Saturday, May 4, 2024

“A Peiper’s Tale” by Allan Peiper

-

HomeOtherBook Reviews"A Peiper's Tale" by Allan Peiper
A Peiper's Tale
Alan Peiper.

This book, “A Peiper’s Tale” is Allan Peiper’s story. It’s a little different from the usual sports biography: it’s clear that Allan is a sensitive, thoughtful, somewhat spiritual bloke, who spends a lot of time trying to get through life in the best way possible, whilst looking after others (he’s currently working as a Team Director for the Lotto – Davitamon Pro cycling team), and usually putting himself further down his priority list than most other folk would.

The book does detail his early days though, and I found these sections particularly interesting, partly because he talks about riders who I idolised in my youth, guys like Allan himself, Robert Millar, Eddy Plankaert and Bernard Hinault, and partly because they do help to explain why such a mild mannered and gentle man was able to draw on his inner anger and have a very successful and worthy career as a pro bike rider.

Allan admits to dabbling a little in primitive amphetamines a couple of times, but explains that the ethos at that time was of children eating sweeties in class behind the teacher’s back, whereas nowadays, with the money involved in professional sport, any cheating is viewed more in the context of sporting fraud.

The reader can forgive Allan because he was simply doing what most of the others were doing, albeit he appears to be “kitting up” to a far lesser extent than most.

The double dealings and buying and selling of races are discussed (this is all part and parcel of pro cycling), as is his relationships with his managers and directors, and other riders.

The book is organised into chapters with each one concentrating on various characters (some very famous) that Allan knew and worked alongside – it’s an unusual format, but it really does work.

The format means that the story leaps around chronologically quite a lot, but that just makes the book more enjoyable and less of a straightforward progression through his life – he adds his views and perceptions on every page, and his descriptions never lean towards sensationalism, yet his experiences with the various characters in the sport are enthralling.

A thoroughly enjoyable read by a very likeable, honest bloke.

Pick something else from the Bookshelf.

Martin Williamson
Martin Williamson
Martin is our Editor and web site Designer/Manager. He concentrates on photography. He's been involved in cycle racing for over four decades and raced for much of that time, having a varied career which included time trials, road and track racing - and triathlons. Martin has been the Scottish 25 Mile TT and 100 Mile TT Champion, the British Points Race League Champion on the track, and he won a few time trials in his day, particularly hilly ones like the Tour de Trossachs and the Meldons MTT.

Related Articles

“Man on the Run” by Manuela Ronchi

"Man on the Run" by Manuela Ronchi is the story of the last few years of Marco Pantani's life. The title works on two levels: after being slung out of the Giro D'Italia race on the penultimate day on a charge of suspected EPO use, whilst leading by a long way, Marco was hounded by demons - insecurity, shame, confusion, betrayal, distrust - all the way through a terrible cocaine addiction to his demise of an overdose.

“Oh, THAT Tour!” by Paul Jesson

Paul Jesson has recently finished his autobiography; ‘Oh, THAT Tour!’, the title coming from his introduction to the pro ranks. The book isn’t a conventionally structured tome, starting with a short chapter about the Paralympics time trial/road race bronze medal he came back and won in Athens some 24 years after his Vuelta stage win...

“Wheels of Steele” by Steele Bishop

I was fortunate enough to get an interview with Steele Bishop back in 2017, at which time he told me he was writing a book about his career: ‘Wheels of Steel.’ The book takes us from his first tentative rides right up to the current day by way of his amateur and pro careers and goes into the fascinating ‘small print’ of his three big bids for the Worlds, culminating in his Zurich success.

“No Ordinary Joe” by Brian Jones

One of the nice things about this gig is that people sometimes send you cool cycling books to review, in this case, ‘No Ordinary Joe’ sub-titled ‘Cycling Legends 1960’s, 1970’s, 1980’s, a unique collection of stories, USA & Canada.’

At Random

Tom Copeland – Season’s Over, Bike’s Handed Back

A couple of months have passed since we first spoke to Tom Copeland, who's living and racing with the French Team Champions, Bic2000, in the Finistère region of Brittany, so we thought we'd get in touch with him and bring ourselves up-to-speed with what's been happening.

Steve McEwen – Helping Israel to International Track Competitiveness

Steve McEwen hails from a little Scottish town on the banks of the Crinan Canal and was instrumental in the recent revival and dominance of Dutch track fortunes on the international stage. Steve is now charged with building track sport in Israel from zero to international competitiveness. We found out more...

Old School Climbing Test (Preview: TDF 2012 Stage 11)

Today is the first “High” mountaintop finish. Stage 7 was considered “Medium”, and looking at the pictures of the stage today, one can see why! This is a short, mountainous stage that may well see fireworks from the big hitters. When considering the terrain, there isn’t really any respite throughout the stage, and it is a virtual guarantee that Vincenzo Nibali, Jurgen van den Broeck and Cadel Evans will equally attempting to make things difficult for the SKY super team.

Scottish Cycling Super 6 – Round 6, Wanlockhead 2009

Nationals apart, Gary Hand (Endura) has dominated the Scottish domestic scene in 2009; he continued that superiority with another win in the Super Six Series in the Tour of the Lowther today, on tough roads around Britain's highest village-Wanlockhead.