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Marathon, My Marathon [Paperback]

Jon Foyt (Author), Lois Foyt (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 1996
The modern sport of running is crawling with history--from the first recorded race in 776 B.C. to the revival of the modern Olympic Games in Athens twenty-seven centuries later in 1896. Now, in 1996, at the start of a most unique marathon, Sea Captain Albion E. Shepard, the mystical overseer of this Texas-sized fable, Marathon, My Marathon, personalizes the cliometrics of present-day questions which confront the competitors gathering in the remote West Texas town of Marathon.

Lawrence Masterson, his career path aborted in an IBM downsizing, bounces back with a plan to elevate this little town from obscurity to an autonomous city-state for the twenty-first century A.D. Cotton, an Olympic runner and world-renowned sculptor, second guesses her decision years ago to give up her baby for adoption. Together, they wonder if their romance, which has developed as swiftly as Texas lightning, will be a long-run commitment. But Burley, the trucker carrying an apocalyptic cargo, threatens their dreams as the story's hilly course winds through the vast Southwest landscape.

--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Editorial Reviews

Review

In exploring the microcosm of the world of running, Marathon, My Marathon reveals an understanding of humanity and the larger human condition and ultimately a glimpse into the workings of the realm of the gods. Raising many questions, this novel asks the reader to find the answers, to look around at what our species, graced with a divine spark, has created, leaving us wondering if the gods must be as crazy as we ourselves seem to be. Just as "Dr. Strangelove," with its extreme and driven characters presented a world too absurd to be real and too real to be dismissed offhand, so Marathon, My Marathon challenges us to try and make sense of the inconceivable yet undeniable. -- The Sandpiper, March, 1996

Not your typical marathon book. The authors have produced an unlikely strange mix of history, Greek mythology, and Western folklore with athletic competition and warnings of environmental cataclysm. -- The Running Journal, June, 1996

Obviously this is a loving work of authors who've been there, done that. -- Fifty Plus Fitness Association Bulletin, Summer, 1996 --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From the Publisher

The authors have taken the history of Marathon, Texas and of marathon races, and have run with it. With two wild imaginations at work, they have come up with a plot that moves like the wind wearing running shoes. Much of Marathon, My Marathon was actually written in a modern-day B & B, the home built in 1896 by Captain Albion E. Shepard, whose spirit surely returned to explore with the authors these new frontiers. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback
  • Publisher: Fithian Press (April 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1564741605
  • ISBN-13: 978-1564741608
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.5 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.1 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #9,233,240 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Reader's and a Runner's High, April 5, 2001
By 
Brian Wheeler (Tesuque, NM USA and London UK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Marathon, My Marathon (Paperback)
The Foyt's highly entertaining and unique novel contains much which is laudable, they are to be commended on creating a scenario which draws the reader into an atmosphere of pervasive trepidation and tension. The Foyts write with a deadly directness and the narrative is an excellent example of great subtlety and simplicity allowing the life of the characters to become the life of the story. Tautness and control are abundantly evident as they handle the highs and the lows, the miseries and rewards, peculiar to the life of a long-distance runner; the inevitable fusing of the psyche into the rural landscape and the splendid isolation encountered by the lone marathon runner: "Triggered by her physical effort and the magnificent view, Cotton's endorphins, those natural brain-induced opiates, raced through her mind and her body, elevating her being into the phenomenon known as runner's high...Alas, Cotton's feelings of elation lasted only seconds. Her nirvana, arching into a fragile glow, diminished as she returned to earth to run in arduous reality." There are many examples of lovely, fluent descriptive prose: "A boundless ocean of land, its hills rising in massive gray-green swells, its white rock outcroppings cresting, flowed before Cotton's eyes as she drove her pick-up truck along the state highway east from El Paso." And the truly horrific and graphic account of Burley's heart attack at the wheel of his truck is brought off with remarkable aplomb and ingenuity: "Without warning a sharp pain stabbed deep within his hulk. A rupture had occurred at the junction of a coronary artery and feeder vessel. Like a hose in an unserviced engine hardened by wear and tear, the artery wall burst open. In response, Burley's body automatically shifted into a state of alert, and summoned his 911 rescue squad--the platelets in his blood stream, whose mission it was to patch things up..."

