An unprecedented new look at mountain biking and trail riding techniques
from the author of The Art of Cycling Riding obstacle-strewn singletrack
trails on a two-wheeled machine is one of those seductive challenges
that can never be fully mastered, even by the most talented and
experienced. In The Art of Mountain Biking, Robert Hurst deliberately
avoids discussion of equipment, training, and other subjects that have
already been beaten to death in mountain bike books and magazines, to
focus on the deeply complex art of riding trails. From page to page and
switchback to switchback, he chases the complex mysteries that make
trail riding so difficult--and so rewarding--from the application of
"soft power" and the biomechanics of balance and vision, to the
philosophy of line choice and the Riccatti equations that describe the
path of the bike's rear wheel, to the nature of dirt itself. Built on
the author's own quarter-century of experience and the tried-and-true
wisdom of many other veteran mountain bikers, this environmentalist and
darkly humorous manual provides a collection of unexpected knowledge
that will be indispensable to both novices and experts. Throughout,
Hurst explains with clarity, revelation--and a healthy dash of wit--the
ins and outs of riding a mountain bike.