Bar Mitzvah and the Beast
One Family's Cross Country Ride of Passage By Bike
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
* A light-hearted and hilarious memoir of an ordinary family’s extraordinary journey
* Promotes cycling, conservation, and getting kids outside
Amateur bike rider, father of three, and everyday public school teacher Matt Biers-Ariel never dreamed of riding a bike across the United States. But then his hard-to-impress teenage son, Yonah, refused to have a Bar Mitzvah as he approached age thirteen. No dancing with grandma or chanting traditional prayers? Something had to be done to celebrate this rite of passage.
So Matt, his wife Djina, Yonah, and little brother Solomon decided to saddle up for a physical ride of passage -- one that would take them 3,804 miles by bicycle from the waters of the Pacific Ocean, across the Rockies, through Midwest small towns, and all the way to Washington D.C. Armed with ibuprofen, several gallons of Gatorade, and one unpredictable tandem bike (the “Beast”), the Biers-Ariel family pedaled across the middle of America, chatting with locals along the way, roasting marshmallows at campgrounds, and quarrelling over the state of climate change, religious identity, and several flat tires. They also collected thousands of signatures on a self-made global-warming petition calling for the United States to undergo its own rite of passage -- one of energy conservation.
The Bar Mitzvah and The Beast is a funny, thoughtful memoir of one ordinary American family’s extraordinary journey by bicycle, and an enlightening, warm exploration of the bond between a spiritual, nature-loving father and his ambivalent, computer game-loving son.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
When his son Yonah refuses to have a Bar Mitzvah, self-described "liberal Jew" Biers-Ariel (Spirit in Nature: Teaching Judaism and Ecology on the Trail) comes up with another way to celebrate coming of age: the whole family Yonah, the author, wife Djina, and younger son Solomon cycles 3,804 miles from San Francisco to Washington, D.C. "As that poem in the Reform Judaism prayer book says, it's the journey, not the destination, that counts," Biers-Ariel points out. And this expedition is multilayered: the quartet bears a climate change petition to deliver to Congress, Yonah and his father have lengthy debates about atheism and God, and the author and Solomon share a heavy, unreliable tandem bike dubbed The Beast. But riding across the country is, by its nature, repetitive; there are climbs and descents, lots of Gatorade, breakdowns both mechanical and familial, bad food, hot weather, and encounters with people "more complicated than their stereotypes lead you to believe." As a consequence, the material feels limited and the author's humor borders on shtick, with numerous jokes about beer and being a cheapskate. And while America's wonders and quirks are featured in abundance, the language is sometimes forced. When the family dips their front wheels into the Reflecting Pond at the Lincoln Memorial, it's a relief for all concerned.