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The Perfect Vehicle: What It Is About Motorcycles

Description:

"This book, a polished, winding meditation on the theory and fractiousness of motorcycles, celebrates both their eccentric history and the wary pleasures of touring."―The New Yorker

In a book that is "a must for anyone who has loved a motorcycle" (Oliver Sacks), Melissa Pierson captures in vivid, writerly prose the mysterious attractions of motorcycling. She sifts through myth and hyperbole: misrepresentations about danger, about the type of people who ride and why they do so. The Perfect Vehicle is not a mere recitation of facts, nor is it a polemic or apologia. Its vivid historical accounts-the beginnings of the machine, the often hidden tradition of women who ride, the tale of the defiant ones who taunt death on the racetrack-are intertwined with Pierson's own story, which, in itself, shows that although you may think you know what kind of person rides a motorcycle, you probably don't.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

"From my mother I learned to write prompt thank-you notes for a variety of occasions," Melissa Holbrook Pierson writes. "From Mrs. King's ballroom dancing school I learned a proper curtsy and, believe it or not, what to do if presented with nine eating utensils at the same place setting.... From motorcycles I learned practically everything else." Pierson, an intellectual New Yorker, is open to her own contradictions--she is bold and fearful, a motorcycle-crazed poet with a Ph.D., and these seeming incompatibilities are what make this book so good. She can write equally well about the visceral pleasures of riding and about the pains of heartbreak or her own displeasure with her fears.

This is the motorcycle memoir for those who are sick of memoirs--or motorcycles. It is a book for people who don't know what the big deal is about riding, or why the Guggenheim Museum in New York, in a swirl of controversy, would exhibit motorcycles as works of modern art. "Riding on a motorcycle can make you feel joyous, powerful, peaceful, frightened, vulnerable, and back out to happy again," Pierson writes, "perhaps in the same ten miles. It is life compressed, its own answer to the question, 'Why?'" --Maria Dolan

Review

"As Pierson tells us why she loves riding, many who share her passion will often feel themselves nodding, saying, 'Yeah, she caught it.'"
Andy Solomon, Chicago Tribune

"
The Perfect Vehicle uses motorcycles as a lens for examining risk, freedom, and most surprisingly, relationships between men and women. . . . Pierson comes through brilliantly, crafting her sentences with precision and a sure ear."
Ann Marlowe, Village Voice

"This is an exceptionally sensitive and intelligent book."
Robert Pirsig

Reviews:

5.0 out of 5 stars Read it, but look between the lines.

