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The Boys in the Boat: Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympics Hardcover – June 4, 2013
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The #1 New York Times–bestselling story about the American Olympic rowing triumph in Nazi Germany—from the author of Facing the Mountain.
For readers of Unbroken, out of the depths of the Depression comes an irresistible story about beating the odds and finding hope in the most desperate of times—the improbable, intimate account of how nine working-class boys from the American West showed the world at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin what true grit really meant.
It was an unlikely quest from the start. With a team composed of the sons of loggers, shipyard workers, and farmers, the University of Washington’s eight-oar crew team was never expected to defeat the elite teams of the East Coast and Great Britain, yet they did, going on to shock the world by defeating the German team rowing for Adolf Hitler. The emotional heart of the tale lies with Joe Rantz, a teenager without family or prospects, who rows not only to regain his shattered self-regard but also to find a real place for himself in the world. Drawing on the boys’ own journals and vivid memories of a once-in-a-lifetime shared dream, Brown has created an unforgettable portrait of an era, a celebration of a remarkable achievement, and a chronicle of one extraordinary young man’s personal quest.
- Print length416 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherViking
- Publication dateJune 4, 2013
- Dimensions6.33 x 1.39 x 9.33 inches
- ISBN-10067002581X
- ISBN-13978-0670025817
- Lexile measure1260L
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now.
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- “Joe, when you really start trusting those other boys, you will feel a power at work within you that is far beyond anything you’ve ever imagined. Sometimes, you will feel as if you have rowed right off the planet and are rowing among the stars.”Highlighted by 9,878 Kindle readers
- The ability to yield, to bend, to give way, to accommodate, he said, was sometimes a source of strength in men as well as in wood, so long as it was helmed by inner resolve and by principle.Highlighted by 9,539 Kindle readers
- Physiologists, in fact, have calculated that rowing a two-thousand-meter race—the Olympic standard—takes the same physiological toll as playing two basketball games back-to-back. And it exacts that toll in about six minutes.Highlighted by 8,976 Kindle readers
From the Publisher

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Daniel James Brown’s The Boys in the Boat is the kind of nonfiction book that reads like a novel. Centered around the life of Joe Rantz—a farmboy from the Pacific Northwest who was literally abandoned as a child—and set during the Great Depression, The Boys in the Boat is a character-driven story with a natural crescendo that will have you racing to the finish. In 1936, the University of Washington’s eight-oar crew team raced its way to the Berlin Olympics for an opportunity to challenge the greatest in the world. How this team, largely composed of rowers from “foggy coastal villages, damp dairy farms, and smoky lumber towns all over the state,” managed to work together and sacrifice toward their goal of defeating Hitler’s feared racers is half the story. The other half is equally fascinating, as Brown seamlessly weaves in the story of crew itself. This is fast-paced and emotional nonfiction about determination, bonds built by teamwork, and what it takes to achieve glory. —Chris Schluep
From Booklist
Review
- Mitchell Zuckoff, author of Lost in Shangri-La and Frozen in Time
“In 1936 nine working-class American boys burst from their small towns into the international limelight, unexpectedly wiping the smile off Adolph Hitler’s face by beating his vaunted German team to capture the Olympic gold medal. Daniel James Brown has written a robust, emotional snapshot of an era, a book you will recommend to your best friends.
--James Bradley, author of Flags of our Fathers and Flyboys
“I really can't rave enough about this book. Daniel James Brown has not only captured the hearts and souls of the University of Washington rowers who raced in the 1936 Olympics, he has conjured up an era of history. Brown's evocation of Seattle in the Depression years is dazzling, his limning of character, especially the hardscrabble hero Joe Rantz, is novelistic, his narration of the boat races and the sinister-exalted atmosphere of Berlin in 1936 is cinematic. I read the last fifty pages with white knuckles, and the last twenty-five with tears in my eyes. History, sports, human interest, weather, suspense, design, physics, oppression and inspiration -- The Boats in the Boat has it all and Brown does full justice to his terrific material. This is Chariots of Fire with oars.”
--David Laskin, author of The Children's Blizzard and The Long Way Home
“A lovingly crafted saga of sweat and idealism that raised goosebumps from the first page. I was enthralled by the story's play of light and shadow, of mortality and immortality, and its multidimensional recreation of the pursuit of excellence. This meditation on human frailty and possibility sneaks up on you until it rushes past with the speed of an eight-oared boat."
