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Every Second Counts

by Lance Armstrong
Published: 01 June, 2004
Publisher: Broadway
Our Price: $11.20
List price: $14.00 SAVE $2.80
ISBN: 0767914481
Customer Rating: 3.4 Stars3.4 Stars3.4 Stars
Sales Rank: 142
Availability: Usually ships within 24 hours


Customer Reviews

2.0 Stars2.0 Stars A huge Lance fan...cycling fan that is....

My family and I have been following Lance's career since well before his public battle with cancer. We have been avid watches of the Tour since the mid 80s and our July revolves around that schedule.

I was very disappointed by this book. I, too, was shocked by the profanity after turning the first page. Not that I think strong models like Lance don't ever swear, I just don't think it needed to be within the first 100 words! There seemed to be no logical information flow - more random thoughts as I found myself skimming to re-find a plot line. It was almost like the book was not edited for content and structure.

Stick with Lance's first book - It's Not About the Bike - to get an inspiration. Read this new book if you want to understand the collapses in his life (family), but Lance's accomplishments are still amazing despite his challenges.

If you want details about the racing side, visit his web site or other USPS team member's web sites where they write the ins and outs of racing in the Tour.

http://www.uspsprocycling.com/

4.0 Stars4.0 Stars4.0 Stars4.0 Stars An honest account, though I wanted more cycling insight

It would be difficult to match It's Not About the Bike. That story had a perfect arc to it: cocky young cyclist limited by his lack of discipline, brought down by cancer, but then redeemed by that very illness and the aid of his family and teammates to become a champion of the world's most grueling endurance event, in the process finding love. The saga beyond that, covered in this book, does not have such a naturally dramatic arc. He went on to win five more Tours, the cancer has not returned, and the story ends with the dissolution of his marriage.

The process of living in the years after remission is not as naturally compelling as the battle with it, and Lance already covered some of his fears about the return of cancer in the previous book. So some of the book feels repetitive. For me, a cycling nut and a Lance fan, I would have loved more insight from Lance into the race itself, what he was thinking during every stage. He covers entire stages in the span of a page or two, and what he reveals leaves me greedy for more. Given how closely his last few Tour efforts have been followed by the media online and offline, a lot of it will be repetitive to his biggest fans. What we need is a DVD that contains edited portions of stages, with Lance and teammates and coach providing a commentary, interspliced with actual excerpts from the radio communications between Lance and his team car, like the bits shown in the Nike-produced documentary 28 Days to Paris.

Still, book is highly readable, just like the first. I read it all in a few hours as soon as I received it. Lance is completely honest with his life, and I find that admirable. Many people have read his books and commented that they didn't really find him likable. He can come off as arrogant, brash, foul-mouthed, controlling; some of those qualities, though, probably make him one of the few people capable of dominating the suffer-fest that is the Tour de France. He doesn't hide who he is, and he doesn't claim to be a saint for having survived cancer.

What I would have preferred is for him to have released this book after his days of competing in the Tour. Perhaps that would be after his attempt for six straight. Then the story would be more inherently dramatic, what with his marital problems and the struggle for his fifth Tour in the center of the story, instead of being a last-minute addendum at the end of this novel (tacked on just as the book was going to print, the last chapter about Tour victory #5 and the problems with his marriage naturally feels rushed, abbreviated). Maybe that story will be Lance and Sally's next endeavor.

5.0 Stars5.0 Stars5.0 Stars5.0 Stars5.0 Stars Brilliant, Exciting, and Insightful Follow-up to 'the Bike'.

This is a beautiful follow-up to Lance's first book (It's Not About the Bike). In this book, Lance shares what it is like for him as person who is also a "superstar bicyclist", "cancer survivor", and "cancer philanthropist". Though a young man in terms of age, Lance speaks with deep wisdom about what it means to live, how to feel alive, and dealing with life's non-life-threatening complexities. And then there are remarkable and thrilling stories about his Tour de France experiences. I loved reading this book! It is spectacular, especially in conjunction with his first book.

Review by Evan Finer, author of "Effortless WellBeing"


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