cover image AMERICA'S VICTORY: The Heroic Story of a Team of Ordinary Americans—and How They Won the Greatest Yacht Race Ever

AMERICA'S VICTORY: The Heroic Story of a Team of Ordinary Americans—and How They Won the Greatest Yacht Race Ever

David W. Shaw, . . Free Press, $26 (288pp) ISBN 978-0-7432-3516-7

This full-fledged history of the first America's Cup yacht race—the oldest international trophy in competitive sports—begins in 1851, when the schooner America beat Great Britain's fastest yachts in a race around the Isle of Wight. Shaw (The Sea Shall Embrace Them) has written extensively about sailing; here he produces an exciting story beginning in the wealthy estates of the members of the New York Yacht Club, who financed the construction of a boat whose revolutionary design humbled those built in the U.K., considered then to be the greatest maritime nation. Exceedingly well-researched and documented, Shaw's history offers a first-time look at "the working-class men with strong backs and dirty hands who designed, built, and sailed the yacht, and who never really got credit for their efforts." The book is rooted in Shaw's finely etched portraits of designer George Steers, a "shy genius of naval architecture," and Capt. Richard Brown, who led the team of men who sailed the yacht to victory and provide Shaw an opportunity to discuss the Sandy Hook pilots of New York Harbor, an overlooked element of U.S. sailing history. And while Shaw produces an exciting recounting of the great race itself, he provides an equally fascinating depiction of the boat's dangerous and turbulent voyage across the Atlantic Ocean to get to the competition. He also includes a wonderful appendix on the post-race fate of the America—from its use by the Confederate Army to an ignominious post–WW II end. (Jan. 6)

Forecast:The 31st America's Cup race, scheduled for February 2003, should give this high-quality and engaging book the high profile it deserves.