Finally! After so many books on the kings of the road of the 70s and 80s marathon boom, a story of the women who had a far steeper path to be recognized as worthy competitors. The book is bookended by a mile-by-mile account of running legend Joan Benoit Samuelson's outstanding victory in the first women's Olympic marathon in Los Angeles, where she remained ahead of the pack in brutally smoggy heat. However, there are many famous races chronicled in the book, including Bobbi Gibb's running of the Boston marathon in disguise as a man, Kathrine Switzer being nearly pulled off the course. But the most compelling figure in the book for me was Benoit, described as "Maine lobsterman tough," training through freezing Maine winters, suffering horrific knee injuries and rebounding to run 100 miles a week in training (a doctor once put her in a walking cast more to prevent her from running the day after surgery than out of necessity for healing), who emerges as the most compelling figure. She wore a Red Sox cap winning the Boston Marathon and when she won the Olympics marathon it was announced at the L.L. Bean store in Maine. It doesn't get more New England Strong than that.
The book's epilogue details Grete Waitz, the silver medalist of the '84 marathon, taking a final run of the NY Marathon she owned for many years, with Fred Lebow, essentially the "father" of the NY Marathon, when he was in his dying days.
Many great stories--perhaps almost too many, and too many personalities, which is why I rated it 4*--it is a little dry because of its historical chronicling, versus books which focus only on a single race or a few sports personality. However, a very important text that will stand the test of time, unlike many of the recently published running books I've read lately.