--Laurence Bergreen, author of Columbus and Over the Edge of the World
“The Boys in the Boat is an exciting blend of history and Olympic sport. I was drawn in as much by the personal stories as I was by the Olympic glory. A must read for anyone looking to be inspired!"
--Luke McGee, USA Rowing Men’s National Team Coach
“The Boys in the Boat is not only a great and inspiring true story; it is a fascinating work of history."
--Nathaniel Philbrick, author of Mayflower and In the Heart of the Sea
“A lovingly crafted saga of sweat and idealism that raised goosebumps from the first page. I was enthralled by the story's play of light and shadow, of mortality and immortality, and its multidimensional recreation of the pursuit of excellence. This meditation on human frailty and possibility sneaks up on you until it rushes past with the speed of an eight-oared boat."
- Laurence Bergreen, author of Columbus and Over the Edge of the World
“For years I’ve stared and wondered about the old wooden boat resting on the top rack of the UW boathouse. I knew the names of the men that rowed it but never really knew who they were. After reading this book, I feel like I got to relive their journey and witness what it was truly like earning a seat in that Pocock shell. The passion and determination showed by Joe and the rest of the boys in the boat are what every rower aspires to. I will never look at that wooden boat the same again.”
- Mary Whipple, Olympic gold medal–winning coxswain, women’s eight-oared crew, 2008 and 2012
“Daniel Brown’s book tells the dramatic story of the crew that set the stage for Seattle emerging as a world-class city. Their lives define the tradition that is still University of Washington rowing today.”
- Bob Ernst, director of rowing, University of Washington
"A remarkable book...hard to put down."
— The Seattle Times
Praise for The Indifferent Stars Above
(A New York Times Editors's Pick; An IndieNext Notable Pick; A B&N Best of the Year selection; finalist for the Washington State Book Award)
"An ideal pairing of talent and material."
— Mary Roach, The New York Times
“A compelling read…capturing the stories of heroism and loss with imagination and attention-grabbing skill.”
— The Minneapolis Star-Tribune
“This deft slice of regional history will attract disaster and weather buffs as well as fans of Norman Maclean’s standout book, Young Men and Fire.”
— Publishers Weekly (starred review)
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Prologue
In a sport like this—hard work, not much glory, but still popular in every century—well, there must be some beauty which ordinary men can’t see, but extraordinary men do. —George Yeoman Pocock
This book was born on a cold, drizzly, late spring day when I clambered over the split-rail cedar fence that surrounds my pasture and made my way through wet woods to the modest frame house where Joe Rantz lay dying.
I knew only two things about Joe when I knocked on his daughter Judy’s door that day. I knew that in his midseventies he had single-handedly hauled a number of cedar logs down a mountain, then hand-split the rails and cut the posts and installed all 2,224 linear feet of the pasture fence I had just climbed over—a task so herculean I shake my head in wonderment whenever I think about it. And I knew that he had been one of nine young men from the state of Washington—farm boys, fishermen, and loggers—who shocked both the rowing world and Adolf Hitler by winning the gold medal in eight-oared rowing at the 1936 Olympics.
When Judy opened the door and ushered me into her cozy living room, Joe was stretched out in a recliner with his feet up, all six foot three of him. He was wearing a gray sweat suit and bright red, down-filled booties. He had a thin white beard. His skin was sallow, his eyes puffy—results of the congestive heart failure from which he was dying. An oxygen tank stood nearby. A fire was popping and hissing in the woodstove. The walls were covered with old family photos. A glass display case crammed with dolls and porcelain horses and rose-patterned china stood against the far wall. Rain flecked a window that looked out into the woods. Jazz tunes from the thirties and forties were playing quietly on the stereo.
Judy introduced me, and Joe offered me an extraordinarily long, thin hand. Judy had been reading one of my books aloud to Joe, and he wanted to meet me and talk about it. As a young man, he had, by extraordinary coincidence, been a friend of Angus Hay Jr.—the son of a person central to the story of that book. So we talked about that for a while. Then the conversation began to turn to his own life.
His voice was reedy, fragile, and attenuated almost to the breaking point. From time to time he faded into silence. Slowly, though, with cautious prompting from his daughter, he began to spin out some of the threads of his life story. Recalling his childhood and his young adulthood during the Great Depression, he spoke haltingly but resolutely about a series of hardships he had endured and obstacles he had overcome, a tale that, as I sat taking notes, at first surprised and then astonished me.
