I’m taking a quick break from novellas coverage but keeping up the nonfiction focus with this week’s Nonfiction November prompt, “Stranger than Fiction,” hosted by Christopher at Plucked from the Stacks: “This week we’re focusing on all the great nonfiction books that almost don’t seem real. A sports biography involving overcoming massive obstacles, a profile on a bizarre scam, a look into the natural wonders in our world—basically, if it makes your jaw drop, you can highlight it for this week’s topic.” I would also interpret this brief to refer to nonfiction that reads as fluently as a novel, and on both counts this book stands out.
The Boys in the Boat: Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympics by Daniel James Brown (2013)
We read this for my book club a couple of months ago, on the recommendation of one of our members’ spouses. I was dubious because I don’t read history books, and don’t enjoy playing or watching sports, so a sport + history book sounded like a real snoozefest, but that couldn’t have been further from the truth.
Brown focuses on one of the University of Washington rowers, Joe Rantz, in effect making him the protagonist of a classic underdog story. The college team in general, and Rantz in particular, were unlikely champions. Rantz lost his mother young and, abandoned by his father multiple times, had to make a living by his wits in the Seattle area, sometimes resorting to illegal schemes like poaching and selling liquor during Prohibition, but also logging and working in dam construction. Even among the teammates who became his de facto family, he was bullied for coming from poverty and for his enthusiasm for folksy music. That we come to know and care deeply for Rantz testifies to how well Brown recreates his life story – largely via Rantz’s daughter’s reminiscences, though Brown did meet Rantz before his death.
Another central character is world-renowned boat designer George Pocock, an Englishman who set up shop on the Washington campus. Boatbuilding and rowing both come across as admirable skills involving hard physical labour, scientific precision and an artist’s mind. I was surprised by how much I enjoyed reading about the technical details of woodworking and rowing. Brown emphasizes the psychological as well as the physical challenges of rowing – “mind in boat” is a catchphrase reminding rowers to give their total attention for there to be harmony between teammates. Individual talent is only useful insomuch as it boosts collective performance, and there has to be a perfect balance between speed, power and technique. Often, it means going past the pain barrier: “Competitive rowing is an undertaking of extraordinary beauty preceded by brutal punishment,” as the author sums it up.
(After reading the book, some of us went on a fieldtrip to see the boating club where the woman who recommended the book rows as an amateur. It wasn’t until I saw the rowers out on the Thames that I realized that only the coxswain – the one who sits at the back of the boat and calls out the orders – faces forward, while all the other rowers are facing backwards. That feels metaphorically significant, like you have to trust where the journey is taking you all together rather than relying on your own sight.)
All along, Brown subtly weaves in the historical background: Depression-era Seattle with its shantytowns, and the rise of Hitler in Germany. Joseph Goebbels and Leni Riefenstahl were key propagandists, whitewashing the city in advance of the Olympics to make a good impression on foreign visitors. Some atrocities had already been committed, and purification policies were in place, yet the Nazis fooled many with a façade of efficiency and cleanliness.
I have deep admiration for books, fiction or non-, that can maintain suspense even though you know the outcome. The pacing really works here. Most of the action is pre-Berlin, which keeps the tension high. (The only times when my attention waned was in the blow-by-blow accounts of preliminary races.) There were so many mishaps associated with the Olympic race that it truly is amazing that the U.S. team pulled through to win – I’ll leave the specifics for future readers to discover. But there are a couple ‘stranger than fiction’ details of the book that I do want to pull out: Joe’s father and brother each married one sister from a set of twins; and actor Hugh Laurie’s father was on the Great Britain rowing team at the 1936 Olympics.
The fires and heatwave of 1936 felt familiar, as did the hairstyles and fashions in the black-and-white photos (but the ‘boys’ themselves look more like 35-year-olds than modern college students). In some ways it seemed that little has changed, but then other facts feel impossibly outdated – e.g., sperm whale oil was used to oil the boats.
