bargainsleuth's review

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5.0

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Five years ago, I was watching Ken Burns’ documentary on baseball great Jackie Robinson, and it was mentioned his older brother Mack competed and won a silver medal at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin. Wow, I thought, how come I didn’t know, lover of the modern Olympics that I am? Because until recently, the story of the 1936 Olympics was about Jesse Owens’ four gold medals, giving Adolf Hitler a metaphorical middle finger. Olympic Pride, American Prejudice: The Untold Story of 18 African Americans Who Defied Jim Crow and Adolf Hitler to Compete in the 1936 Berlin Olympics reveals the stories of 17 other black athletes, including two women, who competed at the games.

"As a companion piece to the brilliant documentary Olympic Pride, American Prejudice (Stream for FREE with Amazon Prime) this book draws on over forty hours of interviews and extensive research the filmmakers obtained which did not make the final film cut. It explores key elements of the story and provides fuller context on the prospect of an Olympic boycott, the relationships between the president of the International Olympic Committee and the Nazis, the different perspectives of Jewish athletes, the NAACP and black newspapers, and details about the actual lives of the eighteen Olympians from family members’ testimonials.”

The athletes were Jesse Owens, obviously, Mack Robinson, Jimmy LuValle, Ralph Metcalfe, Cornelius Johnson, David Albritton, John Brooks, Archie Williams, Jimmy Luvalle, Ralph Metcalfe, Fritz Pollard, Jr, John Woodruff, Jackie Wilson, Howell King, Jimmy Clark, Oliver Willis Johnson, John Terry, and for the women, Tidye Pickett and Louise Stokes.

The story of the athletes revolves around the Jim Crow era of the United States, the fascism taking over in Germany, and the athletes fighting to represent a country that treated them like second-class citizens. Why on earth would they want to compete for the United States, who held them back with segregation and poor treatment just because of the color of their skin? Many of them thought winning a medal would help change society when they got back home. Sadly, this was not the case.

There was a great discussion among the United States Olympic committee on whether to even send a team to Germany because even in 1935, stories out of Germany’s treatment of Jews was well-known. Really, it was one racist country determining whether to compete in another racist country to see who was best. Many of the African-American athletes petitioned to compete, saying they would disprove the Germans’ belief of Aryan excellence. Ultimately, it was decided the U.S. would send a team to Berlin by a vote of 58 to 56.

Most of these athletes came home and found no endorsement deals, no better paying jobs. Mack Robinson, who ran the 200m in Berlin faster than anyone else had ever run it, ended up with a silver medal because Jesse Owens also ran the 200m and beat him. When Robinson returned home, the only work he could find was as a street sweeper, wearing his Olympic jacket while doing so. Even Jesse Owens had a hard time making it after returning home.

While all the black athletes are featured in this book, there’s little attention to Owens because there’s been so much written about him. Instead, there’s a lot of emphasis on Louise Stokes, Tidye Pickett, Jimmy LuValle and Ralph Metcalfe. Metcalfe was told to run so there was daylight between him and the next runner. He understood that to mean that if it came down to the wire, the white man would be awarded the gold medal unless it was clear he crossed the finish line first. It had happened at the 1932 Olympics in Los Angeles when Ralph Metcalfe and white Eddie Tolan crossed the finish line at the same time, and the powers that be gave Tolan the medal. If you watch the documentary, there’s no doubt Metcalfe was robbed of the gold.

Tidye Pickett and Louise Stokes had made the 1932 Olympics in Los Angeles. It was the first time African-American females had made the team. On the way to Los Angeles, Babe Didrickson, who many consider the greatest female athlete of her time, poured a pitcher of water over their heads while they slept. Then, shortly before the competition was to begin, the women’s track coach replaced Pickett and Stokes. They were determined to make and compete in the 1936 Olympics.

