Showing posts with label Dollar Tree Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dollar Tree Books. Show all posts

Sunday, January 11, 2015

Dollar Tree Dude Lit: Mail Call by R: Lee Ermey

We enjoy lots and lots of books from our local Dollar Tree stores.  My most recent addition is Mail Call by R. Lee Ermey.  It brings the attitude and energy of the popular Mail Call television series to the world of literature.  The famed former Marine Corps Drill Instructor answers questions about current and historical military equipment and weapons.  In a very readable format.  It's fun reading for dudes!

If you can't find it in Dollar Tree, you may be able to get it used off of Amazon for as little as 1 cent plus shipping.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Dollar Store Dude Lit: Big Sid's Vincati

Book Review: Big Sid's Vincati - the Story of a Father, a Son, and the Motorcycle of a Lifetime


Even if you are broke, you can still find something good to read.  If you shop at Dollar Tree, you may have noticed that they have a great selection of hardback books.  Perhaps the books have improved because they have close out merchandise from the Borders bankruptcy?  Who knows!  However, I recently found and read a great book about a English professor who builds motorcycles with his elderly father.  The title says it all:  Big Sid's Vincati - the Story of a Father, a Son, and the Motorcycle of a Lifetime.  You can read my complete review here:

Big Sid's Vincati tells the story of a father and son quest to build a legendary motorcycle that combines the powerful engine of a British Vincent and the sleek chassis of an Italian Ducati. But, this is much more than a biker book.

Book Review: Big Sid's Vincati by Matthew Biberman
Hudson Street Press, New York, 2009


140 miles per hour! Before I read this book, I didn't even know that vintage motorcycles could aspire to such speeds. Matthew Biberman is a college professor. His father, Sid, is a famous motorcycle mechanic and tuner. In simple terms, Big Sid's Vincati tells the story of how the two went on a quest to build a legendary vintage motorcycle that combines the powerful engine of a British Vincent and the sleek chassis of an Italian Ducati. If the book was simply filled with memorable motorcycling adventures, mechanical challenges, and moments of genius, it would be a good read. But, just as the Vincati is much more than a motorcycle, Big Sid's Vincati is more than a biker book. You don't even have to be a motorcyclist to enjoy this book.

Vincent Black Lightning [By private, with permission of the author (private) [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html) or CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/)], via Wikimedia Commons]
As a narrative, Big Sid's Vincati addresses many themes. At it's heart, this is the story of how an adult son connected with his aging father by building motorcycles and particularly the Vincati. The reader learns how both men came of age as motorcyclists. It shows Sid and his son dealing with the issue of mortality. It offers a glimpse at how men struggle to keep dreams alive amid the challenges of daily life, family life, and medical issues. It shows how Matthew and his father struggled with the rivalry between a stubborn father and an independent son or vice versa. Every man with a consuming hobby can relate to the struggle to carve out hobby time while maintaining quality time with one's wife.

The themes addressed in this book are deep and many men lack the self-awareness to even articulate the existence of these issues. But, Matthew Biberman's prose is always warm and readable. As the book motors along, Big Sid's Vincati never becomes too wordy, maudlin, or sentimental. While the personal themes play out and Matthew and his family members grow and evolve, there are plenty of exciting blasts down country roads on powerful motorcycles to keep it all an adventure.

Black Shadow Engine [By Mark Robinson (originally posted to Flickr as Power) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons]
Matthew Biberman wrote that he had once dreamed of writing the great American novel. Instead, by writing what he knows and writing from his heart, Biberman has written a great American story. You learn a little about motorcycles and a lot about people as you read Big Sid's Vincati. I highly recommend this book. Besides, whenever an English professor writes about something other than deconstructionist, feminist, paramarxist perspectives on gender roles in The Canterbury Tales, that effort should be praised and rewarded. Maybe we'll get more Dude Lit for real guys?

For the record, an expensive hobby like vintage motorcycle restoration is an excellent way to end up flat broke.  Vicarious biking adventures from Dollar Tree are much less expensive!  While I'm sure this title is cleared out from Dollar Tree, it is still available on Amazon.