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Hardcover Rome 1960: The Olympics That Changed the World Book

ISBN: 1416534075

ISBN13: 9781416534075

Rome 1960: The Olympics That Changed the World

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

From the New York Times-bestselling author of Clemente and When Pride Still Mattered comes the blockbuster story of the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome--17 days that helped define the modern world.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Keep on writing David Maraniss and I will keep on reading

David Maraniss is one of the great nonfiction writers who has an outstanding talent for story telling which shows through in all of his books. My favorite still being, THEY MARCHED INTO SUNLIGHT. Maraniss in his latest on the Rome Olympics and in his previous book about baseball legend Roberto Clemente shows Maraniss has an eye for social history, especially civil rights, intolerance, and duplicity of those wishing to maintain the status quo. About half way through Rome 1960 I had to stop and say, I can not believe it... I am half way though a book on the Olympics and enjoying it immensely. I in fact, almost did not buy the book because it was just not a subject that appealed to me a great deal. How glad I am that I did read this interesting and fun book. The book bookends the narrative around Wilma Rudolph who had polio as a child, had a child out of wedlock, and yet became one of the greatest woman athletes of all time. Rafer Johnson is also highlighted as he became the first black to carry the American flag during the opening day ceremony. And tells of the cold war politics of the time with the Russians on the move and pointing out to the world how the United States treated it's minority citizens and how racism had to confront the truths of the a new era just beginning. Maraniss tells it all with insight, truth, and power and in a most entertaining way. What better time to read this than now... just before the Olympics of 2008. Keep on writing David Maraniss and I will keep on reading.

In Time For The 2008 Olympics

Mr. Maraniss is a former reporter of the Washington Post and author of acclaimed biographies of Bill Clinton and Vince Lombardi. He is a wonderful writer and storyteller. With the approach of the 2008 Summer Games, "Rome, 1960" takes us back to a simple era, without the terrorism threats, outrageous commerialism and non-stop TV coverage. The Cold War was the backdrop and the author weaves in the stories of the athletes, the familiar and the unfamiliar. I don't know that these Olympics changed the world as Mr. Maraniss argues (the 1968 Games in Mexico City or the Munich Games in 1972 have a better claim) but the world has changed since then.

Terrific Reading about the World at a Crossroads - and Glimpses of Sports Superstars, too!

The world is changing so fast right now that most of us can barely keep up with the daily news that affects our lives, jobs and future. So, it's a rare and wonderful treat when a book comes along that carries us back to a time and place when the world changed more slowly - to show us one of those events that truly did change our global culture. When such books come along, they're usually about wars - but not this new gem by Pulitzer Prize-winning writer David Maraniss. Given my own background as a journalist, I'll confess that I was puzzled by Maraniss' decision in selecting "Rome 1960" for a thick new book of nearly 500 pages (that's counting all the extras at the end). As I picked up the book, I kept asking myself: Why did he call this particular meet -- "The Olympics that Changed the World"? As a specialist in religion and culture, I've immersed myself in histories of other Olympics: the 1924 "Chariots of Fire" Olympics, the 1936 Nazi-dominated Olympics, the 1972 Olympics when terrorists killed 11 Israeli athletes - and even the 1964 Tokyo Olympics that were a milestone in global culture in part because of Kon Ichikawa's historic documentary film. But having read Maraniss' new book, I've got to agree - Rome in 1960 ranks right up there as a milestone in world culture. I had not considered the roles of the major players who all collided in Rome that year - including the now-infamous anti-Semite and pro-Nazi American czar of the Olympics movement: Avery Brundage. If you don't find yourself drawn to "Sports" - but you are fascinated by 20th-Century history, especially the 1930s, Fascism and the Holocaust - this is a "must read" book for you. Think of it as a "sequel" to books about the controversial Nazi Olympics in which Hitler, Goebbels and Riefenstahl essentially pulled a fast one on Brundage in convincing him to help them celebrate their glorious new Reich. As a journalist, I'm a longtime follower of new research into that earlier era - and Maraniss picks up the Brundage story in 1960 and pretty much nails the man and his many levels of hypocrisy - and lets us see how this antique figure collided with many of the realities of later-20th-Century culture. Among the key details Maraniss adds to our understanding of Brundage are personal jottings he made during the Rome Olympics that, among other things, complained of the emergence of "Jews ... demanding restitution for everything lost and lot more." (Of course, Brundage somehow managed to continue at the helm through 1972 in Munich, where controversy continued to surround his decisions.) What's great about this new book is that everything I've said about the Brundage sub-plot is just one of many compelling storylines that Maraniss explores in these 500 pages. Among other things: These were the Olympics in which Cassius Clay exploded onto the global stage, later to transform himself into Muhammad Ali. These were the games of Wilma Rudolph. These were the games in which commercial interests

History made interesting and easy to read

I bought this book after hearing an interview with Maraniss on NPR. Normally, this isn't my kind of book. I'm not an athlete. I'm not a fanatic about the Olympics. I'd rather knit or read a cozy mystery that I can breeze through in a night. And yet, I love this book. Each chapter is like a short essay on some facet of the 1960 Olympics: the controverial decision in the men's swimming event, the Tigerbelles' encounters with racisim on their road the Olympics, the political controvery between China and Taiwan, and more. Maraniss paints a picture of the world's political and social climate to show how those factors affected the 1960 Olympics and how the 1960 Olympics affected the world. Each story is compelling--48 years later, I feel minor outrage that Lance Larson wasn't awarded the gold for men's swimming. I understand the terror Rafer Johnson must have felt outside of Lenin Stadium when the Russian crowd surged toward him after his defeat of Kuznetsov. Maraniss deftly captures the human stories and makes this reader care. I'm only 5 chapters into the book, but I wish I could skip work today to finish the rest of the book. Before reading this book, I hadn't watched the Olympics in over 20 years. Now, I'm psyched for 2008 Summer Olympics!

Rome 1960: The Olympics That Changed the World Mentions in Our Blog

Rome 1960: The Olympics That Changed the World in 7 Books Celebrating Muhammad Ali's Fighting Spirit
7 Books Celebrating Muhammad Ali's Fighting Spirit
Published by Ashly Moore Sheldon • October 30, 2020

The "Rumble in the Jungle," a momentous boxing match between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman, took place on this day in 1974. Fourteen years earlier (almost to the day), Ali, then named Cassius Clay, won his first professional fight. Charismatic and controversial, bombastic and bodacious, Ali is widely considered to be one of the greatest boxers of all time—not to mention a serious influencer.

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