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C.C. Pyle's Amazing Foot Race: The True Story of the 1928 Coast-to-Coast Run Across America

C.C. Pyle's Amazing Foot Race: The True Story of the 1928 Coast-to-Coast Run Across America
By Geoff Williams

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Product Description

A riveting account of an incredible 3,423-mile foot race across America, the Great Foot Race of 1928, and C.C. Pyle, the legendary sports promoter who masterminded the event.

A year before the Great Depression, endurance fads were all the rage. From dance marathons to flagpole sitting, everyone was looking for a chance to change their luck, and spectators would shell out hard-earned cash to watch. When notorious sports agent and promoter C.C. Pyle offered a $25,000 prize for a foot race from Los Angeles to New York, 199 runners from all over the world took their marks and half a million spectators flocked to the starting line. The race was grueling, but an astonishing 55 participants made it to the Madison Square Garden finish line 84 days later.

C.C. Pyle’s Amazing Foot Race details this historic event and the colorful cast of characters involved.

At the crux of the story are two very different men: the fast-talking, shady, yet forward-thinking promoter C.C. Pyle, always scheming to make a quick buck; and Andy Payne, a 20-year-old part-Cherokee Oklahoman, who entered the competition as a longshot, against many world-class athletes, hoping to save his family’s farm and win the heart of the girl of his dreams.

In re-creating this classic American drama, the author accessed exclusive, never-before-published material and the support of several descendants of the characters, including Andy Payne’s daughter and C.C. Pyle’s great-granddaughter.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #584637 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-07-10
  • Released on: 2007-07-10
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 328 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Pyle, a sports agent and promoter, came up with the idea of a footrace (mockingly known as the Bunion Derby) from Los Angeles to New York that promised $48,500 in cash, including $25,000 to the first-place winner. For a $125 entry fee, male participants got the chance for a nice payday while subjecting themselves to harsh weather, primitive housing and Pyle's ego and shady business practices. They also had to run 3,500 miles over 84 days (the equivalent of 40 miles a day) long before comfortable running shoes and sophisticated sports nutrition. Williams, a contributor to Entrepreneur magazine, has evocatively recreated a long-forgotten sports event, mixing colorful anecdotes from the race with vivid portraits of the runners. There's Brother John, a bearded zealot who raced in a sackcloth, and 20-year-old Andy Payne, a part-Cherokee Oklahoman who competed to pay off his family's farm and to win the attention of the girl he loved. What could have been one long injury report or a sappy piece of nostalgic nuttiness is a breezy, entertaining read that properly balances the runners' integrity with the comedy of errors that was Pyle's grand experiment and his life. Photos. (July)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
On March 4, 1928, 199 men set off from Los Angeles on foot. Their destination: New York City. It was the Bunion Derby, perhaps the most grueling contest in the golden age of endurance competitions, an era when dancing, flagpole sitting, eating, and even coffee drinking turned into tests of will. The race was the brainchild of huckster C. C. Pyle, who shares the focus of this fascinating account with some of the racers (especially young Andy Payne, who entered the derby in the name of true love). In a broader sense, though, author Williams tells the story of pre-Depression America, when the world seemed an exciting place, and when the horizon was bright. The race was an exhausting, punishing event (amazingly, more than 50 racers finished it), and Williams recounts the story with gusto, giving us a real sense of the physical and mental toll the competition took on its participants. Pyle comes off as a likable rogue, a classic Roaring Twenties, get-rich-quick kind of guy. The book is like a time capsule—and an extremely entertaining one at that. Pitt, David

Review

"Geoff Williams, a freelance writer from Ohio, meticulously and brilliantly captures the roughly 2,000-mile journey and the larger-than-life characters over 328 pages in C.C. Pyle's Amazing Foot Race: The True Story of the 1928 Coast-to-Coast Run Across America...The result is a fine, unlikely and intimate journey into the American past, across the deserts, mountains and plains with heroes bearing wild aspirations long since gone." - The Washington Post "...a fun story..." - Buffalo News "Williams relates the story with the proper mix of bemusement and amazement." - Cleveland Plain Dealer


Customer Reviews

Fascinating, fantastic book5
This was a wonderful journey---as a reader, if not for all the runners who entered this coast-to-coast run.

In the midst of so many people, and so much information, I appreciate the pacing of the story---how Geoff Williams introduced the many subplots and the many characters involved in those subplots, and then returned back to them throughout the book. Williams has a flair for building suspense, with bits of foreshadowing, so that you feel as if you are traveling along with this wildly diverse band of people.

The book has some truly playful, humorous moments---barely a page goes by without a creative turn of phrase or a well-placed jab at someone or something. At times, I found myself laughing out loud at various images that Williams brought forth. I don't think it's spoiling the plot to reveal that one image that stands out is of the runner who was so famished that he ate a candy bar, wrapper in all, on one especially grueling day.

It was also intriguing to see the backdrop of what was happening in the United States at the time---all of the endurance contests, as the Great Depression loomed on the horizon.

This isn't a book solely for sports fans, though they will certainly appreciate the grit required of the runners and the close involvement of no less a legendary character than Red Grange, "The Galloping Ghost."

More than that, it's a book for anyone interested in learning about this slice of American history, as well as some of those who helped embody this time in our nation's development.

It's best personified in the book's central character: Grange's agent and business partner, C.C. Pyle. Williams rightfully details some of the more dubious aspects of Pyle's background and character, but the author shows fair restraint in portraying the promoter so that he comes across in a balanced, maybe even sympathetic, light.

This is one of those books that you want to savor...as entertaining and intriguing as it was to read, I found myself slowing near the end, not quite ready for it to come to a close. I can only hope that it catches the attention of a movie studio and is converted to the silver screen. The idea isn't far-fetched. C.C. Pyle is a key figure in an upcoming George Clooney movie, Leatherheads, and Williams' treatment of the material certainly lends itself to a movie.

Just Incredible5
If this didn't really happen, I would never believe this story. People running marathon (or two) races - 25 to 50 miles - every day for months in horrible weather and terrain? It could only happen in the wild days of The Roaring Twenties in which people were obsessed with setting records.

Today, the conditions under which this incredible event took place, would never happen....for humane reasons, alone. Race organizer/director C.C. Pyle would be vilified and probably arrested!

Anyway, if you want to read a fascinating account of the capabilities of the human body and will to endure, this book will keep you riveted to your seat. I still can't believe this race actually happened!

The ORIGINAL "Survivor" tale4
Everything old really IS new again. The "reality series" of today have nothing on the bizarre endurance contests of the 1920s and early 1930s, which frequently provoked massive media coverage. This book describes one of the unjustly forgotten peaks of this esoteric genre: the International Transcontinental Foot Race of 1928, popularly known as the "Bunion Derby." 199 runners started from California with the goal of reaching Yankee Stadium (later, Madison Square Garden) in New York. Only 50 or so ultimately got there. The event, somewhat haphazardly organized by sports promoter C.C. Pyle, best known as Red Grange's manager, attracted plenty of flakes but also featured some seriously committed long-distance runners. Williams' narrative lays the whole story out for you in gory, blistered, benumbed detail. I could have asked for slightly better writing in a technical sense, but the tale is quite fascinating and will keep your attention till the end.