In his highly acclaimed account of “Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympics,” the author chronicles the rise of the University of Washington men’s crew team that assembled the sons of loggers, shipyard workers, and farmers into a rowing powerhouse that stunned the world. (The hardback version of this book came out last year.)
“On July 1, after a week of working out and relaxing in Poughkeepsie, the boys packed up their possessions, loaded the Husky Clipper onto a baggage car, and headed for the 1936 U.S. Olympic trials. By six that evening, they had arrived at Princeton and entered the world of the Ivy League, a world of status and tradition, of refined tastes and unstated assumptions about social class, a world inhabited by the sons of bankers and lawyers and senators. For boys who were the sons of working-class parents, this was uncertain but intriguing terrain.”