|
Bikes | Features | Events | Books | Tech | Magazine | About | Messages | Classified | Links Back to the Books menu... |
|
13th August 2007 |
|
The Classic Japanese Motorcycle Guide by Rod Ker
Dave Blendell doesn't like bike books. Great! We'll get him to review this book by a RealClassic writer then...
Apart from those, motorcycle books tend to be either the dry witterings of some anorak under the impression that his obsession with facts, figures and indeed correct rivet-accountancy is shared with anyone in the known universe, or 'coffee table'-type offerings; fancy pictures but as entertaining and accurate as the Virgin Rail timetable. Who better than me, then, to ask to do a review of a new book about motorcycles?
It's not a perfect book and some things rankled. Some models are described in painstaking detail; the GS400 and all it variants, for example, yet others like the more popular and long-lived GS850 get barely a sentence. It might have been more interesting to the average reader to have skipped over the minutiae of something that missed the mark completely, and at least mentioned that it eventually led to the massively popular GS500, a bike which most riders will be aware of -- rather than devoting too much space the 400 which was barely a blip on the radar. There is more than one contradiction from one page to the next. The GT550 Suzuki was a 'class leader' for all of two pages until it turns into a waste of time compared to the smaller GT380 (I had both and couldn't disagree more); the Yamaha XT600 was the first Yamaha single with electric start in 1984... it was kick-start only at that time and for a few years afterwards. Look for Bridgestone in the index and you won't find it, despite one of the most mouth-watering pictures being their 350 GTO Street Scrambler. That's nit-picking though, and on the whole the book is an excellent read. I enjoyed it a lot more than I expected to and read it from cover to cover. I hadn't intended to do that and certainly didn't intend to start it within 15 minutes of the postman delivering it -- but a quick browse had me up and running. Great pictures, and plenty of them, too. There is the odd blooper, the occasional repetition but if I hadn't been writing this review for potential buyers there's nothing I'd have thought worth mentioning. If you're a fan of classic Japanese bikes then you'll love this book. If you're a die-hard Brit fan you probably spend all your time trying to keep your old nail running and won't have time to read it anyway. Good effort, great book. Buy it. Reviewed by Dave Blendell The Classic Japanese Motorcycle Guide by Rod Ker It normally costs £19.99 but you can save around 30% by ordering through Amazon... Search for books and magazines on Ebay.co.ukSearch for similar books on Amazon: |
|
|
|
Like what you see here? Then help to make RealClassic.co.uk even better |
|
Bikes | Features | Events | Books | Tech | Magazine | About | Messages | Classified | Links
Back to the Books menu... |
|
© 2002 The Cosmic Motorcycle Co. Ltd / Redleg Interactive Media You may download pages from this site for your private use. No other reproduction, re-publication, re-transmission or other re-distribution of any part of this site in any medium is permitted except with the written consent of the copyright owner or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. |