my book, potholes and pavements: a bumpy ride on britain’s national cycle network, is published by bloomsbury on 9 may

‘Just wonderful — two wheels good, Laura Laker brilliant’  Jeremy Vine

‘…With a passion for both cycling and words, there are a few more qualified to paint a picture of [the NCN’s] potential, than Laura Laker….' Chris Boardman

‘Laker lays a finger on the nation's cycling pulse, and finds, despite it all, there is a lot of life. A beautiful homage to a wonky network.’ Ned Boulting

‘In a pedal-powered journey of discovery, Laura Laker tells the surprising story of how Britain got its bike paths: the good, the bad and the downright ugly. Along the way she meets the early visionaries and today’s activists engaged in what’s become an unlikely new front in the culture wars.’ Jack Thurston

‘An essential read for all cycling enthusiasts. I loved hearing about Laura's experiences … a wonderful reminder of how cycling both in cities and in the countryside can change our nation's health and happiness for the better’. Councillor Emily Kerr, Green Party, Oxford

…Laura is also doing a book tour, scroll down for more…

Bloomsbury, 9 May, £16.99 paperback original. You can pre-order a copy here: https://linktr.ee/lauralakerpotholesandpavements

What if we were less reliant on our cars? What if there were safe cycling paths to take us places instead? What if those paths led to the next town, the next village and the countryside beyond?

This was the dream of a group of Bristolian idealists in the 1970s when they founded Britain's National Cycle Network, which now runs to nearly 13,000 miles across the country. Journalist Laura Laker sets off on an odyssey around the UK to see where the NCN began, and where it is now.

What has gone right - and wrong - with this piece of national infrastructure? Why is it run by a charity whose CEO once admitted ‘we’ve had enough of it being crap, we need to fix it’? Laura lifts the lid on this maddening, patchy, and at times dangerous network, and the similarly precarious politics and financing that make it what it is.

She discovers beauty, friendship and adventure along the way, from the Cairngorms to Cornwall, from the Pennines to the South Wales coast. On her mission to pin down what the NCN is and what it means to those who use it, she also meets up with high-profile travelling companions, including Chris Boardman and Ned Boulting.

In a country where 71% of trips are less than five miles, two thirds of Britons say they want to cycle more and doing so could help our climate, health and wellbeing. Laura is on a mission to see if we can make that dream a reality.

BOOK TOUR:

Tuesday 14 May (Oxford) 18:30-20:30 - Caper, 74-77 Magdalen Road, Oxford, OX4 1RE. In conversation with Emily Kerr. Book here.

Tuesday 21 May (London) 19:00 - 20:30 - Stanfords London Store, 7 Mercer Walk, Covent Garden, WC2H 9FA. Book here.

Thursday 23 May (Bristol) 18:30 - Stanfords Bristol Store, 29 Corn Street, Bristol BS1 1HT, in conversation with Sustrans’ CEO Xavier Brice. Book here.

Wednesday 5 June (London) 19:30 - Wanstead Tap with Newham Bookshop, 352 Winchelsea Road London E7 0AQ. In conversation. Book here.

Saturday 2 November (Wantage) 14:00 - Wantage Literary Festival. Tickets available soon from https://wantageliteraryfestival.co.uk/

‘In a pedal-powered journey of discovery, Laura Laker tells the surprising story of how Britain got its bike paths: the good, the bad and the downright ugly. Along the way she meets the early visionaries and today’s activists engaged in what’s become an unlikely new front in the culture wars.’   Jack Thurston

‘An essential read for all cycling enthusiasts. I loved hearing about Laura's experiences … a wonderful reminder of how cycling both in cities and in the countryside can change our nation's health and happiness for the better’ Councillor Emily Kerr, Green Party, Oxford