The work ethic that these athletes displayed in order to get to the Olympics did lead to moderate success for some of the athletes post-Olympics, but none of it had to do with the fact they brought home medals and received the acclaim they deserved.

juliebcooper's review

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5.0

I’d heard about Jesse Owens, who hasn’t? And without diminishing his athleticism and triumphs, this book tells the story of the other African Americans who went to Berlin for the ‘36 Olympics. Who they were, how they got to the Olympics, what odds they overcame and still faced, and what life looked like after the medals and the fanfare died down. Highly recommended.

morgan_leopold's review

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challenging emotional hopeful informative inspiring sad fast-paced

5.0

alligatoralyssa's review

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hopeful informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

5.0

I'm so glad I found this in the library! It really felt like right place, right time as I was browsing up and down the non-fiction section to see what would strike me. I had listened to the History This Week podcast episode on it, so when I saw it on the shelf I picked it up immediately. I was hooked all the way through and even teared up at the epilogue. I would 1000% recommend this book to anyone, speaking as someone who usually has no interest in sports. My heart was racing with the retelling of every Olympic game, I could hear an announcer hastily speaking into a microphone in my head as I cheered on each athlete. Read!! This!!! Book!!!! Or watch the documentary (which I will be making a movie night out of very soon).

wintermote's review

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3.0

I think this is an important untold story and I wanted to really love the writing and I just didn’t. I think this is just a personal preference thing but I found it too easy to mix up or combine the different athletes’ stories. Perhaps Reading this in print format rather than audio would have helped with that.

megalinity's review

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informative reflective medium-paced

4.5

glfowler's review

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3.0

5/5 for the content and story;
1/5 for the quality of writing and narration

coreyarch9's review

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4.0

I love this book. It was interesting, entertaining, and well-written. Right now, while our country is divided and at the very center of a pandemic and civil rights movement, is a great time to read this book. The story follows the experiences of 18 Olympic icons and their experiences at the games vs. at home. I really enjoyed learning about their experiences in college sports (picture an Olympic sprinter who is prohibited from joining the track and field team, so instead he's the fastest waterboy the football team could have ever imagined) and in life after the Olympics (such as teaching the Tuskegee Airmen to fly or establishing a bowling club).

Read this book if you think that our country has come a long way in terms of civil rights, but that we still have a lot of work to do, and in someways, are stuck in the 1930s.

baileybooknook's review

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4.0

Timely Olympic book review! This is the 2nd book I’ve read this year about the 1936 Olympics. The 1st was The Boys In The Boat, which I’m begging you PLEASE READ! It’s so good. But back to this book: Olympic Pride, American Prejudice.

Set in America and Germany during the 1920s and 30s, this book simultaneosly follows the rise of 18 African American elite athletes and the rise of Hitler and his Nazi party to power in Germany. The authors, Deborah Riley Draper and Travis Thrasher take us to Jim Crow America where these Black athletes were treated as 2nd class citizens by the same country that chose them to represent itself on the Olympic world stage.

Across the ocean we learn about Hitler’s rise to power and his successful attempt to hide what he was actually doing in Germany (stripping the rights of its citizens and building concentration camps) in order to get the 1936 Olympics to Germany.

For me the most interesting and maddening thing to read were the first hand accounts of these elite Black athletes stating that they were treated better by Hitler and the Nazi regime than they were ever treated in America.

Sports can bring out the best and the worst in people (as we see in every Olympics including the current one), and this book is a perfect example. Highly recommend if you like books about sports, U.S. race relations, or Nazi propaganda.

booksnbrains's review against another edition

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informative inspiring medium-paced

4.0

 Jesse Owens is a name that most of us recognize, but there were 18 African Americans at the 1936 Berlin Olympics. This book (and 2017 movie directed by the author) gives them a voice. The narrative is told in pieces, alternating with details of Hitler's rise to power (this format makes more sense now that I know the book was based on the documentary). Very informative and interesting, well-written, and never dry despite the historical nature of the content. These men and women deserve more than a footnote next to Jesse Owens.