But it wasn’t until he began to talk about his rowing career at the University of Washington that he started, from time to time, to cry. He talked about learning the art of rowing, about shells and oars, about tactics and technique. He reminisced about long, cold hours on the water under steel-gray skies, about smashing victories and defeats narrowly averted, about traveling to Germany and marching under Hitler’s eyes into the Olympic Stadium in Berlin, and about his crewmates. None of these recollections brought him to tears, though. It was when he tried to talk about “the boat” that his words began to falter and tears welled up in his bright eyes.
At first I thought he meant the Husky Clipper, the racing shell in which he had rowed his way to glory. Or did he mean his teammates, the improbable assemblage of young men who had pulled off one of rowing’s greatest achievements? Finally, watching Joe struggle for composure over and over, I realized that “the boat” was something more than just the shell or its crew. To Joe, it encompassed but transcended both—it was something mysterious and almost beyond definition. It was a shared experience—a singular thing that had unfolded in a golden sliver of time long gone, when nine good-hearted young men strove together, pulled together as one, gave everything they had for one another, bound together forever by pride and respect and love. Joe was crying, at least in part, for the loss of that vanished moment but much more, I think, for the sheer beauty of it.
As I was preparing to leave that afternoon, Judy removed Joe’s gold medal from the glass case against the wall and handed it to me. While I was admiring it, she told me that it had vanished years before. The family had searched Joe’s house high and low but had finally given it up as lost. Only many years later, when they were remodeling the house, had they finally found it concealed in some insulating material in the attic. A squirrel had apparently taken a liking to the glimmer of the gold and hidden the medal away in its nest as a personal treasure. As Judy was telling me this, it occurred to me that Joe’s story, like the medal, had been squirreled away out of sight for too long.
I shook Joe’s hand again and told him I would like to come back and talk to him some more, and that I’d like to write a book about his rowing days. Joe grasped my hand again and said he’d like that, but then his voice broke once more and he admonished me gently, “But not just about me. It has to be about the boat.”
Product details
- Publisher : Viking; First Edition (June 4, 2013)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 416 pages
- ISBN-10 : 067002581X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0670025817
- Lexile measure : 1260L
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.33 x 1.39 x 9.33 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #29,461 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #7 in Boating (Books)
- #36 in Sports History (Books)
- #208 in U.S. State & Local History
- Customer Reviews:
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About the author

Daniel James Brown grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area and attended Diablo Valley College, the University of California at Berkeley, and UCLA. He taught writing at San Jose State University and Stanford before becoming a technical writer and editor. He now writes narrative nonfiction books full time. His primary interest as a writer is in bringing compelling historical events to life vividly and accurately.
He and his wife live in the country outside of Seattle, Washington, with an assortment of cats, dogs, chickens, and honeybees. When he isn't writing, he is likely to be birding, gardening, fly fishing, reading American history, or chasing bears away from the beehives.
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Customers find the story interesting and amazing. They describe it as inspiring, uplifting, and thrilling. Readers praise the writing quality as masterful, eloquent, and unforgettable. The book provides insightful and well-researched learning material about rowing and the early American team. It also shows the power of teamwork and the beauty of 9 people working seamlessly together.
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Customers enjoy the story. They find it interesting and amazing, weaving together the individual narratives of these young men from different parts of the world. The book reads like a novel, with a gripping plot and memorable characters.
"...The Boys in the Boat is a true story of starving boys who joined the U of Washington crew for the promise of food, shelter and work plus an..." Read more
"...It is not simply a sports book. It is an amazing story – or stories – on many levels ...." Read more
"...are complete after 2026 (it is 2024 as I write this) sound like fun places to see now that I've read these stories...." Read more
"...Sometimes he uses the quotes of others to show us the beauty and spirituality of rowing. George Pocock wrote “It’s a great art, is rowing...." Read more
Customers find the book an inspiring and emotional journey. They describe it as uplifting, heartwarming, and filled with a sense of achievement. The author captures the essence of dedicated people and their true-life experience during World War II. They find the subject promising and the novel personal at times.
"...The ability to allow oneself to depend on others, to trust that others have your back, is a story of collaboration, cooperation, harmony and poetry;..." Read more
"...Brown does a tremendous job of presenting historical contexts, while also juxtaposing what was happening at the same time, sometimes on the same day..." Read more
"...as this book emphasizes again and again the importance of working hard to achieve your dream...." Read more
"...is beautifully written as well as moving, haunting, frightening, uplifting, and thrilling...." Read more
Customers find the writing quality masterful and inspiring. They appreciate the author's style that flows well, is not too flowery, and reads like wonderful fiction. The book is described as clear, descriptive, and charismatic.
