title of the book is a little misleading:

Inside the Postal Bus my ride with Lance Armstrong and the US Postal Cycling Team.

Now if George Hincapie or Floyd Landis had written this book, you might have gotten a more intimate picture of Lance Armstrong. But Michael usually rode for Postal's "B" team so I wasn't too shocked or disappointed that there wasn't too much material on Lance.

That being said, this was supposed to be a book about the Postal Bus and what goes on in it.

There were glimpses of what goes on in the bus and the team but Michael never goes very deep.

Maybe I'm too hard-core but I felt like he never really tells us anything about the races or the racers.

I wanted to read a few funny stories. Heck any stories. Stuff that the general public never gets to see. The closest he comes is when he and Dave Zabriske are in an elevator and they see a famous French cyclist and make fun of the fact that he has a mullet.

Unfortunately, the best and most revealing passage is not written by Michael but is in fact written by George Hincapie.

George tells us how he told Lance how much he respected and admired his gutsy performance after Lance had had a rough time trial during the 2003 Tour.

Lance said that he was touched by George's words. It was a great passage. And not for the fact that it involved Lance but because it showed the human side of the cyclists. If only the book was filled with stories like that. Whoa!

I wish he would have talked more about how hard it is to make the postal tour team.

And on how disappointed he was of not going and having to watch the tour on TV. (He had to have been disappointed it's every cyclist's dream to ride the tour. I know it was mine and when I raced I sucked).

Give us some emotion please. (If Michael was on a lesser team, I'm convinced he could be a tour rider - yes he's that good.) But we don't get anything.

If you want a more entertaining look at cycling in the European peloton, read Bob Roll's first book Bobke: A ride on the wild side of cycling. The only unfortunate thing is that it's from a different era. But it's funny. Hilarious in fact.

VELOPRESS had a golden opportunity to get an inside look at one of the greatest cycling teams ever (and not just becuase of Lance i.e. Bruyneel, Ekimov, Heras, et all)

But instead of getting inside the bus we get thrown under it.

I'm new to cycling, so this helped4
Michael Barry's peek inside the world of the former US Postal Pro Cycling Team was a fun read for me. I'm new to cycling and don't know much of the inside scoop, so Barry's vignettes entertained and educated me about life on a pro team.

Maybe an editor could have given the stories more "flow." However, I read the book in one sitting, laughing all the way through. Barry is a cyclist, not an author . . . and the stories show just how much he loves what he does.

I recommend this book to other cycling newbies and will read more from Barry, should he choose to put pen to paper again.

Enjoy!

average at best3
I liked the inside look at a pro team but the writing was simplistic and reminded me of someone writing home from summer camp. Very little here outside of "what I did today."