D.L.B. · August 17, 2004

This book will further your insight into why motorcyclists ride and why they think what they do about their bikes, motorcycling, and each other. But by the time Pierson is on to her second bike mechanic boyfriend, you will realize that you're going to have to see the truth for yourself, because the author has her hands so full with her own issues -- anxiety, delusion, hypocrisy -- that she can hardly help herself or her endlessly sick bike, let alone help you, the questing reader.She does give you all the clues you will need, so don't despair. It's just that you're on your own in figuring out what the clues mean.The Fallen Bike Incident is a good example of Pierson's lack of self-knowledge, and why this book is accused of male-bashing.In the rain, Pierson's bike has fallen over due to the soft, wet surface she has planted her side stand in. This is a classic blunder. It's in the curriculum of the motorcycle safety course (of which Pierson is a graduate) and she even mentions elsewhere in the book how, for this very reason, wooden blocks were passed out in the dirt parking lot of a motorcycle rally. You can easily conclude that it is her own damn fault her bike fell over, but you won't read her admitting it in so many words, and this lack of personal accountability is everywhere in The Perfect Vehicle.In her motorcycle class she has been taught how even a grandmother can lift up even a fallen Honda GoldWing (800+ pounds of bike), but for reasons unexplained, she is unable to lift her sub-400 pound Moto Guzzi. Again, no admission that she failed to learn the very thing she was specifically taught to do; you just read that it didn't work out and draw your own conclusion. So she asks a driver in an idling van for help, and he stares at her blankly, as she frantically begs "Quickly!" Finally the nice man gets out of his dry van, into the rain, and helps her right her fallen bike, to her eternal non-gratitude.Reflecting later, Pierson intuits, and apparently comes to believe, that the reason her benefactor didn't instantly leap into the downpour to assist her was because he was thinking that since she is a woman, she wanted help lifting a bicycle, not a motorcycle, and so she was once again the victim of rampant sexism. She will shortly use this incident as a springboard to launch into one of many catalogs of undeniably valid examples of cruel and unfair treatment women have suffered in the history of motorcycling. This stuff is good to know and you'll be glad you read about it, but keep in mind, these terrible things happened to other women, not Pierson.In several place we read explanations of her attraction to the woefully unreliable Moto Guzzi bikes, namely that they're stylish, sexy, and that fixing your bike all the time gives you a deep sense of self-sufficiency and personal identification with your machine.It's a fair characterization of the series of Moto Guzzi enthusiasts Pierson repeatedly enlists to fix her broken-down bike for her, gratis, but this admirable, self-reliant, hands-on individualist ain't Melissa Pierson. She apparently never begins to master bike mechanics in her 35,000 miles of riding. She's more the damsel in distress with delusions of rugged independence. You would feel some pity if she had left out all the haughty, off-hand dismissals of Japanese motorcycles for the crime of providing exactly what Pierson and millions just like her really need: an affordable and reliable bike, albeit one that lacks "character."She at least respects BMW and Harley-Davidson enough to give us fully-cardboard-cutout stereotypes of those riders, but those bland, bloodless Japanese aren't even worth the time. Oh, and in case you didn't know, "rice burner" is not really an epithet of derision. I bet "broad" is, though.It's an all-purpose snobbery. When in France she finds herself at a hotel that dares offer exactly what Pierson and millions like her really need (it's affordable and they've got a room), she sniffs "Holiday Inn, of all places!"So while the author only grows a little in the course of this book, you the reader will have the opportunity to learn much more in the ugly truth behind Pierson's inadvertent revelations, as well as benefit from the several places where she is actually on to something real and manages to convey it without getting hung up on her own issues. The florid descriptions of what it feels like to ride are quite fine if you accept them outside the context of the neurotic author's world of prejudice and denial.UPDATE: January 12, 2011In the 6 years since I first read this book and wrote this review, I've read a great many other motorcycling books that cover much of the same ground, and I've found none better than The Perfect Vehicle. The book's flaws are still its flaws: I think the author's attitudes are often unfair and tone deaf, but in spite of that, Melissa Pierson's scholarship is first rate and highly readable. So while I once again suggest you read between the lines, I still recommend nonetheless that you do read it.

4.0 out of 5 stars A Woman's Point of View

P.H. · June 29, 2005

I found Ms. Pierson's book very interesting as far as her impressions of riding a motorcycle and her adventures while doing so. She has an adventurous spirit and an adventurous way with words that rang true in me and stimulated my imagination in nice ways, while following her adventures and travails on her Guzzi.In buying this book, I was interested in her woman's view of the riding and how she overcame the inherant difficulties involved in an activity which ultimately needs not only riding skill but also the strength to handle a sometimes heavy machine, and the know-how to turn a wrench to service the machine or correct a difficulty.Ms. Pierson shows what I suspected all along, she is just a woman, albeit one who can ride and write. She does not know how to raise her own Bike, flaps, and has to ask for help, thus supporting the stereotype she is not strong. She relies on a succession of boyfriends or people she has pursuaded into action to help her do the smallest service on the bike. This supports a theory that women are not mechanically inclined. This is not a criticism, just a finding in her text.She also cannot stick to the point and mixes different things in this book. She cannot decide if the book is a history of her, or the history of the motorcycle, or the history of women on motorcycles. At one time she is deep into her personal narrative, and then suddenly dives into the history of the motorcycle from day one. Then we are back with more marrative, and then suddenly we are listing all the records on the motorcycle, then back to the story. Then given a long passage about women and motorcycles and their various achievements.She has a great skill with her history in summarising some of these great achievements briefly and accurately (as far as I know).Please don't let me give you the wrong impression, I was delighted by her woman's point of view, and delighted by her writing, and the points I raise here did not detract from a very easy read that was full of great images and impressions and information, but the real gem here is reading about her personal history and her adventures with bike and boyfriends. She would have done well to expand on that subject more and left the history to another book.

