France by Bike: 14 Tours Geared for Discovery Popular series gives all the essentials of bicycling throughout the world. Includes tips on trip planning, safety, health, food, accommodations, sites of interest, buying and outfitting a bike, and more.
Customer Review: We have done two France tours from this book
There does not seem to be a great selection of France bike touring books. This is one of few, and we found it very useful. We have done two tours with it. As has been said, the maps could be better, but you’ll have your Michelin map anyway.
Customer Review: On the surface this one doesn’t look great…
Sure, the maps are next to useless and the writers are far too fixated on campgrounds and not enough on hotels, but the routing they choose is very nice. I also feel they have selected is an excellent melange of cities, towns, villages and spectacular sights. My wife and I did the Languedoc and Rhone Loop tours for a trip two years ago and loved it and are so are using it again for Burgundy/Franche Comte/Alsace trip we are going on in two months.
Ultimately, I see this book as intended as a companion piece to the Michelin maps which are availiable for every region. What the book actually offers is a turn by turn narrative by which one would physically chart out your intended path on the maps using a highlighter pen. From there one would just follow the markered line and the book itself is stowed away in your panniers unless one finds oneself needing specific directions out of a town onto the intended road.
Addnittedly, there are a few books out there that do give you more information, elevations, point to point milages, etc…though all give precious little on accomodations–(Though, I suppose that is what the internet and the Michelin Red Guide is for), however I find this book to be the most personable and well thought out in terms of what a semi-serious tourer would be after, (and besides, the Michelin maps *do* help out here.) For one not-so-small example, the tours in this book actually seem to logically connect to each other so that if you perhaps wanted to ride for 12 days instead of 7 days, no problem. The other books, to me at first glance seem to seriously fall down here. Some of the other books also seek to work *too* hard to take you off the beaten track. Sometimes you want to see the sights. Unlike another reviewers opinion I actually think it OK to have a great time when touring around France!
Ultimately to do a decent tour I don’t think that there is any one single book to buy (unfortuantely). I think it is best to buy at least two or three and pick then your desired route from anyone of them. I feel that “France by Bike” should be one of your choices and In my estimation it is one you will come back to despite its lack of slickness.
It would be really great to see the authors come up with an updated second edition. More train info and some weblinks would be one area where they could improve.
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