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Pilgrimage on a Steel Ride: A Memoir About Men and Motorcycles

Pilgrimage on a Steel Ride: A Memoir About Men and Motorcycles

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Author: Gary Paulsen
Publisher: Harcourt
Category: Book

List Price: $21.00
Buy Used: $0.01
You Save: $20.99 (100%)



New (5) Used (57) Collectible (3) from $0.01

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 9 reviews
Sales Rank: 877000

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1st. Ed
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 179
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 9 x 5.8 x 1

ISBN: 0151930937
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780151930937
ASIN: 0151930937

Publication Date: November 1997
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: A nice ex-library copy. Gently used. All pages and cover clear except for a few library markings. Mylar over dustjacket. Binding solid and tight. No creases.

Similar Items:

  • Zero to Sixty: The Motorcycle Journey of a Lifetime
  • Riding with Rilke: Reflections on Motorcycles and Books
  • Longrider: A Tale of Just Passin' Through
  • Philosophical Ridings: Motorcycles and the Meaning of Life
  • Jupiters Travels: Four Years Around the World on a Triumph

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
At 57, with heart disease and a bad case of wanderlust, Gary Paulsen decided to get himself the motorcycle of his dreams and take it to Alaska from his home in New Mexico. "The bike held me like a hand, caught me and took me with it so that the engine seemed to be my engine, the wheels my wheels," he writes. "It was singular, visceral, unlike any other motorcycle I had ever ridden. In some way it brought me out of myself, out ahead of myself, into myself, into the core of what I was, what I needed to live. And I knew, my core knew that I would never be the same again, could never be the same."

Paulsen writes in a blaze of macho invective, about men who like drinkin' and butcherin' and guns and "poker with no-limits stakes, or stakes high enough to make you intensely focus on everything there is--and there is everything--in the game." But when he's writing about the spicy characters he's encountered in his wide-ranging travels around America, this short memoir, for all its exaggerated manliness, turns out to be quite funny. --Maria Dolan


Customer Reviews:   Read 4 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars Author takes to the Open Road   July 6, 2006
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

A great book in the genre of the open road as the author takes his Harley from New Mexico to Alaska


2 out of 5 stars A poor job by Gary Paulsen   March 2, 2003
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

If you're looking for this book, it has been newly reprinted (word for word) under the title, _Zero to Sixty: The Motorcycle Journey of a Lifetime_.
I love many of Gary Paulsen's books. I've heard Gary discuss his books at a bookstore appearance; Gary appears to be a very genuine, intelligent, and caring man and author.
BUT, this book seems to have been cobbled together to meet a contractual obligation. Not only is the book short, but the print line spacing is expanded to "fluff" the text. Typical books have 28 to 32 lines of text per page; this book has 24. The title doesn't even match: the journey isn't a "pilgrimage," since the length of trip is more important than the destination. While the book is in part about Gary Paulsen's relationship with motorcycles and journeys, it isn't about "men and motorcycles." There's some glorification of how a Harley, different from any other motorcycle, "brought me out of myself, out ahead of myself, into myself, into the core of what I was, what I needed to live," but no thought about WHY the Harley brand does this for Gary -- or why other motorcyclists feel that other brands fit THEIR soul. (See _The Perfect Vehicle: What It is about Motorcycles_ for Melissa Holbrook Pierson's take on her relationship with her Moto Guzzi.)
_Pilgrimage_ contains some interesting insights into Gary Paulsen's life, and has some beautifully written passages: but that's what you might expect in a long magazine interview.
The profanity is inappropriate and very stilted. Further, the profanity suddenly and almost totally stops halfway through the book at the start of chapter five -- almost as if an editor said, "Gary, you've got to throw some profanity into the first half of the book. After all, it is a 'Harley book.'" Who knows -- maybe the same editor later said, "hey, let's put out the same book under a different title and not tell anyone."
Borrow this book if you must read it -- it's a very quick read. But DON'T give up on Gary Paulsen if this is your first book of his -- he's an excellent writer -- just not here -- and perhaps not in his other directly autobiographical books.



3 out of 5 stars its an ok read.....there are many that are better though   November 26, 2002
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

A very fast read, a few hours for a slow reader. If you are looking for an inspiring book to get you out on the road in your fifties it might do it for you. Mostly he talks of his life before this ride he takes with a friend to Alaska during a month long trip. About the only thing memorable about his trip was rain and more rain and the lousy road condition on the Alaska highway. A bunch of poor stories about growing up and about the times he did the Alaskan Ididrod with team of dogs and a sled. He should have written a story about that he seemed more knowledgeable. Not really a profound writer with deep articulated insight. Blue collar over 60 harley riders might like and relate. It was just ok.


3 out of 5 stars From a rider's perspective...   September 2, 2002
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

Gary Paulsen is admittedly patently insane, but that shouldn't stop you from reading this book. Alcoholic parents turned him homeless at age 14, so he eked out a bare existence doing any thing that paid, from fence posting to tarring roofs and digging septic systems, cutting trees in snow, picking crops with migrants, etc.
You might ask, why do you care about this guy's life? Because while the book's title suggests a road journey, the subtitle suggests otherwise: "a memoir about men and motorcycles." But this book is not about either; there is only one bike involved and one guy's story. Since I don't believe in false advertising, I would change that subtitle to "a memoir about myself." And this is what we get. We get an award-winning book author who makes no compromises with his life, who clocked up 10,000 miles on the Alaskan Highway astride his Harley the moment he laid $19K on her and just weeks after doctors told him he had heart disease. And that's nothing compared to the 20,000 miles he claims he's done as a real sled-dog musher and Iditarod finisher.
Paulsen's writing style is direct, in-your-face, colloquial. This explains why his books are big sellers in the "young adult" market. He's never eloquent, but then you don't have to be when you can write something like this: "To seek. Not to find, not to end but to always seek a beginning."
Paulsen is like so many riders out there scribbling on the slab: a pilgrimage is not about traveling to any holy place since the holy place is found in the traveling itself.
At only 179 pages, Steel Ride is a fast read and despite the journey to Alaska, the book doesn't exactly inspire trekking there because we hardly get out of Paulsen's own head trip. For every mile we go forward we get two miles back into his personal history. But it's a fascinating history and a kind of life better heard than lived.
He pleads with the reader about hurrying up to Alaska by any means possible "before it's too late, before the jaws of life clamp down on your neck." Now there's some good advice.



1 out of 5 stars The book I could put down and may not finish   January 14, 2001
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

This book is nothing but a rant with a great deal of lewd, foul language and situations. It includes items from the authors life, such as stories about high stakes poker games, barely-stand-up-drunkeness, more foul language, and more sexual situations and fantasies. Not the book I intended to read by the cover and search criteria. I had hoped to find a book that would express in words what it is like to RIDE a motorcycle. Not to the store. Not on a good weekend with perfect weather. But a book about the open road and how a mtorocycle moves a person to peace and change in their lives. I do not know if I will be able to finish it due to the language and situations it describes. NOT A BOOK TO SHARE WITH SOMEONE INTERESTED IN "THE QUEST" or a kid.

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