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The Marathon From Hell: Dust, Strychnine, and the Death of the American Dream on a St. Louis Dirt Road
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8233736131
- EAN9798233736131
- Date de parution12/03/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurLinda Balsamo
Résumé
Forget everything you thought you knew about Olympic spirit. In 1904, the St. Louis Marathon wasn't about glory; it was about surviving a spectacular blend of environmental apocalypse, chemical warfare, and sheer, unfiltered absurdity. Author Ismail Can Karademir, under the witty mantle of Funny History Bites, delivers a visceral, satirical, and strategically brilliant account of the "Marathon from Hell." It wasn't a race; it was a dark, hysterical test of the Gilded Age, played out at 32°C on a choking dirt road.
Witness the Chaos Unleashed: The Architect of Misery: James Sullivan, the arrogant bureaucrat who thought dehydration built character, providing only one water source in 24 miles. The "Scientific" Winner: Thomas Hicks, kept moving by a terrifying cocktail of strychnine injections, brandy, and raw egg whites until he was nearly dead and hallucinating. The Casual Runner: Andarín Carvajal, the Cuban postman in dress shoes who took a nap, ate rotten apples, and still finished fourth.
The Dust Lung Casualty: William Garcia, nearly choked to death by the cement-like silt kicked up by Olympic motorcars. The Feral Runner: Len Taunyane, the barefoot South African chased over a mile off-course by wild Missouri dogs. This book exposes the brutal reality behind the myth of Victorian resilience. Karademir uses his unique blend of strategic historical analysis and visceral narrative to prove that sometimes, the only way to win is to get off the road.
Forget Pacing. This Was About Survival.
Witness the Chaos Unleashed: The Architect of Misery: James Sullivan, the arrogant bureaucrat who thought dehydration built character, providing only one water source in 24 miles. The "Scientific" Winner: Thomas Hicks, kept moving by a terrifying cocktail of strychnine injections, brandy, and raw egg whites until he was nearly dead and hallucinating. The Casual Runner: Andarín Carvajal, the Cuban postman in dress shoes who took a nap, ate rotten apples, and still finished fourth.
The Dust Lung Casualty: William Garcia, nearly choked to death by the cement-like silt kicked up by Olympic motorcars. The Feral Runner: Len Taunyane, the barefoot South African chased over a mile off-course by wild Missouri dogs. This book exposes the brutal reality behind the myth of Victorian resilience. Karademir uses his unique blend of strategic historical analysis and visceral narrative to prove that sometimes, the only way to win is to get off the road.
Forget Pacing. This Was About Survival.











