Reviews for Pedal power : how one community became the bicycle capital of the world

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Pedal-power protests in the 1970s turned Amsterdam into "the capital city of cycling."Spurred on by activist mom Maartje Rutten and friends, a campaign to take back Amsterdam's streets that began with festive, peaceful protests turned more serious when a bike-riding child was killed. With auto traffic banned on Sundays because of a fuel shortage, a dramatic mass ride through a cars-only tunnel seemed to turn the tide. New regulations including special bike lanes, traffic-calming constructions, and new right-of-way laws changed things in Amsterdam and all over the world. The author surrounds this simply told story with endpapers showing bicycle efficiency, bicycle contributions to social progress, great cyclists, and great bikes of the world. He includes statistics about bike-share programs and reasons for using bicycles to get around. As he did in other tales of community transformation, he decorates his text with cheerful pen-and-ink sketches with watercolor wash. Appropriately for the Netherlands, most of the people shown are white; Drummond correctly includes racially diverse cyclists and also provides a 1970s photograph in the author's note showing a smiling rider of African descent. The note recalls his original goal: showing "how wonderful it feels to ride a bike, particularly in a city." That joy is evident throughout; it might even convince some readers to give it a try. Drummond rolls along with another successful story of environmental change. (bibliography) (Informational picture book. 5-9) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Horn Book
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Drummond (Energy Island; Green City) takes young readers to Amsterdam, a city that turned automobile- and carbon monoxideclogged streets into bicycle- and family-friendly boulevards. His straightforward text and near-impressionistic illustrations show citizens, led by activist Maartje Rutten, who took to the streets (on bicycles) in the 1970s to protest constructing more roads for automobiles. As a united community, they effected (worldwide) change. Bib. (c) Copyright 2017. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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