A fascinating, mind-boggling account of young
athletes in their prime destroyed in the hell of war. A
mesmerizing view of cycling in its golden age, and the
darkness that followed. On June 28, 1914, one hundred
and forty-five riders lined up in a suburb of Paris at 3
a.m. to start the first stage of the Tour de France. The
race, which had been founded just a decade earlier, had
grown to become the biggest bicycle race in the world.
The riders did not know it at the time, but as they
raced, an event was taking place on the opposite side of
Europe which would change all of their lives forever:
Gavrilo Princip assassinated Archduke Franz Ferdinand of
Austria, triggering World War I. While racing went on in
France, a diplomatic crisis had started that would try
but fail to avert war. Shortly after the finish of the
race, France mobilized its troops and went to war with
Germany. The organizer of the Tour de France, Henri
Desgrange, despite being fifty years old, enrolled in
the army shortly afterwards and encouraged the cyclists
to do the same. The war would see over 16 million
soldiers and civilians die. Many of the riders from that
Tour de France did not return, and three previous
winners of the race would be among those killed in
action. The Shattered Peloton tells the story of that
Tour de France and what happened to the top cyclists of
the day during the course of the war. A brilliant,
disturbing, important book for anyone with an interest
in cycling or military history. |
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