5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful exploration of why we ride bikes.

M.F. · February 15, 2025

Holbrook Pierson does the best job of any writer exploring why motorcycling is so wonderful. If you’re jonesing for a ride, it’s a good time to read it, but be careful - it will make you want to ride more than ever.

5.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyable Read

S.D. · July 2, 2024

Lots of moments in this read.

3.0 out of 5 stars text to speech not enabled!

B.L. · September 17, 2012

I'm about half way through and finding it a very nice read. I'd give it a solid 4.. leaning toward 5.. but, text to speech is not enabled. Therefore, a three is given. I've made it a habit to NOT buy books that block this feature, but it has become so common in the books I buy I forgot to check. I have ADD and find the text reading to me works much better. Won't buy another of her books if this feature is disabled.Back to the book itself.. the four and five star reviews have it right.. so long as you just want to read a nice tale about the love of bikes and her pathway there.Edited: Later... I enjoyed the history of motorcycles and motorcycle racing less than the opening about her discovery of motorcycling.

5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Read!

K. · June 7, 2024

A must-read for motorcyclists!

Muito bom

D. · August 29, 2025

Livro com muito bom conteúdo

Märkliga meddelanden.

P.H. · October 11, 2025

Jodå, föremålet var som väntat bra och det kom snabbt. Däremot har jag fått meddelande från Bolo om att jag måste hämta min order, detta trots att jag redan har hämtat den. Jag har fått samma meddelande i dag om att jag måste hämta ut en annan order som jag hämtade för tre dagar sedan.Var felar det? Hos postombudet eller hos Bolo?

Great book

J.t. · February 18, 2021

Excellent book!!! It was hard to put down. If you ride a motorcycle or like them in any way this is a must read!!!!!

Great written work

A.C. · July 9, 2024

Wonderful bookWorth the purchasing and sharing

Amaizing book. Highly recommended!

T.M. · June 16, 2023

Amaizing book. Highly recommended! I believe that should be considered as a wonderful ticket to ride!

The Perfect Vehicle: What It Is About Motorcycles

Product ID: U0393318095
Condition: New

4.4

AED8555

Price includes VAT & Import Duties
Type: Paperback
Availability: In Stock

Quantity:

|

Order today to get by 7-14 business days

Delivery fee of AED 20. Free for orders above AED 200.

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Imported From: United States

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The Perfect Vehicle: What It Is About Motorcycles

Product ID: U0393318095
Condition: New

4.4

The Perfect Vehicle: What It Is About Motorcycles-0
Type: Paperback

AED8555

Price includes VAT & Import Duties
Availability: In Stock

Quantity:

|

Order today to get by 7-14 business days

Delivery fee of AED 20. Free for orders above AED 200.

Returns & Warranty policies

Imported From: United States

At BOLO, we work hard to ensure the products you receive are new, genuine, and sourced from reputable suppliers.

BOLO is not an authorized or official retailer for most brands, nor are we affiliated with manufacturers unless specifically stated on a product page. Instead, we source verified sellers, authorized distributors or directly from the manufacturer.

Each product undergoes thorough inspection and verification at our consolidation and fulfilment centers to ensure it meets our strict authenticity and quality standards before being shipped and delivered to you.

