book cover of The Yellow Jersey
 

The Yellow Jersey

(1973)
A novel by

 
 
"This is sports fiction at its very best. Mr. Hurne has a cool, downbeat style descended from Lardner and Hemingway, and a fine hand with the hairpin turns of suspense."
- The New York Times Book Review

"The greatest cycling novel ever written. . . . An underground classic. . . . A cycling book that follows a different course - one with drama and characters you can relate to, whose actions raise questions about life on and off the bicycle. . . . The heart of The Yellow Jersey is the Tour de France itself, which Hurne views as a metaphor for life. . . . Thoroughly entertaining."
- Bicycling

"Full of wit, charm, excitement, and intelligence."
- Publishers Weekly

Terry Davenport is nearly washed up. After a career of good but never great bicycle racing in Europe, he is past his prime, and given lately to chasing women rather than leading the pack through the Alps. He contemplates how he might find a comfortable retirement, and is wallowing in an existential crisis. But his final Tour de France - which he rides only as a favor to his young protege, to pace him through the early stages - develops by a series of accidents into the chance of a lifetime. And though Davenport is old, he is wily and tough and fearless. His arduous, painful, heroic performance in the face of impossible odds is unforgettable.
A sports thriller - with stunning descriptions of competitive cycling - and a keen meditation on mortality, The Yellow Jersey is an extraordinary novel.


Genre: Literary Fiction

Used availability for Ralph Hurne's The Yellow Jersey


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