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[Closed] Autobiography recommendations

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[#10747763]

Hi

I love a good autobiography and appreciate this is a wide subject. Looking for inspiring reads on holiday please.

I like; cycling, cricket, indie music and on the limit of human endurance topics.

Thanks in advance


 
Posted : 01/08/2019 10:49 pm
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Any of the Julian Cope books. Not a fan of his music but the books are crazy.


 
Posted : 01/08/2019 10:51 pm
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Did the audio of I am Ozzy, not exactly high brow but kept my interest and I generally don't finish books.


 
Posted : 01/08/2019 10:56 pm
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Alan Clark Diaries.

Not much cycling or indie music. But plenty of human endurance.


 
Posted : 01/08/2019 11:01 pm
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Not on your topic list, however Mr Nice is an easy and interesting read.


 
Posted : 01/08/2019 11:18 pm
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I am Ozzy ^^^^ I actually managed to read it but I'd recommend. Bloody hilarious but I suspect not that much involvement from Ozzy.


 
Posted : 01/08/2019 11:21 pm
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Space Below My Feet by Gwen Moffat. A fascinating book about one of Britain's early female climbers set in the immediate post WW2 period, and it really is another country.


 
Posted : 01/08/2019 11:22 pm
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How about Long Way Round (Ewan McGregor) or Around the World in 80 Days (Michael Palin)


 
Posted : 01/08/2019 11:23 pm
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Peter Crouch


 
Posted : 01/08/2019 11:31 pm
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Not an autobiography as such but "The Secret Barrister" - stories of the law and how it's broken

Or if you can find a copy, Riding Rockets (I'll lend you mine if you want)


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 12:22 am
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Mad, Bad and Dangerous To Know - Ranulph Fiennes

7 marathons in 7 days on 7 continents weeks after heart surgery, cutting off his own fingers in the garden shed with a hacksaw etc etc. Lives up to it's title


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 12:26 am
 ctk
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Tim Hilton

I loved this book!


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 12:28 am
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Jupiter's travels ted Simon

Ultra marathon man Dean karnazes (love hate )

Long way round is ok....if you read only the boorman bits....

Ghost trails and be brave be strong by Jill homer

Guy Martin - my autobiography and when you dead you dead.


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 12:35 am
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I prefer the older adventures....

A World of my own Robin Knox Johnson

The Lonely Sea and the Sky  Francis Chichester (grumpy bugger but amazing all the same)

The Brendan Voyage Tim Severin

The kon tiki expedition Thor Heyerdahl

Newer stuff like Born to Run Christopher McDougal, Bold Man of the Sea Jim Shekhar The Flying Scotsman Graeme Obree


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 12:44 am
 kcr
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Any of the Julian Cope books

If you like indie music "Head-On/Repossessed" was the first one I thought of as well!

I assume you've already read "Touching the Void" and "Into Thin Air"?


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 2:15 am
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Karen Darke. Some impressive human endurance, including a bit of cycling.

Scott Jurek - Eat and Run. I'm now reading his new one, North, pretty good so far.


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 2:15 am
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First Light.


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 7:03 am
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 Pook
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+1 First Light


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 7:52 am
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Cold - Ranaulph Fiennes
Ascent - Chris Bonnington
Mark Beaumont - any of his cycling world tour books.
Sean conway - LEJOG


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 8:17 am
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The Boy on the Shed by Paul Ferris.

About growing up in Northern Ireland during the troubles, joining Newcastle FC at 16, recovering from the scrap heap etc to work at the highest levels.

Brutal read but well-written and fascinating.


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 9:01 am
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Eric "Winkle" Brown - "Wings on my sleeve"


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 9:13 am
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+ 1 more for First Light. Riveting and humbling in equal measure.

Legionnaire: Five Years in the French Foreign Legion, Simon Murray. A guy who joined the Legion out of boredom back in the sixties, follows his years in service.

In search of Captain Zero, Alan Weisbecker - a road trip through Central America to find a missing friend.