The Foyts have a great understanding of modern-day dilemmas and mid-life crises and this is manifest in their handling of the central characters, particularly Lawrence Masterson, who wakes up, age fifty, in the grip of a particularly oppressive mid-life crisis: "After all, why had he gone to college, prepared and disciplined himself for life in corporate America, done his best, applied himself one hundred per cent. Why? To be shown the door and told he is through? At age fifty?" There is a lovely analogy in the manuscript which clearly illustrates Masterson's pessimistic state of mind and mounting feelings of despondency: "Tumbleweeds were blowing across the highway...He remembered looking at it and thinking how much he and the tumbleweed had in common--no roots anymore, no place to go, each of them bouncing along in any wind that blew." Reading Marathon, My Marathon, one senses that the Foyts are committed environmentalists because there is much talk of green issues, but the narrative is never hi-jacked in any way by such talk. And if the promotion of such issues is a hidden agenda within, they should be applauded because their treatment of such discussions is even-handed and carefully researched. And indeed, we should never be allowed to forget that the calamitous denouement is entirely plausible. Marathon, My Marathon is a brilliantly conceived story, eloquently delivered, which entertains and stimulates and raises pertinent questions which demand to be addressed.

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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Reader's and a Runner's High, April 5, 2001
By 
Brian Wheeler (Tesuque, NM USA and London UK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Marathon, My Marathon (Hardcover)
The Foyt's highly entertaining and unique novel contains much which is laudable, they are to be commended on creating a scenario which draws the reader into an atmosphere of pervasive trepidation and tension. The Foyts write with a deadly directness and the narrative is an excellent example of great subtlety and simplicity allowing the life of the characters to become the life of the story. Tautness and control are abundantly evident as they handle the highs and the lows, the miseries and rewards, peculiar to the life of a long-distance runner; the inevitable fusing of the psyche into the rural landscape and the splendid isolation encountered by the lone marathon runner: "Triggered by her physical effort and the magnificent view, Cotton's endorphins, those natural brain-induced opiates, raced through her mind and her body, elevating her being into the phenomenon known as runner's high...Alas, Cotton's feelings of elation lasted only seconds. Her nirvana, arching into a fragile glow, diminished as she returned to earth to run in arduous reality." There are many examples of lovely, fluent descriptive prose: "A boundless ocean of land, its hills rising in massive gray-green swells, its white rock outcroppings cresting, flowed before Cotton's eyes as she drove her pick-up truck along the state highway east from El Paso." And the truly horrific and graphic account of Burley's heart attack at the wheel of his truck is brought off with remarkable aplomb and ingenuity: "Without warning a sharp pain stabbed deep within his hulk. A rupture had occurred at the junction of a coronary artery and feeder vessel. Like a hose in an unserviced engine hardened by wear and tear, the artery wall burst open. In response, Burley's body automatically shifted into a state of alert, and summoned his 911 rescue squad--the platelets in his blood stream, whose mission it was to patch things up..."

The Foyts have a great understanding of modern-day dilemmas and mid-life crises and this is manifest in their handling of the central characters, particularly Lawrence Masterson, who wakes up, age fifty, in the grip of a particularly oppressive mid-life crisis: "After all, why had he gone to college, prepared and disciplined himself for life in corporate America, done his best, applied himself one hundred per cent. Why? To be shown the door and told he is through? At age fifty?" There is a lovely analogy in the manuscript which clearly illustrates Masterson's pessimistic state of mind and mounting feelings of despondency: "Tumbleweeds were blowing across the highway...He remembered looking at it and thinking how much he and the tumbleweed had in common--no roots anymore, no place to go, each of them bouncing along in any wind that blew." Reading Marathon, My Marathon, one senses that the Foyts are committed environmentalists because there is much talk of green issues, but the narrative is never hi-jacked in any way by such talk. And if the promotion of such issues is a hidden agenda within, they should be applauded because their treatment of such discussions is even-handed and carefully researched. And indeed, we should never be allowed to forget that the calamitous denouement is entirely plausible. Marathon, My Marathon is a brilliantly conceived story, eloquently delivered, which entertains and stimulates and raises pertinent questions which demand to be addressed.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
Let the tale begin. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
rich eagle, hundred runners, race director, old sea captain
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
John Voss, West Texas, Bill Yates, Montgomery Wilson, Philip Lopate, Shepard Hotel, Gage Harte, Rio Grande, Fast Freddie, Fort Peña, New Mexico, Baby Doe, Destinations Marathon, Greek Revival, New York, Lawrence Masterson, Mount Olympus, Captain Albion, Del Rio, Glass Mountains, Mexico City, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Tarahumara Indian, Elizabeth Paepcke, Olympic Games
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