My neighbor, friend, and erstwhile colleague Todd Balf has brought the history of cycling to life with this account of the life of Major Taylor, a black athlete at the turn of the 20th Century who fought to be the world's fastest human being. Todd's deep research into the era, into race relations in America and abroad, and into the complicated history of the development of the modern bicycle are powerful. Little do most of us know that cycling was once as popular as NASCAR is today. Todd's narrative is always engaging, and the style of the writing reminded me in many ways of Larson's THE DEVIL IN THE WHITE CITY. The story is compelling, and I hope that someday it will come to the big screen, since it has so many elements that would benefit from cinema. Congratulations, Todd, on a tour de force.