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The Perfect Mile

Three Athletes, One Goal, and Less Than Four Minutes to Achieve It

Audiobook
0 of 4 copies available
0 of 4 copies available
The inspirational story of three international runners attempting to achieve what no one had managed—to break the four-minute mile barrier. It was the ultimate test of endurance, and the human drama that unfolded is told here for the first time.
In sport, running the four-minute mile was the elusive Holy Grail, considered by most to be beyond the limits of human endeavour.
Then in late 1952, shortly after the Helsinki Olympics, three men set out to challenge the record books: Roger Bannister, the Oxford medical student, the great British hero who epitomized the ideal of the amateur athlete; John Landy, the tireless Australian, the romantic who trained night and day in search of perfection; and the American Wes Santee, son of a Kansas ranch hand, a natural runner and the quickest of the three ('I was just born to run fast').
Three men, each of contrasting character, competing thousands of miles apart, but all with the same valedictory goal. The Perfect Mile is the stirring account of their quest for sporting martyrdom, charting their journey through triumph and failure, culminating in the moment when Bannister broke the record in a monumental run at the Iffley Road cinder track in Oxford in May 1954. It was a feat that became one of the most celebrated in the history of British sport.
Far from bringing an end to the rivalry, this watershed moment turned out to be merely the prelude to a final climactic battle three months later—the ultimate head-to-head between Bannister and Landy in what was dubbed 'the mile of the century' at the Vancouver Empire Games.
Bascomb provides a fascinating account of what happened and an invaluable insight into the motivations and characters of three amazing achievers.
This audiobook includes an interview with the author.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Few individual achievements enthrall the popular imagination as does the first mile ever run under four minutes. Nelson Runger's enthusiastic reading of THE PERFECT MILE lends a quality of personal testimony to collective history. Runger has an affable, comfortable sound with a touch of the no-nonsense solidity of a nature show announcer. Athletes, like lions and antelope, are fascinating, complex creatures when Runger's voice describes them. Three runners of unprecedented ability and determination peak simultaneously on different continents. One breaks the barrier initially, yet another soon shatters that record. After beating the clock separately, the competitors finally face each other. When the story is over, the congenial Runger interviews the author to elicit additional details about the milers. D.J. (c) AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 8, 2004
      The attempt by three men in the 1950s to become the first to run the mile in less than four minutes is a classic 20th-century sports story. Bascomb's excellent account captures all of the human drama and competitive excitement of this legendary racing event. It helps that the story and its characters are so engaging to begin with. The three rivals span the globe: England's Roger Bannister, who combines the rigors of athletic training with the "grueling life of a medical student"; Australia's John Landy, "driven by a demand to push himself to the limit"; and Wes Santee from the U.S., a brilliant strategic runner who became the "victim" of the "ypocrisy and unchecked power" of the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU). Although Bannister broke the record before Landy, Landy soon broke Bannister's record, and the climax of the book is a long and superb account of the race between the two men at the Empire Games in Vancouver on August 7, 1954. Bascomb provides the essential details of this "Dream Race"—which was heard over the radio by 100 million people—while Santee, who may have been able to beat both of them, was forced by AAU restrictions to participate only as a broadcast announcer. Bascomb definitively shows how this perfect race not only was a "defining moment in the history of the mile—and of sport as well," but also how it reveals "a sporting world in transition" from amateurism to professionalism. (Apr.)

      Forecast:
      With Bascomb's narrative skills, it's no surprise that movie rights have already been optioned—and by the team behind the
      Seabiscuit film.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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