your question (with the book clarification) would be better suited for https://help.openstreetmap.org/ . Please search the old questions before asking – you may find an answer already.
If it’s a public route (like a hiking, sightseeing or cycling route, published in tourist guides and marked somewhere in the terrain), it can be added into OpenStreetMap, as a route relation including road segments of which the route consists. It might be complicated for a newbie, feel free to ask for help.
Otherwise, maybe try uMap (mentioned by a colleague above) or QGIS (free desktop software, capable of producing book-quality printed maps).
Discussion
Kommentaar van maxerickson op 6 Oktober 2014 om 01:39
Just to show friends or so? If that is the case, give uMap a look:
http://umap.openstreetmap.fr/en/
Kommentaar van AD42 op 6 Oktober 2014 om 01:45
No, I actually need to use it in a book. I’ll have a look.
Kommentaar van aseerel4c26 op 6 Oktober 2014 om 01:58
your question (with the book clarification) would be better suited for https://help.openstreetmap.org/ . Please search the old questions before asking – you may find an answer already.
Kommentaar van maxerickson op 6 Oktober 2014 om 02:01
I guess http://maperitive.net/ might be interesting then (I haven’t used it though).
Kommentaar van vincentxavier op 6 Oktober 2014 om 05:26
If I’s a well known route, you could use a relation within OpenStreetMap database.
Kommentaar van Endres Pelka op 6 Oktober 2014 om 14:34
If it’s a public route (like a hiking, sightseeing or cycling route, published in tourist guides and marked somewhere in the terrain), it can be added into OpenStreetMap, as a route relation including road segments of which the route consists. It might be complicated for a newbie, feel free to ask for help.
Otherwise, maybe try uMap (mentioned by a colleague above) or QGIS (free desktop software, capable of producing book-quality printed maps).