

Story" (Guardian) as Brown skillfully animates his memorable cast

Some overwrought and hackneyed prose, "one quickly gets lost in the

Introduction to the sport" (Christian Science Monitor). Of rowing shouldn't be intimidated Brown's suspensefulĪccount "of nobodies from nowhere" offers "a fine Stadium in search of Olympic Gold." ALEX BEAMĬompared by several critics to Seabiscuit by Laura Hillenbrand,īoys in the Boat takes readers on a thrilling ride through anĮxtraordinary moment in sports history, when the underdogs, all odds Rows off of Lake Washington to Berlin's spanking new Langer See To be fair,īoys tells the affecting story of the University of Washington crew that
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Miramax as a movie with Kenneth Branagh slated to direct. Maudlin, loaded to the gunnels with obscure lore, and pre-sold to "It is a certifiable Big Book: wildly overlong, occasionally Individualism-as boats drift through the gloaming of Lake WashingtonĪnd eight unsophisticated Americans stick it to Hitler's AryanĬhampions-and he sometimes loses the war against cliche." MATT Brown certainly romanticizes this era of supremely rugged History of that shining moment, and a surprisingly suspenseful tale of "The Boys in the Boat is Daniel James Brown's cogent Thrilling reading, even by people who have no previous interest in The Boys in the Boat makes for absorbing and sometimes Hillenbrand's Seabiscuit and Mark Frost's The Greatest GameĮver Played. History that is almost forgotten, in the vein of Laura "Daniel James Brown explores an extraordinary moment in sports Victory of those nine boys from Washington state on a windy day inīerlin once upon a very dark time." JAY PARINI Of narrative non-fiction, though it could never be as thrilling as the The Boys in the Boat is, then, an often inspiring feat To understand the dynamics of the sport, which he conveys withĮnthusiasm. "Brown digs into his material with impressive energy, trying Tension of the races, the particular strengths of character and physiqueĭemanded by competitive rowing: physical ability, mastery of technique,Īnd trust in and harmony with one's fellow crew members, the lastīeing the ineffable ingredients that propel the boat into a fourthĭimension of grace and speed, elevating crew and vessel into the realm "He is a superb sportswriter, conveying the almost unbearable These all-American underdogs pull off the unimaginable." KEVIN J. With the final 50 pages blurring by with white-knuckled suspense as "A story this breathtaking demands an equally compellingĪuthor, and Brown does not disappoint. Tumultuous days leading up to World War II. Individual journey as well as their collective triumph as a team in the In this sweepingĪccount of their journey to victory, Brown tracks each young man's Underhandedness to walk away with the gold medal. Olympics in Berlin, they overcame poor health, tragedy, and Nazi When they were chosen to represent the United States at the 1936 Summer Which had been, up to that point, an exclusive sport for the well-to-do. Group of nine young men from the University of Washington-the sons ofįishermen, farmers, and loggers-did the unthinkable: they formed anĮight-oar rowing team that trounced their rivals at the University ofĬalifornia and challenged the East Coast's ascendancy in rowing,

THE TOPIC: During the Great Depression, a motley, rough-and-tumble A film version of The Boys in the Boat, to beĭirected by Kenneth Branagh, is already in development. (2006) and The Indifferent Stars Above: The Harrowing Saga of a Donner Nonfiction: Under a Flaming Sky: The Great Hinckley Firestorm of 1894 Universities, Daniel James Brown is the author of two previous works of Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 BerlinĪ former writing teacher at Stanford and San Jose State
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