Date: Fri 27-Aug-1999
Date: Fri 27-Aug-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
Sarah-Hale-mountain-bike-book
Full Text:
Author Takes On Seat-Of-The Pants Writing Projects
(with photo)
BY STEVE BIGHAM
Sarah Hale's love of bicycling grew even stronger a few years back after she
and some friends biked their way through Europe. The wide open expanses of the
European highways allowed her to cruise the continent.
A few years later, the former Newtown resident was writing about the bicycle
highways of her home state of Maine. But these particular highways aren't
found on a map. They're the ones you find in the back woods, where rocks,
trees and cliffs are found around every corner. They're the kind of highways
only a mountain bike would dare contend with.
Published last year, Sarah Hale's Mountain Bike! Maine can now be found at
such places as the sportsman's mecca known as LL Bean in Freeport, ME,
Amazon.Com, and other fine stores.
So how does a fabric store manager, who had never even ridden a mountain bike,
end up writing a book about them -- a book many critics are calling a one of a
kind?
"I responded to an advertisement in an adventure cycling magazine. They were
looking for authors," said Sarah, a 1988 Newtown High School graduate. "Three
days later, I got a call from an editor who was looking to do a series of
books on mountain biking."
Before long, she was combing the back woods of Maine, exploring trail networks
in Acadia National Park, old logging roads and other narrow paths. And she did
it all on the seat of a mountain bike.
"It's all off-road. I learned rather quickly that mountain biking is an
entirely different sport from road biking," Sarah said. "It's intense, it's
high impact, it's hard core. It's `I hope I have my teeth when I'm done with
this.'"
After more than a year of research (not to mention a lot of sore muscles), the
Newtown author had completed her work. The book's detailed trail descriptions
were regarded as the first of their kind in Maine, a place where thousands of
vacationers go each year for a little recreation. Just a half day's drive from
most New England points, Maine still offers remote, rugged and wild areas --
places where you'll find few signs of life (except for the occasional bear or
moose).
When her book was complete, Sarah returned to her job as manager of the Chintz
& Prints fabric store in Brunswick, the sister store of Dave Gardner's Newtown
store. Sarah worked at C&P in Newtown for several years while in high school
and then during her college summers.
"Dave was so supportive of me. I don't think there's another job in the world
that would have allowed me to take off so much time to write the book," she
said.
And it wasn't just one book. Sarah recently completed her second book as part
of the mountain bike series. This book -- about the mountain bike paths of the
Atlantic region of Canada -- is due out anytime.
This book, also part of the America by Mountain Bike series, took her to the
far reaches of New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia and
Newfoundland where she discovered a vast array of mountain bike trails. For
this book, she collaborated with a friend from college. The two spent the
summers of 1997 and 1998 doing research. Sarah was somewhat familiar with the
area, having graduated from McGill Montreal in 1992. A member of the rowing
team, she often traveled throughout the eastern part of Canada.
"People are intrigued by the fact that I sold fabric and wrote about mountain
biking," he said. "For me, this was a safe way to enter the world of
publishing. Being part of a series, I knew it was a book that was wanted."
Sarah earns a percentage of each sale in the form of royalties.
So what about a next book for the girl who was born in Birmingham, England and
grew up in Newtown?
"I'm going to take some time off. I was offered an opportunity to do a guide
for the national parks and monuments of the West Coast," she said. "I turned
it down, though. I'd like to take some time to reflect."
Mountain Bike! Maine is on display at the Chintz & Prints store in Newtown.