Daniel James Brown, "The Boys in the Boat"

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  • Опубликовано: 10 дек 2024

Комментарии • 39

  • @MrBlutarskyZeroPointZero
    @MrBlutarskyZeroPointZero 4 года назад +13

    I have read this fabulous book 4 times! Each time, I dont want it to end... I will read it again...

  • @keepinonkeepinon60
    @keepinonkeepinon60 3 года назад +10

    One of my favorite books of all time. Love this.

  • @davidotness6199
    @davidotness6199 11 месяцев назад +5

    I truly loved reading this book. It brought out so much history of the Pacific Northwest at the time and all of the challenges many of these young men had to overcome in their lives already, but then their shell being given the worst positioning in the race for the Olympic Gold and winning in spite of its very significant challenges, was nothing short of sublime.

  • @georgecollins9388
    @georgecollins9388 3 года назад +8

    Wonderful book, Daniel. So well said! A good friend of mine from Seattle used to go to the same church as George Pocock and they became friends. So I read the book flat-out non-stop and enjoyed every minute of it. I'm sure that you even more than me would love to see the movie come to pass, and that it would somehow maintain or match the incredible spirituality and power that you somehow gave us from your book, that it would serve as a tribute to these incredible boys and men who fought for each other and purely with each other to represent America and to totally win the race despite everything going against them. Maximum spirit and make it go right determinism. But the movie can never attain or match. the detail and quality of the book.

  • @TheBootstrapBoutique
    @TheBootstrapBoutique 8 лет назад +33

    I just finished this book in tears. So moving, Joe and the boys have a beautiful story, thank you for telling it.

  • @marilyncole2072
    @marilyncole2072 4 месяца назад

    This is an excellent book. Amazing story, amazing young men, amazing details told with feeling and respect for the sport. The audible book is a gem

  • @dakers2052
    @dakers2052 9 лет назад +8

    I found out about this book from a review in a history magazine. Being a UW rowing fan for over 40 years, it was a great historical and human interest story. I have given this book to several people and donated it to the library of the two ships I work on. It's a story you can read over and over and enjoy each time! My hats off to Mr. Brown!

  • @davidrichardson2330
    @davidrichardson2330 6 лет назад +7

    Excellent book. Highly recommended. Ex-rower in four boat myself 1971 to 79. My boss for two years was the nephew of the great British Olympic oarsman, Jack Beresford (Los Angeles 1932). The book has so many great highlights and the crew's journey to the Olympics was a huge challenge with competitors from the elite crews in the East and West.

  • @getdusty1
    @getdusty1 5 лет назад +8

    I'm 66 and I (used to) hate reading ... WITH A PASSION. There is not one book I've ever read in my entire life. I've struggled through some verbal books and then lost interest. But I can now honestly say, that "The Boy's In The Boat" is a "can't put it down" book. My grand-daughter is a 15 year old rower and this book was suggested to me by a retired school teacher in his seventies. I balked at it at first, but the more I thought about it, the more I thought, "If I don't like it, I can give it to my grand-daughter", who loves to read. I found myself coming down the stairs after eating a meal, looking forward to my reading time, something that has NEVER happened in my life. Now that I'm through that book, I'm wondering what the next book will be that I can read. There are two things I love about Daniel's writing in this book. His details about the atrocities in Germany were minor in graphic detail and his use of foul language, even when he had the chance to use it, he fell short, still leaving the reader in no uncertain terms what was said, as in, when they fell way behind in the gold medal race, one of the rowers was heard to use (and Daniel says it this way) "the F-word". Daniel's integrity is to such a high standard that he wouldn't let himself use that word even if it WAS used in a practical place. That means a lot to a great many people. I would like to get his permission some day to use parts of pages 213 to 215 in a sermon some day and tie it in with First Corinthians 12:12 to 27, which compares the church to the body. Those three pages would tie in perfectly with a sermon like that. When one triumphs, we all cheer ... when one hurts, we are all made sad. An amazing read!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @jockellis
      @jockellis 4 года назад

      If you think this book is a page turner, you ought to read The Cross and The Switchblade. I loved TBITB but TCATSb had me wondering what God would do on the next page. Check it out.

  • @abpabpabp6153
    @abpabpabp6153 5 лет назад +7

    Perhaps the most inspiring, heart-warming book I've ever read. And beautifully written.

  • @sbhtennis
    @sbhtennis 11 лет назад +5

    I listend to this book on CD and one of the best I have read/heard. A fascinating story and soo well written

  • @willmpet
    @willmpet 4 года назад +3

    I read this and then gave it to my daughter. We both loved it! It's one of the things that binds us.

    • @willmpet
      @willmpet 4 года назад

      I am impressed that Mr.Rantz wanted a story written that described the rowers not him.

  • @AbbaJoy1
    @AbbaJoy1 9 лет назад +6

    Outstanding book.

  • @rogerphillips2063
    @rogerphillips2063 Год назад +1

    Great book and wonderful true story! I will see the movie asap.those young men were amazing.
    This summer I was in the Sequim area of Washington and the summer before saw the Hudson River making me feel a tiny connection in two places in this exciting
    Happening in this truly great country with great Americans.