A short walk in the Hindu Kush, Eric Newby. An Englishman and his mate go off to Afghanistan on a bit of a whim to be the first to climb a major peak there, despite not being mountaineers.

Currently reading Chickenhawk, following a recommendation on a previous STW book thread. It's excellent so far.


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 10:40 am
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Fallen Angel the Fausto Coppi book. Probably my favourite cycling bio. Though A Dog in a Hat also very good.

Second, Mad,Bad and dangerous to Know and Jupiter's Travels. Especially JT, great snapshot of the world as it was.

And not within your criteria but Chuck Yeager bio very good.


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 10:48 am
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How about a biography? I really liked the Gino Bartali book.... Road to Valour...history and bikes!!


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 11:01 am
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Alan Partridge, especially the audiobooks.


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 11:06 am
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If you like indie music “Head-On/Repossessed” was the first one I thought of as well!

Snap. One of my fave two books ever.

*Also ticks 'limits of human endurance' if you count the frankly terrifying road-trip game of 'sock' and also (possibly) the nocturnal power-walking disaster he experienced in Tamworth 😂🤣


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 11:23 am
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Chickenhawk is very good as if First Light.

Coronation Everest is also worth a mention. Not a full-life autobiography but an account of James (now Jan) Morris's experiences as the embedded reporter with The Times on the Everest Expedition of 1953.


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 11:29 am
 nbt
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Cycling -
Ned Boulting - How I Won The Yellow Jumper
Tim Moore - Gironimo
Time Moore - French Revolutions
Domestique - Charly Wegelius

non-cycing
Tom Jones - Over the Top and Back again (I think)
Stuart Maconie - Cider With Roadies


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 11:53 am
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How about some good, old-fashioned rock'n'roll debauchery? Just finished Moby's autobiography and its brilliant. Really interesting. He doesn't hold back either. I imagine there are a few less than happy people reading the book

I always thought he was quite clean living with all his promotion of veganism and stuff. How wrong I was. Turns out he was a right rum'un. A monumental appetite for drugs and vodka and would shag owt with a pulse. But the account of his descent into paranoia and suicidal depression is pretty harrowing


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 12:07 pm
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I imagine there are a few less than happy people reading the book

Well, Natalie Portman was less than thrilled.


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 12:23 pm
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45 by Bill Drummond.

All about the KLF and other odd stuff including Zodiac Mindwarp, sonic weapons, Echo and The Bunnymen, a dead cow, pornographic art installations, Nazis and burning a million quid.

Been a while since I read it. Will have to re-visit.


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 12:29 pm
 DezB
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I'm currently reading the biggest, fattest book I've ever owned

Marvellous it is.


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 12:42 pm
 DezB
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If the recent Moby interview in Q mag is anything to go by, his autobiog is a good shout!


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 12:45 pm
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A couple of years ago I got to the airport and found I'd left my books at home. In desperation I bought the Geraint Thomas and Sue Perkins books. I found them both excellent, and perfect holiday reading. Others I have enjoyed include Frank Skinner, Mark Radcliffe and, of course, Danny Baker.
But far and away the most unintentionally hilarious was "North Country Squire" by Sir John Craster. A vanity project written by a deluded, self important aristocrat and makes Jacob Rees Mogg look like Rab C Nesbitt.


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 12:56 pm
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Tim Moore's books always review well.

Does he put brown envelopes in his review books ?

I find them very forced and hard to read and inevitably give up.

Charley boormans race to dakar is good. And by any means is quite good too.

Paul Howard's two wheels on my wagon is a great insight into how someone went from zero to tour divide completion in short time.

Yes JT being a snap shot of the world of that era is why I like it. I travel alot -j go through areas where he traveled and while some of it sounds familiar you wouldn't travel in some of those areas as a lone traveler on a motorcycle in this day and age - which is a huge shame.

