Going for the Gold
Posted by Jack on 08.14.2008 at 7:10 am
I don’t know about you, but since the Olympics started you can’t pry me away from the TV for anything. I’m camped out in my parents house on vacation, diligently watching everything from the swimming (wow, Michael Phelps, seriously) to the basketball (Redeem Team? Meh, not that cool of a name), to WAY too many hours of women’s beach volleyball even to water polo (can anyone understand what’s going on? They need to bring out the old Fox glowing puck technique from hockey cause I can’t see anything…).
I realized in my viewing fervor as they repeatedly mentioned old greats or referenced Olympic glories or disasters that my own knowledge was limited at best. Sure I remember Barcelona, Atlanta and Athens just fine, I even have my thoughts about Nagano, Lillehammer, Turin and the others (Oslo maybe?). But if I’m going to spend this much of my life on this, I need to educate myself better. Come along:

Owning the Olympics First things first we need to know about this one. After watching the CRAZY opening ceremonies, I want to know more about this Olympics and about China as it appears they’re coming into their own as the world’s superpower. 1.3 billion people and a massive martial arts/explosives presentation with lighting up war drums. Yikes.

Get Talking Chinese This simply couldn’t be a bad idea.

A Century of Olympic Posters This is perfect, I love graphic design and you can tell so much from the promotional material of any event. Besides, is this not a supreme coffee table book?

Triumph No history of the Olympics would be complete without information about Jesse Owens. This particular is written by Jeremy Schaap, who also wrote Cinderella Man, the book that became a movie starring Russell Crowe and Renee Zelweger (directed by Ron Howard I believe). Jeremy is not as sharp as his father, Dick, but I trust that this account will be excellent.

Rome 1960, the Olympics that Changed the World I keep hearing about this book as it’s rather new. I’m inherently reluctant to read something with a decidedly histrionic title, but if this Olympics truly changed the world and I have no idea what happened there, sounds like I had better get reading.

Pre As a runner and lover of athletic lore, there is no better story than that of Steve Prefontaine. He was the first athlete to ever wear Nike shoes (his coach was building them by hand) and he was an all-around running stud that made Oregon into the track powerhouse it has been since. His story is both invigorating and tragic, but totally worth reading.
| Tagged Book Reviews, book lists, book reviews, olympics
« My Summer Reading // The Ritornello »
- Aaron King africa ARC authors betterworld.com better world books fund Better World Books in the field blog book drive book drives book reviews books books for africa bookstore campus campus division in southeast asia chicago conferences david murphy facebook Golden Key green for all hilarious posts Impact library literacy literacy statistics massachusetts Natasha NCFL new york times off-topic Our Partners partner updates Pat Plonski Phi Theta Kappa Poll Wednesday press room to read SF office Show Us Some Love the green house worldfund xavier and erin's adventures in africa Xavier Helgesen
- Antiquarian Ramblings (7)
- Author News (15)
- Better World Book Club (1)
- Book Reviews (59)
- Dispatches from the Green House (34)
- Flabbergasted (9)
- Impact (107)
- Our Partners (119)
- Paging Authors Podcast (6)
- Poll Wednesday (18)
- Show Us Some Love (27)
- The Man Behind the Curtain (19)
- Top Ten Fridays (6)
- Uncategorized (278)
- Week In Review (14)
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- April 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
- January 2008
- December 2007
- November 2007
- October 2007
- September 2007
- August 2007
- July 2007
- June 2007
- May 2007
- April 2007
- March 2007
- February 2007
- January 2007
- December 2006
- November 2006
- October 2006
- September 2006
- August 2006
-
Latest Comments
I believe he's done it - I'm just afraid the titles include the likes of Sheep i...
If he says that he has, I'll take it at face value. I read about two hundred boo...
So true, PK, thanks for the continued support!...
This is quite good, I am acutally supporting education since the time I visited ...
I believe we can do more than this!! (And yes i have spent almost a thousand dol...








Leave a Comments »
Trackback | RSS 2.0
no comments yet - be the first?