  • @nantinee9
    @nantinee9 6 лет назад +5

    Thank you Daniel James Brown for writing this book. I recently finished reading it and I have been so touched and inspired. I found myself cheering for Joe Rantz and the boys of Washington and wanting them to succeed. I love their humility and grace during a difficult time in life, and as they rowed together as one. There were parts in the book where I was brought to tears, including the excerpt you read. That has never happened to me before in reading a book. This story, I believe, will live in my heart for a very long time.

  • @NancyMcGuiremsls
    @NancyMcGuiremsls 9 лет назад +4

    Excellent story! Inspirational, educational, and definitely worth reading and discussing.

  • @jeffreyc.mcandrew8911
    @jeffreyc.mcandrew8911 7 лет назад +3

    Reading for our local book club "The On Track Readers" in North Fond du Lac. Promises to be great. Wonderful writing!

  • @Reussclub
    @Reussclub 10 лет назад +10

    I can agree to every word the author said. Excellent description of a rowers mind and what he feels during and after a race. I have been a competitive oarsman and still row at age 66. Interestingly my dad was at the Olympic regatta in Berlin in 1936! He was a spectator, but rowed already then as a junior. In 1939 one month before the beginning of WW 2 his now elite 8 from the rowing club Reuss Lucerne was sent to Liege/Luettich in Belgium to compete against Europes top teams. The big favorites were the Germans, Grossdeutscher Achter, the young Swiss boys from Lucerne won the race and the Nazi eight came in second, one length behind! One of that team is still alive, he was born in 1916. My dad born in 1914 passed in 2002! After their victory the team was qualified for the European Championships to be held 4 weeks later in Amsterdam. The sent the boat to Amsterdam and went back to Lucerne to train for this event. In September Hitler started the war, the European Championships were cancelled as well as the Olympic Games in 1940 (Tokyo).

    • @ricksindars4810
      @ricksindars4810 8 лет назад

      Thanks for sharing that is interesting story of your dad and you. My cousin Joyce Simdars was married to Joe Rantz many years my senior. I have a close relationship with my cousin Judy Willman who is Joe Rantz daughter. Here is a photo below that may interest you.
      facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=805957612752934&set=t.100000161082518&type=3&theater

  • @maureenhodder1226
    @maureenhodder1226 8 лет назад +6

    just read the book ,,what a fine read

    • @treason3382
      @treason3382 8 лет назад

      Maureen Hodder I read the young readers version.

  • @jameskavanaugh7052
    @jameskavanaugh7052 11 лет назад +2

    I have purchased three copies and passed them on. They don't come back. People what to keep this book forever.

  • @lh570
    @lh570 9 лет назад +6

    Enjoyed the book. Joe Rantz had interesting life, and will be a hero to you, after reading this story.

    • @ricksindars4810
      @ricksindars4810 8 лет назад +2

      Joe Rantz was married to my cousin Joyce Simdars many years my senior. I have a close relationship to my cousin Judy Willman who is Joe Rantz daughter. Here is a link below to a photo that may interest you.
      facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=805957612752934&set=t.100000161082518&type=3&theater

  • @smilborrow
    @smilborrow 10 месяцев назад +1

    Who would have thought that 10 years later George Clooney would make a film based on the book!

  • @Easts101
    @Easts101 10 лет назад +2

    I just finished reading this book and it was a great read. Whilst it is a bit too detailed in the technique of rowing in some parts, and I am married to a mad rower, it is in my view a story about young people growing up in a particular part of USA.

  • @fishingtitans5031
    @fishingtitans5031 4 года назад +3

    Spoiler alert. LOL .. had to pause at 4min 25sec as I am at the point in the book where Joe and the boys are en route to Berlin... great book so far.. will come back to this vid when I'm done.

  • @crpond3699
    @crpond3699 6 лет назад +3

    Nice....we look forward to your next book. Perhaps now is a good time to write about The Girls In The Boat.

  • @jockellis
    @jockellis 8 лет назад +8

    My question would have been: How many of the German team ended up on the Russian front?

    • @angusloughor-clarke386
      @angusloughor-clarke386 4 года назад

      I may be mistaken but I believe that one of Jesse Owens competitors from Germany ended being conscripted into the army in the early years of the war. I also believe that he was Killed In Action.

    • @SilverQuillTV
      @SilverQuillTV 11 месяцев назад +1

      I’m so amazed at professionalism of Daniel James Brown’s descriptive analysis and his thoughtful approach. Brown is a hallmark of exceptional journalists. I hope to have an autographed version for my self and my son (both my kids rowed and now I have started!

  • @mitchellweiner4990
    @mitchellweiner4990 3 года назад +2

    An absolutely wonderful book which needs no prior knowledge of rowing!

  • @profd65
    @profd65 5 лет назад +5

    Jesse Owens said that it wasn't Hitler who refused to shake his hand, it was FDR. You have to remember than the US was a deeply and brutally racist society in the 1930s, even though books like this try to distract from that.

    • @georgecollins9388
      @georgecollins9388 3 года назад +2

      I didn't know that! I don't get involved in race situations such as what our country is being pushed into now. But I will tell you that black people are in fact my best friends and I truly hope that all racism of any kind will become a thing of the past, that all men will see each other as brothers, as well as the full certainty that we are all just spiritual beings.

    • @SilverQuillTV
      @SilverQuillTV 11 месяцев назад

      😮well now I can’t wait to read it! I did not feel this from the movie!