"...have your back, is a story of collaboration, cooperation, harmony and poetry; like doctor groups who rely on others to cover patients when they are..." Read more
"...Brown provides a tremendous amount of detail from the weather on certain days to what the boys were thinking...." Read more
"...Readers will feel like they are really there and can easily picture the action...." Read more
"The Boys in the Boat by Daniel James Brown is a book that is beautifully written as well as moving, haunting, frightening, uplifting, and thrilling...." Read more
Customers find the book insightful and well-researched. They appreciate the writing skill and research that brings it all together into an engaging story. The book provides valuable information about rowing and the early American team's experiences. Readers appreciate the determination, grit, and stamina of the young men. Overall, they describe the story as compelling and believable.
"...American aspirations for educational effort, self-respect, and honest work...." Read more
"...It is an amazing story – or stories – on many levels . You don’t need to know a lot about rowing because author Daniel James Brown will explain...." Read more
"...of WWII soon to engulf the globe but the wealth of information about the world of rowing and what life was like pre-WWII is why I deem it a valuable..." Read more
"...It is the story of rowing—not just the beauty of rowing but the grueling physicality of the sport...." Read more
Customers enjoy the historical value of the book. They find the story of fortitude mixed with historical information regarding Hitler's regime and world history leading up to World War II. The author weaves history, personal development, and historical records into the personal narrative. Readers appreciate the juxtaposition of political events in Germany. The book is described as a historical biography of Joe Rantz's life and rowing career.
"A great story for all, and a great tribute to the sport and the Olympian’s involved. A well written piece of history." Read more
"...triumphs of Joe Rantz and his teammates, but also as a political victory over Nazism of sorts, as Hitler is described leaving the balcony in fury..." Read more
"...It is a parable of Jesus' church, which is the greatest of all communities...." Read more
"...the story was told with such great detail, emotion, and accuracy to the events of the time...." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's focus on teamwork and collaboration. They find the sport of rowing interesting and praise the author's skill in describing the effort and grit required. The book details the roles and challenges of the team members, bringing the true events to life.
"...to depend on others, to trust that others have your back, is a story of collaboration, cooperation, harmony and poetry; like doctor groups who rely..." Read more
"...and what life was like pre-WWII is why I deem it a valuable addition to any home library...." Read more
"...flow of muscle, oars, boat, and water; the single, whole, unified, and beautiful symphony that a crew in motion becomes—is all that matters...." Read more
"...The book is a testament to the power of teamwork, perseverance, and the indomitable human spirit...." Read more
Customers enjoy the character development of the team and their personal stories. They appreciate the author's exploration of the personalities and make-up of the members. The book blends historical facts about the US during the 1930s with a fascinating cast. Readers find the story spectacular with heroes and villains.
"...And it is a story of unlikely heroes, from the University of Washington Coaches, to boat-builder George Pocock, to the boys themselves...." Read more
"...particular help from the daughter of rower Joe Rantz, delves deeply into the personalities and make-up of the members of the medal-winning team...." Read more
"...Legend, with its emphasis on sport, the Depression, and a fascinating cast...." Read more
"...Brown certainly provides ample narrative treatment to key characters (i.e., coach Al Ulbrickson, boatbuilder George Pocock) and other members of..." Read more
Customers have different views on the pacing of the book. Some find it fast-paced, with the action unfolding as if in real time. Others feel it starts slowly and lacks momentum, leaving them less invested in reading.
"...by Daniel James Brown is a book that is beautifully written as well as moving, haunting, frightening, uplifting, and thrilling...." Read more
"...necessary for the story and I found my mind wandering and less invested to keep reading...." Read more
"...The team effort—the perfectly synchronized flow of muscle, oars, boat, and water; the single, whole, unified, and beautiful symphony that a crew in..." Read more
"...Although an historical account, this book does not bog down. As a reader, I wanted to know what happened next. Would Joe get on the varsity boat?..." Read more
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Great metaphor for balancing the skill of the individual with the harmony of the collective
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 18, 2024The Boys in the Boat 2013 Daniel James Brown opens a window on human peril post WWI, The Great Depression, the propaganda of the Nazi Third Reich, and the quiet struggles of individuals to shelter, eat and survive.
