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PERFECT MILE

Author: Neal Bascomb
Publisher: HarperCollinsWillow
Category: Book

Buy Used: $12.00



Used (3) from $12.00

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 56 reviews

Format: Import
Media: Paperback
Pages: 384
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2

ISBN: 0007182783
EAN: 9780007182787
ASIN: 0007182783

Publication Date: 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - The Perfect Mile
  • Hardcover - The Perfect Mile
  • Hardcover - The Perfect Mile: Three Athletes, One Goal, and Less Than Four Minutes to Achieve It
  • Paperback - The Perfect Mile: Three Athletes, One Goal, and Less Than Four Minutes to Achieve It
  • Audio CD - The Perfect Mile: Three Athletes, One Goal and Less Than Four Minutes to Achieve It
  • Audio Cassette - The Perfect Mile: Three Athletes, One Goal, and Less Than Four Minutes to Achieve It
  • Audio CD - The Perfect Mile
  • Audio Download - The Perfect Mile: Three Athletes. One Goal. And Less Than Four Minutes to Achieve It (Unabridged)
  • Hardcover - The Perfect Mile: Three Athletes, One Goal, and Less Than Four Minutes To Achieve It

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Customer Reviews:   Read 51 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars More than a race against time   July 31, 2008
Neal Bascomb's account of the race for the first four minute mile was produced (just) in time for the 50th anniversary of this mile-stone (pun intended). It is a very easy read, and a highly enjoyable account of the intertwining events of three very different athletes. A factional account, the book is very much based on the events of the early 1950's, but with events described from the viewpoint of the three protagonists. Like a race, the book wills you to get to the end.

There are undoubtedly a few liberties taken with the details, but, after all, the aim is to tell a story; a story very much based on events that many would recall details of, or have seen old cinematic or still pictures of. Australian John Landy, American Wes Santee and the British Roger Bannister had all failed to meet expectations at the 1952 Olympic Games in Helsinki. If not failing to meet the expectations of others, then certainly they had failed to fulfil their own dreams. Yet their ensuing race against time caught the imagination of many, not limited to the three countries of their respective births.

Almost every schoolboy of 30 years ago would know that it was the Brit Roger Bannister who had the distinction of being the first to dip below the magical 4 minutes for the mile. In that, the book reads like a detective story in which, like Lieutenant Columbo, readers know the end. However, this does not take away from the telling of the tale. It seemed to matter little that the centre photographs show the result of the 1954 Empire games 1 miles race before you get to the narrative, so even that particular race has no mystery in it.

The world of the mid-1950's seems to be a long way from modern professional athletics. The training schedules and diets simply cannot be compared to those enjoyed and endured today. This is what makes the book for me, a harking back to the days of amateur athletics, little or no expenses or appearance money, and ambition as the primary motivation. Not only were the three athletes raving against `the clock' and against each other (albeit against each other's shadows, not on the same track for the most part). Both the Englishman, and the Australian knew that they had limited time, both before the record 4 minutes was first broken (for ever), and before they had to finish with athletics to move on top the next stage in life.

This is a different era, the dying days of the gentleman amateur, before athletics was taken up by the countries of the former Soviet block, as a political weapon. It was before the win-at-all-cost drug cheats, before corporate sponsorship, and massive investment in strict training and dietary requirements. You could not have a career as an athlete, because there was no money available.

Part of the success of this volume is that it is undoubtedly nostalgic, it is a good story told well, and it touches upon events that have a place in the collective culture of those who lived in the third quarter of the 20th century in Britain. The final parts of the book review what has happened in the years since May 6th 1954. The total amount of pages for the progressive lowering of the mile record after Bannister takes less space than used to describe `The Mile of the Century' at the Empire Games in Vancouver, when for the first time ever, 2 athletes broke the 4 minute barrier. This mile race is partly the perfect mile in Bascomb's title.

The book will inspire readers to persist, to begin again and to achieve. It will also prove to be a good read. Well done Mr Bascomb.

Peter Morgan (morganp@supanet.com)



5 out of 5 stars I loved this book   May 30, 2008
If you enjoy running and reading. This is an awesome story. I didnt want to put the book down.


4 out of 5 stars The perfect mile   May 27, 2008
A very well written book on an extraordinary feat of running. I true page turner!


5 out of 5 stars Makes you feel like you watched it happen   March 7, 2008
I'm not a track fan, but this book was recommended to me as being very well written, and I have to agree completely. Following the story of these three men from very different backgrounds as they all strive to be the first to break a previously considered unbreakable human feat, you get a sense that you were there watching it transpire. Even though it's a recounting of historical events, the narrative is so compelling that you find yourself mentally urging on the runners as the races are described. After reading this book, I immediately got myself a copy of "Chariots of Fire". :-)




5 out of 5 stars If you ever tried to break 5:00 in high school, you will love this book   December 27, 2007
3 atheltes; 3 continents; 3 training methods; 1 goal.

Roger Bannister - trained by Franz Stamfl (heavily influenced Mihaly Igloy and the LATC). Emphasis on intensity and speed endurance. A meticulous athlete who believed in measurement and gradual improvement.

John Landy - trained by Percey Cerutty (Herb Elliott's coach). Emphasis on longer intervals and higher volume. Ran most of his races solo; talented and agressive.

Wes Santee - trained by Bill Easton (coach of Billy Mills). Old school methods. Heavy racing schedule. Santee was a gritty competitor who liked to race, and had little patience for the patronizing AAU.

The book details these three atheltes attempts to break the "unbreakable" barrier. A number of close attempts are described in agonizing detail, in particular Santee's 4:00.2

If you have ever tried to break any running "barrier" - 5:00 mile, 4:00 marathon, etc. you will understand how this text captures the solitary focus that envelopes a runner as s/he pursues a goal.


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