If you ever have concerns regarding the authenticity of a product purchased from us, please contact Bolo Support. We will review your inquiry promptly and, if necessary, provide documentation verifying authenticity or offer a suitable resolution.

Your trust is our top priority, and we are committed to maintaining transparency and integrity in every transaction.

All product information, images, descriptions, and reviews originate from the manufacturer or from trusted sellers overseas. BOLO is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or an authorized retailer for most brands listed on our website unless stated otherwise.

While we strive to display accurate information, variations in packaging, labeling, instructions, or formulation may occasionally occur due to regional differences or supplier updates. For detailed or manufacturer-specific information, please contact the brand directly or reach out to BOLO Support for assistance.

Unless otherwise stated, all prices displayed on the product page include applicable taxes and import duties.

BOLO operates in accordance with the laws and regulations of United Arab Emirates. Any items found to be restricted or prohibited for sale within the UAE will be cancelled prior to shipment. We take proactive measures to ensure that only products permitted for sale in United Arab Emirates are listed on our website.

All items are shipped by air, and any products classified as “Dangerous Goods (DG)” under IATA regulations will be removed from the order and cancelled.

All orders are processed manually, and we make every effort to process them promptly once confirmed. Products cancelled due to the above reasons will be permanently removed from listings across the website.

Description:

"This book, a polished, winding meditation on the theory and fractiousness of motorcycles, celebrates both their eccentric history and the wary pleasures of touring."―The New Yorker

In a book that is "a must for anyone who has loved a motorcycle" (Oliver Sacks), Melissa Pierson captures in vivid, writerly prose the mysterious attractions of motorcycling. She sifts through myth and hyperbole: misrepresentations about danger, about the type of people who ride and why they do so. The Perfect Vehicle is not a mere recitation of facts, nor is it a polemic or apologia. Its vivid historical accounts-the beginnings of the machine, the often hidden tradition of women who ride, the tale of the defiant ones who taunt death on the racetrack-are intertwined with Pierson's own story, which, in itself, shows that although you may think you know what kind of person rides a motorcycle, you probably don't.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

"From my mother I learned to write prompt thank-you notes for a variety of occasions," Melissa Holbrook Pierson writes. "From Mrs. King's ballroom dancing school I learned a proper curtsy and, believe it or not, what to do if presented with nine eating utensils at the same place setting.... From motorcycles I learned practically everything else." Pierson, an intellectual New Yorker, is open to her own contradictions--she is bold and fearful, a motorcycle-crazed poet with a Ph.D., and these seeming incompatibilities are what make this book so good. She can write equally well about the visceral pleasures of riding and about the pains of heartbreak or her own displeasure with her fears.

This is the motorcycle memoir for those who are sick of memoirs--or motorcycles. It is a book for people who don't know what the big deal is about riding, or why the Guggenheim Museum in New York, in a swirl of controversy, would exhibit motorcycles as works of modern art. "Riding on a motorcycle can make you feel joyous, powerful, peaceful, frightened, vulnerable, and back out to happy again," Pierson writes, "perhaps in the same ten miles. It is life compressed, its own answer to the question, 'Why?'" --Maria Dolan

Review

"As Pierson tells us why she loves riding, many who share her passion will often feel themselves nodding, saying, 'Yeah, she caught it.'"
Andy Solomon, Chicago Tribune

"
The Perfect Vehicle uses motorcycles as a lens for examining risk, freedom, and most surprisingly, relationships between men and women. . . . Pierson comes through brilliantly, crafting her sentences with precision and a sure ear."
Ann Marlowe, Village Voice

"This is an exceptionally sensitive and intelligent book."
Robert Pirsig

Reviews:

5.0 out of 5 stars Read it, but look between the lines.