In 2006 nonfiction author Daniel James Brown finished Under a Flaming Sky the history of devastating unpredictable wildfire. He gathered neighbors in his new home to discuss coordinated fire prevention. His next door neighbor Judy Rantz Willman had read his book aloud to her father Joe Rantz, who was under hospice care at her home. Judy asked DJB to meet her dad Joe and listen to Joe's story. Judy had collected photos, letters, memorabilia of the U of Washington 8 man rowing team which won Olympic gold in 1936 Berlin.
Daniel James Brown took 6 years to research, interview crew members and their families, collate the diaries, newspaper accounts, weather data and recollections of the rowing champions. Then he compiled the outcome for the boys of '36 and their life outcomes. Online Seattle TV news clips show the men as they age.
The Boys in the Boat inspired multiple documentaries PBS The Boys of '36, unearthed Leni Reifenstahl's Olympia the Nazi propaganda film which intended to hide Nazi war preparations under a veil of peaceful friendliness, and highlighted the Greatest Generation American aspirations for educational effort, self-respect, and honest work. Most videos online are 8-10 years old released in response to the book's original publication.
The Boys in the Boat is written at the 4th-8th grade literacy level, simple vocabulary and grammar.
The ability to allow oneself to depend on others, to trust that others have your back, is a story of collaboration, cooperation, harmony and poetry; like doctor groups who rely on others to cover patients when they are not on call, and who step up to respond when someone is in need.
Sometimes an individual is fortunate enough to be wrapped in a golden haze of synchrony, caring and support. This is the story of just such a moment, a group of boys, water, a philosopher-artisan crafted shell and political history.
The online Seattle TV news reports of the 10year reunions of the 8man crew to row the Husky Clipper together until they became too frail and too few to continue are inspirational.
The Boys in the Boat opens a whole world to a those who row only for recreation on whitewater, about the potential for spiritual uplift in cooperating and trusting in others.
The Boys in the Boat is a true story of starving boys who joined the U of Washington crew for the promise of food, shelter and work plus an education during the Great Depression. None had ever rowed before in competition. The boys were sons of fishermen, loggers, mill workers. Some worked on the Grand Coulee Dam to make enough money for tuition books and food. The boys learned to depend on one another for their safety.
Joe Rantz and his Husky Clipper crew remind me of neighbors, fathers, brothers, friendly open hearted smiling boys. One UW crew member turned 19 on the day of the opening ceremony of the Olympics 1936 Berlin.
George Pocock the Eton craftsman who built, polished and lovingly repaired most of the wooden shells which competed in 1930-40 rowing was a gentle man and well read scholar.
Al Ulbrickson the UDub coach was severe and restrained of speech, single minded in his pursuit of excellence in rower character, mind and body: no alcohol, no smoking, no fried food. Eat healthy fresh vegetables and protein like you mother cooks at home. Crews have the highest GPA of all athletes at UW.
The epilogue details the life outcomes of the boys grown into men who crewed for UW in 1936: coxswain Bobby Moch Seattle lawyer, the rest a mix of engineers who built planes for Boeing during WWII.
Joe Rantz died age 93 a few months after meeting Daniel James Brown, after interviews but before the book was finished. In his 70s Joe Rantz built fencing around his daughter Judy's home with wood he had carried, split and set enclosing her entire property.
5* true story reading pleasure. I read it twice.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 21, 2015One of the first stories I wrote as a freshman sportswriter at my college newspaper was about the women’s crew team. The coach picked me up early in the morning and took me out on the river in the launch. That was the extent of my coverage in my collegiate career, except when I became Sports Editor I made sure crew was covered.
I grew up and live in Philadelphia, where you can see the scullers on the Schuylkill River along Kelly Drive, named for the Philadelphia native rowing Olympian, John Kelly, brother to the actress and Princess Grace Kelly. But, I’ve never been to a regatta.
Now, along comes The Boys in the Boat: Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympics. If this was simply a sports book, it might have begun in 1936, talked about the University of Washington varsity boat, how it won the national championship to qualify for the Olympic trials, won that, and miraculously came from behind to beat Italy and Germany for the gold at Hitler’s Olympics, with the Nazi leader watching. The crew of Joe Rantz, Bobby Moch, Don Hume, Chuck Day, Roger Morris, Stub McMillin, Johnny White, Gordy Adam and Shorty Hunt would be considered, by friend and adversary, the greatest eight-oar-plus-coxswain rowing group ever, and the standards by which even today's crews are measured.
It is not simply a sports book. It is an amazing story – or stories – on many levels . You don’t need to know a lot about rowing because author Daniel James Brown will explain. Each chapter opens with a quote about a special element of rowing. These quotes are not from a coach, but the boatmaker George Pocock. He followed in his father’s footsteps, but emigrated from England. While he would make shells for almost every collegiate team, his studio was the University of Washington shell house. His opinion and judgment was valued by coach Al Ulbrikson and the boys.
