Roger Robinson has been witness to many great moments in the history of running, and to those when running made history in ways beyond sport.
As an excited child at the post-war London Olympics, an ardent spectator following the drama of Peter Snell and Murray Halberg at Rome, stadium announcer at the transformative Christchurch Commonwealth Games, TV commentator when Ben Johnson got busted, and more recently as a journalist reporting live on the Boston Marathon bombings, Robinson was there.
In a unique cross-over of literature, history and autobiography, Robinson tells of running in Berlin at the moment of German reunification and in New York's Central Park the day the Twin Towers fell; he is on the TV microphone for Kenya's first major running victory; and has to find words to help a stadium crowd mourn for the lives lost in the Christchurch earthquake.
`When Running Made History' is a superb depiction of the modern running movement. It provides a compelling, close-up account of the American running boom, the defiant emergence of women's running, the glorious dawn of Africa's ascendance, the sport's redefinition of ageing, and its important role in environmental conservation. Robinson lets us run alongside as history is made by Emil Zatopek, Abebe Bikila, Ron Clarke, Dick Tayler, Allison Roe, Paula Radcliffe, Nick Willis, Meb Keflezighi and 85-year-old superstar Ed Whitlock.
Robinson brings to life the days when running shaped the world, and shows why so many millions love to run and why running is worth loving.
- ISBN13 9781988503080
- Publish Date 13 February 2019 (first published 1 May 2018)
- Publish Status Active
- Publish Country NZ
- Imprint Canterbury University Press
- Format Paperback
- Pages 328
- Language English