Wiggins my time was another good one- I don't particularly like cyclists auto biogs as they can be quite dry but wiggos and even froomes are both quite good reads.

David Millars racing through the dark was quite a hard read but because of the turmoil and heartwrenching he went through when he hit bottom rather than it being boring. But you had to be in the right frame of mind to read it.


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 1:36 pm
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Others I have enjoyed include Frank Skinner, Mark Radcliffe and, of course, Danny Baker.

Frank Skinners biography is absolutely brilliant. The stories of his pre-telly days when he was doing stand up around the midlands working mens clubs, while a barely functioning alcoholic, are both hilarious and heartbreaking.

One of the few books that had me regularly laughing out loud

And if you want utter and complete debauchery then this is the pinnacle:

Though the old adage applies. Its all fun and games until somebody gets killed. It goes from utter lunacy to being very poignant, very quickly. Very much a book of two halves


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 1:51 pm
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Tony Hawks' (not the skater) has done a few good ones. I've read the first four, but not the recent stuff.

Round Ireland with a Fridge: His first book was an account of his attempt to hitchhike around Ireland with a fridge to win a bar bet.[10] It sold over 800,000 copies.
Playing the Moldovans at Tennis: His second book, also the result of a drunken bet (with the comedian Arthur Smith), this time involved an attempt to beat each member of the Moldova national football team in a game of tennis, based on the theory that people good at one sport aren't necessarily good at others.[11]
One Hit Wonderland: His third book, describes his attempt, over 10 years after his first, to write a second hit song. This culminates in him performing on Albanian television with Norman Wisdom and Tim Rice.[12]
A Piano in the Pyrenees: The Ups and Downs of an Englishman in the French Mountains: An account of his purchase of a house in the Pyrenees in the south of France, after deciding that the two things he wanted in life were to meet his soul mate, and to purchase an "idyllic house abroad somewhere abroad".[13][14]
The Fridge Hiker's Guide to Life.[15]
Once Upon a Time in the West...Country [16]


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 1:58 pm
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I'll second one of Harry's other recommendations, that I ead while I was on my hols, on his recommendation

Chickenhawk manages to nail the absolute madness of the Vietnam war in one book. God only knows how he got out of it alive. Absolutely bonkers


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 2:07 pm
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I've just bought another Tony Hawks on my own recommendation.

Once Upon A Time In The West... Counrty.

I want to know how he faired riding his bike into Ilfracombe with a pig under his arm.

Less than £3 on AbeBooks! Charity shop prices delivered to your door. Can't fault that.


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 2:21 pm
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On a musical note (sorry) Peter Hook's books are great. If you're into F1 I'd recommend Damon Hill and Mark Webber.


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 2:24 pm
 piha
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Mo Mowlem.

A very good read about an astonishing wonderful lady. A great insight into the Northern Ireland peace process too.


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 2:25 pm
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+1 for First Light. Try 'Hit the road Jac', by Jacqui Furneaux - 'older' lady riding round the world on a motorcycle. Makes Ewan McGregor lok like the media tart that he is. Also 'Jupiter's Travels' by Ted Simon - 70s trip round the world on a Triumph 500. 'Hizzy' by Steve Hislop quite good, too. Oh, and if you like 60s & 70s music, 'White Bicycles' by Joe Boyd.


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 2:30 pm
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I like; indie music

ive recently enjoyed john lydon and bez books.

i liked even more, the slit's viv albertines 2 autobiographies. very open, honest and personal, with a touch of humour too.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Clothes-Clothes-Music-Music-Boys/dp/B01N1WXCZT/ref=sr_1_1?qid=1564749196&refinements=p_27%3AViv+Albertine&s=books&sr=1-1

and secondly, https://www.amazon.co.uk/To-Throw-Away-Unopened/dp/B07G1BSTXZ/ref=sr_1_4?qid=1564749196&refinements=p_27%3AViv+Albertine&s=books&sr=1-4


 
Posted : 02/08/2019 2:33 pm
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