Showing posts with label WWII. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WWII. Show all posts

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Read and Reviewed: The Boys in the Boat


The Facts

 

Author: Daniel James Brown

Publication: 2013 Penguin Books

Length: 370 medium pages

Genre: Nonfiction

Target Audience: 14 and up

 

Now for the opinions. I had to read The Boys in the Boat for my freshman course beginning next week, so I was a bit proactive. My rating: 8 out of 10. Recommended.

Subtitled Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympics, this is a bit of a sports story, a bit of a boat story, a bit of a Depression story, and a bit of a Nazi Germany story. The author opens on a “grey day in a grey time” to paint the picture of a poor farm boy whose only hope of staying at Washington State in 1933 is making the crew team—against a good stiff bit of competition. Brown takes us back through his childhood and up to the defining moment of Joe Rantz’s life—rowing in front of Hitler for the USA at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin.

I enjoyed this book very much. Crew was never a sport I paid much attention to, but after reading this, I will! It made crew interesting and emotionally involving—no small feat for a sport that involves rowing skinny shells over the water. Brown does an excellent job contrasting Depression-era US with Germany and the building attitudes and programs of both countries. Some may be surprised to learn that messed-up family lives aren’t just a modern thing—people sinned then, too. Of course, like any well-written sports story, the conclusion is nail-biting—so don’t skip to the end!