Brown does a tremendous job of presenting historical contexts, while also juxtaposing what was happening at the same time, sometimes on the same day, in Germany. Later, we will see the histories meet up in Berlin. His description of what the American Olympians see as their boat enters Germany, docks at Hamburg and while they are transported to Berlin, is chilling. You feel the tension and imagine the music as he describes the championship race and what the crew had to overcome and how much rested on the the coxswain Bobby Moch.
Brown introduces us to a time when rowing occupied the same stature in college athletics as football, drawing similar size crowds and attentive media coverage, including radio broadcasts of meets. On the East Coast, the powers were the privileged Ivy Leaguers. For Washington and its arch rival, the University of California, most of their oarsmen were working class young men - farmers, fishermen and loggers - who had worked hard digging themselves out of the Great Depression.
The book begins in 2007 when Brown first sits down to talk to 92-year old Joe Rantz about “the boat,” at the invitation of Joe’s daughter, Judy, months before Joe dies. That’s the last we see of that scene.
Joe is the main character, partly because of his daughter’s initiative, but because his story is the most intriguing. He was the one who had to overcome the most in his life.
He had a childhood no one would envy. His mother died when he was young. His father remarried. In a weird circumstance, he married the twin sister of the wife of Joe's older brother . She was destined to become a famous violinist, but instead bore Harry Rantz’s children and lived in Hoovervilles. In Idaho, Thula forces young Joe to go live above the school. In Sequim, Washington, the family picks up and leaves 15-year old, Joe, living on his own. This built independence in Joe, but also scarred him. He believed he had to do everything for himself and could not trust others.
Except in Sequim, he meets Joyce, who would be his life-long companion, and UW crew coach Al Ulbrikson saw Joe working out in the high school gym and handed Joe his card.
Joe had never rowed before, but he makes the freshman boat in the 1933-34 season. It wins the freshmen national championship in Poughkeepsie, NY (they traveled by train from Seattle each spring). This sets the stage for 1936, as Ulbrikson, a Husky national champion in 1924 and 1926, doesn't hide that he wants to get gold at Berlin, but who will be on that team and how they get to Berlin occupies the next two years.
There was one historical juxtaposition that intrigued me. Joe spends a summer working on the Grand Coulee Dam, a program of President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal, with teammates Day and White. Brown then describes how Hitler put young men to work building the Olympic venues. We get a look at two different leaders pulling their countries out of the Depression, for which they were admired by the people in their country.
Brown provides a tremendous amount of detail from the weather on certain days to what the boys were thinking. Joe and Joyce shared a lot with their five children and the families provided a lot of material, including journals. Brown did a tremendous amount of research as evidenced by the epilogue and chapter notes.
Top reviews from other countries
- Nick's DadReviewed in Canada on October 8, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars What An Extraordinarily Good Book!
I had watched the movie and found it very moving, then I read the book ... I wish I had read the book first. The book was so good that I couldn't put it down. I read the chapter about the Olympic gold medal win several times, with tears in my eyes ... those boys were magnificent and the author captured them so well!
- Michael M.Reviewed in Germany on May 6, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome Storytelling
this nonfiction story is told as it should be … although known it gave me a deeper impression about the time and the history of those young men and there environment … I could sympathize and understand … so take your time to read about this … and „forget about“ ;-) the fictitious movie and the online clip bait …
- Mrs B. MerseysideReviewed in the United Kingdom on January 8, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars brilliantly written and very interesting. couldn’t put this book down
I found myself drawn into this book and learning so much. The true story of the boys and their lives was so interesting and their achievements were phenomenal considering their individual circumstances. I enjoyed learning about the techniques of rowing - having never rowed in my life. The history accompanying the story was extremely well written. I highly recommend this book and look forward to watching the film
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in Mexico on January 12, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Hard and true
Incredible, I always read a novel during Christmas and this one will stay with me forever.
-
石神井太郎Reviewed in Japan on March 30, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars ボート競技に興味がない人も楽しめる歴史小説です。
日本人にはあまり知られていないが、映画化も決まっていてアメリカ人にはお馴染みなストーリーだと思って読んでみました。ボート競技の勝敗だけでなく、それに関わる多くの人のドラマが織り込まれていて、ボート競技や歴史に興味がない人も楽しめる本です。