Steve's adventure reminds us all that wildness and countryside is never more than a bike ride away. You don't need to fly around the world for an adventure: all you need to do is step outside your front door, pedal out of town, and keep going! * Alastair Humphreys, author of The Boy Who Biked the World * Cycling from London to Pembrokeshire in just one week, Steve Silk is a great guide, enthusiastic and sensitive to the contours of the landscape through which he passes, and the stories and secrets buried within. It's a timely reminder that real adventure can still be found right beneath our noses, and a joyous rallying cry for middle-aged couch potatoes everywhere. * Mike Parker, author of All the Wide Border * Relatable from the very first page, Steve's razor-sharp observations of human behaviour are as good a reason topick up this book as the cycling journey itself. A historically fascinating, witty sojourn from the streets of our capital city right through to the tiny Welsh hamlets where Steve is welcomed with no Wi-Fi and an outside loo. A thoroughly enjoyable - and educational - read. * Rachel Ann Cullen, author of Running for My Life * ...the salubrious subtext of Silk's transcendent two-wheeled odyssey is the joy of travelling slowly close to home, and the truth that the closer we look, the more we see. If we journey with the proper mindset, there is a wide world of wonders waiting to be discovered even in our figurative backyard. -- Don George * BBC Travel * Steve Silk is an acute observer, striking up conversations and bringing in economic and social history; he followed in the footsteps/cycle tracks of Charles G Harper from 1905. Recommended. -- Ian Small * Cycle magazine *