Friday, May 2, 2014
row, row, row your boat.
Daniel Brown's The Boys in the Boat is the account of the nine man University of Washington rowing crew that won gold
in the 1936 Olympics in Berlin. Through loads of research Brown managed to create a narrative story told mostly from the perspective of one of the rowers,
Joe Rantz, who had the type of childhood that would of lead most people to an early grave. This is a tale about young men from different backgrounds learning to work as a team and overcome
tremendous obstacles, and that in and of itself makes it a must read. However, Brown's description of the current world events of this time period, the
Great Depression and the rise of Nazi Germany, makes this a story about much more than rowing.
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