cover image THE PERFECT MILE: Three Athletes, One Goal, and Less Than Four Minutes to Achieve It

THE PERFECT MILE: Three Athletes, One Goal, and Less Than Four Minutes to Achieve It

Neal Bascomb, . . Houghton Mifflin, $24 (322pp) ISBN 978-0-618-39112-7

The attempt by three men in the 1950s to become the first to run the mile in less than four minutes is a classic 20th-century sports story. Bascomb's excellent account captures all of the human drama and competitive excitement of this legendary racing event. It helps that the story and its characters are so engaging to begin with. The three rivals span the globe: England's Roger Bannister, who combines the rigors of athletic training with the "grueling life of a medical student"; Australia's John Landy, "driven by a demand to push himself to the limit"; and Wes Santee from the U.S., a brilliant strategic runner who became the "victim" of the "[h]ypocrisy and unchecked power" of the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU). Although Bannister broke the record before Landy, Landy soon broke Bannister's record, and the climax of the book is a long and superb account of the race between the two men at the Empire Games in Vancouver on August 7, 1954. Bascomb provides the essential details of this "Dream Race"—which was heard over the radio by 100 million people—while Santee, who may have been able to beat both of them, was forced by AAU restrictions to participate only as a broadcast announcer. Bascomb definitively shows how this perfect race not only was a "defining moment in the history of the mile—and of sport as well," but also how it reveals "a sporting world in transition" from amateurism to professionalism. (Apr.)

Forecast: With Bascomb's narrative skills, it's no surprise that movie rights have already been optioned—and by the team behind the Seabiscuit film.