D.L.B. · August 17, 2004

This book will further your insight into why motorcyclists ride and why they think what they do about their bikes, motorcycling, and each other. But by the time Pierson is on to her second bike mechanic boyfriend, you will realize that you're going to have to see the truth for yourself, because the author has her hands so full with her own issues -- anxiety, delusion, hypocrisy -- that she can hardly help herself or her endlessly sick bike, let alone help you, the questing reader.She does give you all the clues you will need, so don't despair. It's just that you're on your own in figuring out what the clues mean.The Fallen Bike Incident is a good example of Pierson's lack of self-knowledge, and why this book is accused of male-bashing.In the rain, Pierson's bike has fallen over due to the soft, wet surface she has planted her side stand in. This is a classic blunder. It's in the curriculum of the motorcycle safety course (of which Pierson is a graduate) and she even mentions elsewhere in the book how, for this very reason, wooden blocks were passed out in the dirt parking lot of a motorcycle rally. You can easily conclude that it is her own damn fault her bike fell over, but you won't read her admitting it in so many words, and this lack of personal accountability is everywhere in The Perfect Vehicle.In her motorcycle class she has been taught how even a grandmother can lift up even a fallen Honda GoldWing (800+ pounds of bike), but for reasons unexplained, she is unable to lift her sub-400 pound Moto Guzzi. Again, no admission that she failed to learn the very thing she was specifically taught to do; you just read that it didn't work out and draw your own conclusion. So she asks a driver in an idling van for help, and he stares at her blankly, as she frantically begs "Quickly!" Finally the nice man gets out of his dry van, into the rain, and helps her right her fallen bike, to her eternal non-gratitude.Reflecting later, Pierson intuits, and apparently comes to believe, that the reason her benefactor didn't instantly leap into the downpour to assist her was because he was thinking that since she is a woman, she wanted help lifting a bicycle, not a motorcycle, and so she was once again the victim of rampant sexism. She will shortly use this incident as a springboard to launch into one of many catalogs of undeniably valid examples of cruel and unfair treatment women have suffered in the history of motorcycling. This stuff is good to know and you'll be glad you read about it, but keep in mind, these terrible things happened to other women, not Pierson.In several place we read explanations of her attraction to the woefully unreliable Moto Guzzi bikes, namely that they're stylish, sexy, and that fixing your bike all the time gives you a deep sense of self-sufficiency and personal identification with your machine.It's a fair characterization of the series of Moto Guzzi enthusiasts Pierson repeatedly enlists to fix her broken-down bike for her, gratis, but this admirable, self-reliant, hands-on individualist ain't Melissa Pierson. She apparently never begins to master bike mechanics in her 35,000 miles of riding. She's more the damsel in distress with delusions of rugged independence. You would feel some pity if she had left out all the haughty, off-hand dismissals of Japanese motorcycles for the crime of providing exactly what Pierson and millions just like her really need: an affordable and reliable bike, albeit one that lacks "character."She at least respects BMW and Harley-Davidson enough to give us fully-cardboard-cutout stereotypes of those riders, but those bland, bloodless Japanese aren't even worth the time. Oh, and in case you didn't know, "rice burner" is not really an epithet of derision. I bet "broad" is, though.It's an all-purpose snobbery. When in France she finds herself at a hotel that dares offer exactly what Pierson and millions like her really need (it's affordable and they've got a room), she sniffs "Holiday Inn, of all places!"So while the author only grows a little in the course of this book, you the reader will have the opportunity to learn much more in the ugly truth behind Pierson's inadvertent revelations, as well as benefit from the several places where she is actually on to something real and manages to convey it without getting hung up on her own issues. The florid descriptions of what it feels like to ride are quite fine if you accept them outside the context of the neurotic author's world of prejudice and denial.UPDATE: January 12, 2011In the 6 years since I first read this book and wrote this review, I've read a great many other motorcycling books that cover much of the same ground, and I've found none better than The Perfect Vehicle. The book's flaws are still its flaws: I think the author's attitudes are often unfair and tone deaf, but in spite of that, Melissa Pierson's scholarship is first rate and highly readable. So while I once again suggest you read between the lines, I still recommend nonetheless that you do read it.

