The Amateurs: The Story of Four Young Men and Their Quest for an Olympic Gold Medal | David Halberstam | top 2 rowing books ever
books:
The Amateurs: The ...
The Amateurs: The Story of Four Young Men and Their Quest for an Olympic Gold Medal
David Halberstam
Ballantine Books
, 1996 - 224 pages
average customer review:
based on 18 reviews
view larger image
for more information click here
highly recommended
"Astonishing . . . Moving . . . One of the best books ever written about a sport."
*Walter Clemons
Newsweek
"A PENETRATING, FASCINATING AND REMARKABLY SUSPENSEFUL NARRATIVE."
*David Guy
Chicago Tribune
In The
Amateurs
, David Halberstam once again displays the unique brand of reportage, both penetrating and supple, that distinguished his bestselling The Best and the Brightest and October 1964. This time he has taken for his subject the dramatic and special world of amateur rowing. While other athletes are earning fortunes in salaries and-or endorse
men
ts, the oarsmen gain fame only with each other and strive without any hope of financial reward.
What drives these men to endure a physical pain known to no other sport? Who are they? Where do they come from? How do they regard themselves and
their
competitors? What have they sacrificed, and what inner demons have they appeased? In answering these
quest
ions, David Halberstam takes as his focus the 1984 single sculls trials in Princeton. The man who wins will gain the right to represent the United States in the 84 Olympiad; the losers will then have to struggle further to gain a place in the two- or
four
-man boats. And even if they succeed, they will have to live with the bitter knowledge that they were not the best, only close to it.
Informative and compelling, The Amateurs combines the vividness of superb sportswriting with the narrative skills of a Pulitzer Prize-winning correspondent.
"RIVETING."
*Christopher Lehmann-Haupt
The New York Times
"[A] MASTERFUL JOB . . . Maintains the suspense to the very last stroke . . . Halberstam makes us care about the four men, their disappointments and the brutal testing of their friendships."
*Dan Levin
Sports Illustrated
for more information click here
Another great book from David Halberstam
I read this book in spite of the facts that I have no interest in rowing and know nothing about it. I read it only because it was written by David Halberstam, and I've loved everything I've ever read by him.
This book was no exception. Even though I still know very little about the sport, I now appreciate how grueling it is, and how much training these guys do.
You can't go wrong with a David Halberstam book, and this one's no exception.
top 2 rowing books ever
halberstam is very engaging in not merely following the
story
of the 1976
Olympic
US rowing scullers, but in relentlessly digging into
their
lives for historical details of their rowing past, psychological stabs at what drives them, and their social interaction with their teammates. this book was quite well known in the 1980's, but seems to have been forgotten by many in the rowing community - what a shame!! i expect every serious rower today would still find this an extremely compelling and interesting story, and for those of us who read it 20 years ago, i can testify that it is very well worth a re-read. and the other top rowing book? virtually unknown and quite hard to find, brad alan lewis' `assault on lake casitas' is just as great as `the
amateurs
', and a fantastic companion to it!!
for more information click here
A way to see into rowing and the people who do it
For someone who's not a rower, Halberstam gets most of this right - the technique, the atmosphere, the obsessiveness (which is common to all levels of rowing, just intensified among Olympians). In some ways the selection for the '84
Olympic
s was a crux point in the US rowing system, and Halberstam shows just why. If you want to get a view into a sport most people ignore, written by a top author, this is a good place to do it - same if you just want a peek in the mind of world-class athletes. If you want to really learn about the 84' Olympics selection camp, I'd recom
men
d reading this in combination with Brad Lewis' "Assault at Lake Casitas", for a another viewpoint from one of the main actors (and the '84 doubles
gold
medal
ist).
Incidentally, the movie Rowing Through was based on The
Amateurs
. It's quite divergent from the book, but not too bad if you can ignore a good bit of gratuitous sex and some hardly-Olympic-caliber rowing in the scenes on the water.
for more information click here
Great writing, sad story
Really well written, but a depressing
story
. I finished the book without any happy illusions about the sport, or sports in general. Nevertheless, a valuable story about the human spirit.
reviews
:
page 1
,
2
,
3
,
4
products you might be interested in
recommendations
David Halberstam: The Best and the Brightest
Non-fiction Page Turners
Sports Library starters
David Halberstam--Books
Books/DVDs
their
Words Their Way: Word Study for Phonics, Vocabulary, and Spelling ...
This Land Is Their Land: Reports from a Divided Nation
Rich Dad, Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach Their Kids About Money--That ...
Just Do It: How One Couple Turned Off the TV and Turned On Their Sex ...
Caps for Sale: A Tale of a Peddler, Some Monkeys and Their Monkey ...
quest
Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation
The Field Updated Ed: The Quest for the Secret Force of the Universe
Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, a Man Who ...
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
The Year of Living Biblically: One Man's Humble Quest to Follow the ...
search for books
the story of
,
amateurs
,
medal
,
olympic
,
quest
,
their
toavi.com
web
randomly chosen
DVD:
Chunhyang