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A father and son build a legendary motorcycle and, along the way, reconstruct their relationship in this moving memoir
When his father had a near-fatal heart attack and gave up the will to live, Matthew Biberman panicked. Impulsively, Matthew promised his father, an expert motorcycle mechanic, that they would build a Vincati motorcycle together. The Loch Ness monster of motorcycles, a Vincati-half Vincent, half Ducati- had never been completed in North America. Building a Vincati was considered, at best, a fool's errand; at worst, an expensive waste of motorcycle parts.
But for nearly sixty years, "Big Sid" Biberman was the mechanic to see to refurbish and repair motorcycles, especially British-made Vincents. If anyone could build a Vincati, it was Big Sid. Despite sharing his father's passion for motorcycles, his son Matthew lacked Big Sid's mechanical gift, gave up on tools, and became a Shakespearean scholar. As adults, father and son barely spoke. But after his father's brush with death, Matthew vowed to learn the techniques that had made Big Sid a legend among bikers. Reminiscent of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, Big Sid's Vincati is an irresistible combination of step-by-step motorcycle construction mixed with a powerful story of fathers and sons, and shows not only how the Bibermans built their Vincati (which was featured in Cycle World and Classic Bike) but also how the two men reconstructed their relationship, one motorcycle part at a time.
Matthew Biberman teaches creative writing and literature at the University of Louisville. He also works on Vincent motorcycles in his garage with his father, "Big Sid" Biberman.
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June 09, 2009: Biberman has written a combination of human interest and motorcycle technology and managed to produce both an informative and moving story. Sons will recognise fathers and fathers will recognise sons as they read about this specific father and son. The love of motorcycles and the devotion to one's father are movingly illustrated and I came away happy for the two main characters.
I Also Recommend: Rebuilding the Indian, Shop Class as Soulcraft.
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May 22, 2009: I've ridden a few, but I've never owned a motorcycle. And I've certainly never worked on one. But I do have a father and I have spent a lifetime working on that relationship. And now I am one as well. And I think that's what this book is about: a father and son who are thrown back together out of necessity and adversity, and who learn to appreciate each other. Matthew is unsparingly candid about some of the most intimate moments in the most important relationships in his family. I think the honesty would resonate with anyone who has tried to understand his own father or tried to be a good one himself.
For the technically inclined, there detailed specs in the back, but I found that most of the "tech speak" in the heart of the book served more as a frame that gave the story structure. Not to take away from its authenticity, I just wouldn't want those of us who aren't gear heads to think this isn't a book for us. It truly is a book for anyone who has or is a father.