Roads Were Not Built For Cars book review

Carlton Reid's new book has proved so popular that you won't get a hard copy before Christmas. Read on for why that's such a shame, but also for how you can still get your hands on it

Roads Were Not Built For Cars
Reasons to buy
  • +

    A great read in a good-looking book

  • +

    Well-written and thoroughly researched with fascinating insights from primary sources

Reasons to avoid
  • -

    Due to unprecedented demand you won't get hold of a hard copy before Christmas (but you can gift an iPad version). The second edition, with additional research, is expected in paperback in Jan/Feb 2015

You can trust Cycling Weekly. Our team of experts put in hard miles testing cycling tech and will always share honest, unbiased advice to help you choose. Find out more about how we test.

Price as reviewed: iPad iBooks £14.99 (inc. 10 short videos); Kindle (standard) £6; ePub £6; Paperback £19.95; Hardback £34.95; Kindle (colour) £16

Somewhere between Hitler and modern historians the history of the roads was re-written to the effect that they were built for motorists, by motorists. In fact, as Carlton Reid reveals, on both sides of the Atlantic it was thanks to early cyclists - also the pioneers of motoring - and their lobbying, that our roads were transformed from dusty, rutted earth tracks in the summer and mud baths in the winter to the all-weather macadamised (tarmac) surfaces we use today.

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