4.0 out of 5 stars A Woman's Point of View

P.H. · June 29, 2005

I found Ms. Pierson's book very interesting as far as her impressions of riding a motorcycle and her adventures while doing so. She has an adventurous spirit and an adventurous way with words that rang true in me and stimulated my imagination in nice ways, while following her adventures and travails on her Guzzi.In buying this book, I was interested in her woman's view of the riding and how she overcame the inherant difficulties involved in an activity which ultimately needs not only riding skill but also the strength to handle a sometimes heavy machine, and the know-how to turn a wrench to service the machine or correct a difficulty.Ms. Pierson shows what I suspected all along, she is just a woman, albeit one who can ride and write. She does not know how to raise her own Bike, flaps, and has to ask for help, thus supporting the stereotype she is not strong. She relies on a succession of boyfriends or people she has pursuaded into action to help her do the smallest service on the bike. This supports a theory that women are not mechanically inclined. This is not a criticism, just a finding in her text.She also cannot stick to the point and mixes different things in this book. She cannot decide if the book is a history of her, or the history of the motorcycle, or the history of women on motorcycles. At one time she is deep into her personal narrative, and then suddenly dives into the history of the motorcycle from day one. Then we are back with more marrative, and then suddenly we are listing all the records on the motorcycle, then back to the story. Then given a long passage about women and motorcycles and their various achievements.She has a great skill with her history in summarising some of these great achievements briefly and accurately (as far as I know).Please don't let me give you the wrong impression, I was delighted by her woman's point of view, and delighted by her writing, and the points I raise here did not detract from a very easy read that was full of great images and impressions and information, but the real gem here is reading about her personal history and her adventures with bike and boyfriends. She would have done well to expand on that subject more and left the history to another book.

5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful exploration of why we ride bikes.

M.F. · February 15, 2025

Holbrook Pierson does the best job of any writer exploring why motorcycling is so wonderful. If you’re jonesing for a ride, it’s a good time to read it, but be careful - it will make you want to ride more than ever.

5.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyable Read

S.D. · July 2, 2024

Lots of moments in this read.

3.0 out of 5 stars text to speech not enabled!

B.L. · September 17, 2012

I'm about half way through and finding it a very nice read. I'd give it a solid 4.. leaning toward 5.. but, text to speech is not enabled. Therefore, a three is given. I've made it a habit to NOT buy books that block this feature, but it has become so common in the books I buy I forgot to check. I have ADD and find the text reading to me works much better. Won't buy another of her books if this feature is disabled.Back to the book itself.. the four and five star reviews have it right.. so long as you just want to read a nice tale about the love of bikes and her pathway there.Edited: Later... I enjoyed the history of motorcycles and motorcycle racing less than the opening about her discovery of motorcycling.

5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Read!

K. · June 7, 2024

A must-read for motorcyclists!

Muito bom

D. · August 29, 2025

Livro com muito bom conteúdo

Märkliga meddelanden.

P.H. · October 11, 2025

Jodå, föremålet var som väntat bra och det kom snabbt. Däremot har jag fått meddelande från Bolo om att jag måste hämta min order, detta trots att jag redan har hämtat den. Jag har fått samma meddelande i dag om att jag måste hämta ut en annan order som jag hämtade för tre dagar sedan.Var felar det? Hos postombudet eller hos Bolo?

Great book

J.t. · February 18, 2021

Excellent book!!! It was hard to put down. If you ride a motorcycle or like them in any way this is a must read!!!!!

Great written work

A.C. · July 9, 2024

Wonderful bookWorth the purchasing and sharing

Amaizing book. Highly recommended!

T.M. · June 16, 2023

Amaizing book. Highly recommended! I believe that should be considered as a wonderful ticket to ride!

Similar suggestions by Bolo

More from this brand

Similar items from “History”