Cycling was a sport so important in Italy that it
marked a generation, sparked fears of civil war, changed
the way Italian was spoken, led to legal reform and even
prompted the Pope himself to praise a cyclist, by name,
from his balcony in St Peter's in Rome. It was a sport
so popular that it created the geography of Italy in the
minds of her citizens, and some have said that it was
cycling, not political change, that united Italy.
Pedalare! Pedalare! is the first complete history of
Italian cycling to be published in English. The book
moves chronologically from the first Giro d'Italia
(Italy's equivalent of the Tour de France) in 1909 to
the present day. The tragedies and triumphs of great
riders such as Fausto Coppi and Gino Bartali appear
alongside stories of the support riders, snow-bound
mountains and the first and only woman to ride the whole
Giro. Cycling's relationship with Italian history,
politics and culture is always up front, with reference
to fascism, the cold war and the effect of two world
wars.The sport is explored alongside changes in Italian
society as a whole, from the poor peasants who took up
cycling in the early, pioneering period, to the slick,
professional sport of today. Scandals and controversy
appear throughout the book as constant features of the
connection between fans, journalists and cycling.
Concluding with an examination of doping, which has
helped to destroy what was at one time the most popular
sport of all, Pedalare, Pedalare is an engrossing
history of a national passion. |
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