In 1928 two extraordinary Englishmen competed in an unprecedented event - a transcontinental road race across America that required them to run an average of 40 miles for 80 consecutive days. Despite being separated by class, education and age, Peter Gavuzzi and Arthur Newton became close friends and formed a successful business partnership as endurance athletes. They raced in 500-mile relays, in 24-hour events, in snowshoes and against horses; and they became the stars of a craze for endurance events that swept across depression-era North America and the most famous long-distance runners in the world. However, history has forgotten these two men, and in Running for Their Lives - in a story peopled with remarkable characters, unimaginable feats and tragic twists of fate - they only now receive the recognition they so richly deserve.
'A poignant account of unrecognised achievement'
Spectator
In 1928 two extraordinary Englishmen competed in an unprecedented event - a transcontinental road race across America that required them to run an average of 40 miles for 80 consecutive days.
Despite being separated by class, education and age, Peter Gavuzzi and Arthur Newton became close friends and formed a successful business partnership as endurance athletes. They raced in 500-mile relays, in snow shoes and against horses; they became the stars of a craze for endurance events that swept depression-era North America and the most famous long-distance runners in the world.
However, history has forgotten these two men, and in Running for Their Lives, in a story peopled with remarkable characters, unimaginable feats and tragic twists of fate, they only now receive the recognition they so richly deserve.
'Well-researched and entertaining? Whitaker's real achievement is to resurrect for recognition the careers of two genuine, if peripatetic, British sporting heroes'
Times Literary Supplement
'Remarkable'
New Statesman