It’s been a while since we last added new titles to the BikePortland Bookstore. In the meantime, some new books have been released, most notably local author Jeff Mapes’ Pedaling Revolution, and many more old, good ones brought to our attention. A selection of newly featured titles is below.
Through our partnership with Portland’s own Powell’s Books, BikePortland.org will receive a portion of all sales on Powells.com made through the links on this page (including any books and DVDs, not just the ones we link to).
Via the links below, you can order books to be shipped to you — or better yet, pick them up by bike! Just choose the “In-Store Pickup” option at checkout to have the books held for you at any Powell’s location.
Newly released
Pedaling Revolution
by Jeff Mapes “From Oregonian senior political reporter Jeff Mapes, Pedaling Revolution (OSU Press) is essential reading for the approximately one million people who regularly ride their bike to work or on errands, for anyone engaged in transportation, urban planning, sustainability, and public health — and for drivers trying to understand why they’re seeing so many cyclists. All will be interested in how urban bike activists are creating the future of how we travel and live in 21st-century cities.” |
More recommended titles
A Pattern Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction
by Christopher Alexander and Sara Ishikawa and Murray Silverstein An architecture and urban design classic, providing classical inspiration and progressive thinking to anyone working on building projects big or small. Alexander literally gave us a whole new way of looking at the urban landscape. |
Bicycle Science Projects: Physics on Wheels
by Robert Gardner A reader wrote in about how much they like this book of bike-related science projects geared at 11 to 17 year olds. |
Fun stuff
Cartoons
by Andy Singer Andy Singer’s CARtoons are classics that you may have seen around already in magazines and on stickers. The text and cartoons in his book cast our relationship with the automobile in a counterintuitive — and very funny – light. |