Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
A Race Like No Other
A Race Like No Other: 26.2 Miles Through the Streets of New York | Liz Robbins
5 posts | 3 read | 2 to read
When 39,195 competitors thunder over the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge to begin the thirty-eighth running of the famed New York City Marathon, they experience one of the most exhilarating moments in sports. But as they cross five towering bridges and five distinct boroughs, carried 26.2 miles by the cheers of two million fans and by their own indomitable wills, grueling challenges await them. New York Times sportswriter Liz Robbins brings race day to life in this gripping saga of the 2007 Marathon, weaving the unforgettable stories of runners into a vibrant mile-by-mile portrait of the world's largest marathon. The professionals pound out the suspense in two thrilling races. Paula Radcliffe, the women's world record holder from Great Britain, returns with new resolve after having given birth nine months earlier; Gete Wami, her longtime rival from Ethiopia, tries to win her second marathon in just five weeks; and Latvia's Jelena Prokopcuka desperately hopes for her third straight New York title. If the women's race plays out like a mesmerizing chess game, then the men's race quickly turns into a high-speed car chase. South Africa's Hendrick Ramaala, eager to recapture glory at age 35, surges to lead the pack as Kenya's Martin Lel and Morocco's Abderrahim Goumri stay within striking range. While the professionals offer insight into the intense, often painful experience of being an elite athlete, the amateurs provide timeless stories of courage and obsession that typify today's marathoner: Harrie Bakst, a cancer survivor at 22, who is a first-timer; Pam Rickard, a 45-year-old mother of three from Virginia, who is a recovering alcoholic; and 65-year-old Tucker Andersen, who has run the race every year since 1976. Enlivening the history of the New York City Marathon with stories of such legends as the late Fred Lebow, the race's charismatic founder, and nine-time champion Grete Waitz, A Race Like No Other provides a curbside seat to the drama of the first Sunday in November. Feel the anxiety at the start in Staten Island. Listen to gospel choirs in Brooklyn and the accordion in Queens. Bask in the delirious sound tunnel of Manhattan's Upper East Side. Hit The Wall in the Bronx. And overcome agony in the last hilly miles before arriving in Central Park—exhausted yet exhilarated—at the finish line.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
blurb
keithmalek
post image

-- "A Race Like No Other: 26.2 Miles Through the Streets of New York" by Liz Robbins
-- Simon Rich, Jon Ronson
-- Real Time With Bill Maher
-- Richard Cheese
-- "Rocket Queen" by Guns N Roses

blurb
Awk_Word_Smith
post image

#Autumn and #MarathonDay in #NYC. It‘s the greatest day in the city. #NYCMarathon

quote
keithmalek
post image
quote
keithmalek

They come to outrun their demons and diagnoses. They run with members of a team, sometimes tethered to a blind runner by a shoestring. They race on wheels if they cannot run. They run to check it off a life list. They run to eat cake or choose vanity. They run to suffer so others will not. They run to win. And at the end of the day, at the end of 5 bridges and 5 boroughs and 26.2 miles, they will run because it is New York, and they are not alone.

quote
keithmalek
post image

Like most people, I used to dismiss the New York City Marathon as nothing but 50,000 health nuts going for a really long jog. That misconception ended when I read this book. I learned that many people run this race BECAUSE they used to be morbidly obese. They run BECAUSE they have cancer. There are as many reasons to run as there are nations that participate, and Robbins captures these stories masterfully. #MarathonSunday

Betty I walk the virtual NYC Marathon often on my Fitbit app. 7y
lauralovesbooks1 My sister is running it today! 7y
keithmalek @lauralovesbooks1 That's awesome! I once ran half a block to catch a bus, and it was the most miserable experience of my life. 7y
23 likes1 stack add4 comments