This might seem like a ‘dad book’ – indeed, several of us passed the book on to our fathers/-in-law after reading – but in fact it has very broad appeal and is one I’d be likely to recommend to any big readers, even if they’re not keen on nonfiction. It’s one of my most memorable reads of the year so far. And whether you fancy reading the book or not, you may want to look out for the George Clooney-directed film, coming out next year. (Secondhand purchase)
I was vaguely aware of this book but also saw a local (we live in Washington) TV history story about the same group and wasn’t aware the two were related! Silly me!
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I don’t think I realized you were in Washington. I’m sure you’d enjoy seeing local-ish places mentioned. It’s a truly remarkable story.
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I think I’ll read it. For some reason I had it mixed up with that nonfiction book about the guys in WWII who were in a life raft and captured by the Japanese. I should have known better, because I read that one. It was called Unbroken.
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I think I had that confusion too, initially. They were probably marketed in similar ways.
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Well, I almost didn’t read this review, thinking ‘Sport? Yawn, yawn’, but you’ve convinced me to give this one a whirl. If I can source it. It’s not in my library’s catalogue, and I don’t think I’d go so far as to buy it.
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I got a free copy from my stepfather and then found another couple of secondhand copies to pass round my book club, for the princely sum of £1.33. One to look out for at charity shops.
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Will do!
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I’ve wanted to read this book since it came out, but I give up now that I know the movie’s coming. Lol
I bet the rowing scenes will be hard to get just right.
It’s amazing how boring-sounding stories can be so riveting!
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Are you the kind of person who likes to watch the movie first, or only after the book? I’m sure the movie won’t include as much detail or backstory.
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I prefer to read the book. But, sometimes, I decide to write the book off and just watch the movie if I think I might never get to the book anyway.
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I have this one in my reading stack because I rowed for years! Need to get onto it.
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Ooh, yes, perfect for you then!
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I resisted this also because sports don’t much interest me but I did read it due to raves in previous NFN seasons and I was so glad I did. I also had a local connection, having grown up near Seattle, but it was outstanding narrative nonfiction I’d recommend to anybody.
Not all books about sports can do that for me. I started reading one not long ago by a rock climber and I could not relate to it. Perhaps because that was a solitary activity that I could never imagine myself doing, while the team aspect of rowing brought it more into the realm of relationships that I could connect to.
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I absolutely agree with your assessment: “outstanding narrative nonfiction I’d recommend to anybody.”
Was that Between a Rock and a Hard Place/127 Hours? That’s a rock-climbing memoir I found totally gripping!
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No, it was a different title … I’ll look into that one though!
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It’s a terrific book and I’m not a fan of sports books at all. It always comes to mind when I see the Univ. of Washington teams out on the water getting their practices in.
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Three local fans here already 🙂 I didn’t know I had so many Seattle-ites reading!
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I like a sports book so I need to look out for this one!
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It’s a great read! I asked my book club afterwards if they thought it was a particularly American story and they said no, it felt universal.
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Incredible story–I couldn’t put it down. I’ve also watched the American Experience documentary of the book several times. What he went through….
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Yes, Joe Rantz’s story, in particular, is astonishing. I definitely surprised myself with how much I engaged with reading about a sport!
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You might like this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FKfeQ4H1I0M
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Oh wow, I hadn’t heard this will be made into a film. Fun! I enjoyed this book much more than I thought I would, too. The Pocock/boat stuff was especially fascinating. And the audiobook was excellent–great voice actor. I love that you even got in an apt field trip with your group.
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There were some beautiful old wooden boats at the boathouse we visited. Our friend who rows there owns a fiberglass two-man canoe that cost hundreds of pounds.
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[…] The Boys in the Boat by Daniel James Brown: The University of Washington rowing team in general, and Joe Rantz in particular, were unlikely champions. Boatbuilding and rowing both come across as admirable skills involving hard physical labour, scientific precision and an artist’s mind. All along, Brown subtly weaves in the historical background: Depression-era Seattle with its shantytowns, and the rise of Hitler in Germany. A classic underdog story. […]
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