Michael Kranish is an investigative political reporter for The Washington Post. He is the coauthor of the New York Times bestseller Trump Revealed, John F. Kerry, The Real Romney, and the author of The World’s Fastest Man and Flight from Monticello: Thomas Jefferson at War. He was the recipient of the Society of Professional Journalists Award for Washington Correspondence in 2016. Visit MichaelKranish.com.
“What captures the reader is the insight into [Major Taylor's]
complex life, the rough and colorful characters whom he raced
against, the tender and trusted relationships he developed in an
often brutal world. I felt as though I were on the starting line
with Taylor as his competitors taunted him, and in the belly of the
peloton as his rivals blocked and barreled into him. I could feel
his torn and burned skin after he came crashing
down.” —The Wall Street Journal
“For anyone interested in cycling, technology or social history…a
fascinating ride… Kranish has done historians and fans a service by
reminding us that such immortals as Joe Louis, Jesse Owens, Serena
Williams and Tiger Woods all followed in Major Taylor’s wake. In
the lingo of bike racing, his ultimate legacy was as a pacesetter.”
—Washington Post
“The World’s Fastest Man… restores the memory of one of the first
black athletes to overcome the drag of racism and achieve national
renown.” —The New York Times Book Review
“A fantastic exploration of the life of an athlete who should be a
household name, but isn’t.” — The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
“Journalist Kranish weaves the fascinating and interconnected
history of the rise and demise of professional cycling with the
life story of African American cycling hero [Major Taylor]… Kranish
mixes sports and history, along with the realities of racism, in a
valuable addition for all libraries with collections touching on
those areas.” —Library Journal
“[Major Taylor’s] legacy was in the quiet athletes, like Jackie
Robinson, who endured endless abuse to break baseball’s color
barrier. And… in athletes like Muhammad Ali, who refused to accept
limits imposed by white men. It’s also in every child, black or
white, boy or girl, who jumps on a bike, sprints down a track or
plunges into a pool with one goal: To go faster.” —The New
York Daily News
“A must read.” —PELOTON Magazine
“A welcome contribution to sports history, drawing attention to two
extraordinary athletes for whom recognition is long overdue.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“Both inspiring and heartbreaking, this is an essential
contribution to sports history.” —Booklist, starred review
“A sharp-eyed account of a nearly forgotten African-American sports
legend.” —Publishers Weekly
“In this original, surprising, and important new book, Michael
Kranish brings a man and an era back to vivid life. The story of
Major Taylor—sportsman, bicyclist, pioneer—is in many ways the
story of America. Through his speed and his grace, Taylor emerged
as a critical figure that showed a world dominated by Jim Crow
and abhorrent theories of innate racial disparities that the
prevailing climate of opinion was as wrong as it could be.” —Jon
Meacham, winner of the Pulitzer Prize and author
of The Soul of America: The Battle for Our Better
Angels.
“Michael Kranish has written an extraordinary book about an
extraordinary figure whose place in American history could very
easily have been lost to us all. But he does much more than
illuminate the improbable story of a heroic black athlete. He
throws open a window on a nearly forgotten version of America when
a rising tide of hardship engulfed the lives of millions of black
citizens, even as hope faintly glimmered. Major Taylor—a
superstar at the zenith of his achievements—inspired both black and
white Americans and became, too briefly, a last flicker of
possibility for a 20th century in which ‘justice for all’ might
still have become a reality. It is only through works like
this that we can see just how much America lost when our society
turned so completely down a path of total racial oppression in the
20th century. We also are reminded of the generations of black
Americans whose talents and contributions to our national life were
so cruelly suppressed. Major Taylor represents a very different
America that could have been—a better one we sadly chose not to
be.” —Douglas A. Blackmon, winner of the Pulitzer
Prize and author of Slavery by Another Name: The
Re-Enslavement of Black People in America from the Civil War
to World War II
“Jack Johnson, Jesse Owens, Jackie Robinson, Althea Gibson— the
world recognizes the names of these trailblazers. Now, Michael
Kranish shows that a new name should be added to the list. The
World’s Fastest Man is a riveting account of the life of Major
Taylor, the cyclist who was our country’s ‘First Black Sports
Hero.’ Kranish brings Taylor’s story alive with vivid prose and
extensive research. This is not just a story about Taylor, it is a
story about his times; when racial prejudice blighted the lives of
millions of Americans, and made their journeys through life far
more difficult than they should have been.” —Annette Gordon-Reed,
winner of the Pulitzer Prize and author of The Hemingses of
Monticello: An American Family
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