The Austerity Olympics: When the Games Came to London in 1948
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Average customer review:Product Description
'An enthralling account' Independent 'A fascinating book...researched with an awesome thoroughness' Daily Telegraph 'Hampton's excellent book should be compulsory reading for everyone involved in the 2012 London Olympics' Daily Mail Critic's Choice The budget for the 2012 Olympic village alone is already a billion pounds short. The likelihood of corporate sponsorship recedes with every day of the credit crunch. How on earth are we going to match the opening and closing ceremonies of Beijing, let along top them? Fortunately, London has been through just such hard times before in the run-up to an Olympics, and in 1948 it showed just how to run a fantastic Games on a tiny budget - indeed, make them all the better for it. Janie Hampton's book about the last time the Olympics came to London is a tale of female competitors sewing their own kit, teams ferried to the Games on red London buses and billeted in Spartan hostels or even army camps, and the main stadium being hastily cleared of greyhound racing to allow the athletics to take place. The total budget was GBP760,000, great athletes like Emil Zatopek and Fanny Blankers-Koen thrilled the crowds, and at the end a profit was turned! This is a book that becomes more relevant and ironically entertaining every day nearer to 2012. Janie Hampton is also the author of a bestselling biography of Joyce Grenfell. She lives in Oxford
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #26550 in Books
- Published on: 2009-05-25
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 368 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
'Hampton's excellent book should be compulsory reading for everyone involved in the 2012 London Olympics' 'A fascinating book... researched with an awesome thoroughness' --Daily Mail Critic's Choice
'A fascinating book... researched with an awesome thoroughness' --Daily Telegraph
'An enthralling account'. --The Independent
Review
'The tale of the Games is told here with spirit and touching humour.'
Review
'excellent'
Customer Reviews
Glorious Games
I read this book from cover to cover including the appendices and I just loved it. Janie Hampton has managed to capture the essence and quintessence of all the different sports. When she was writing about athletics I found myself convinced that she was an athletics correspondent, on the rowing - well she was up there with Dan Topolski and on the riding, wrestling and sailing I just knew I was reading things written by an expert. I fell in love with Fanny Blankers Koehn, I envied the US diving girls their glorious silky bathing suits, I was entranced by the art of fencing and I wished I'd been in Torbay. The facts, figures and details are so cleverly woven in to the tale that it works really well.
This is a lovely book. It is not often that I can say that unreservedly but it is certainly the case with Janie Hampton's story of the 1948 Olympics. And a story it is, for the extraordinary thing we learn about those Olympic Games is that they really were as homespun as the title of the book suggests. After the Second World War there was on the one hand a tremendous weariness in Britain but on the other there was still a good dose of the make-do and mend culture which contained an innate degree of optimism which pervaded the lead up to the Olympics and went on throughout the Games themselves. The great delight of this book is that it makes you feel as if Janie Hampton was there herself.
First hand accounts from spectators as well as athletes give a worm's eye view of events while Janie Hampton's excellent research and understanding of the time provides the balancing bird's eye view of the historian. So many of the athletes were true amateurs in the way that most readers would be able to identify with and yet they come across as passionate about their sport, professional in their desire to win but refreshingly honest about how much training they had been able to do. Dorothy Manley, one of three British women runners, confessed that her preparation was very low key as she had a full time job in the city as a typist: `I could only train after work for a couple of hours, four evenings a week.' and yet she was competing for Britain against one of the greatest women athletes of all time, the Dutchwoman Fanny Blankers-Koen. You really feel you get to know these women reading this book, as you do the men. And it's not just the Czech runner, Kartopek, with his agonisingly pained style of running but Halliday, the weightlifter who, three years before the Games, had been released from a Japanese POW camp weighing under five stone. These athletes come alive in The Austerity Olympics, as do the boy scouts, the spectators, the organisers and even the journalists managed to make me smile.
I strongly recommend this book to anyone who is interested in sport, to anyone who has an interest in the period and to everyone else who needs a really good book to take on holiday or to give as a Christmas present.
When Olympians were not so spoiled
I would highly recommend this book. It is really well written, a fascinating topic and will have you laughing all the way round the athletics track. The author has clearly researched her subject well and found some stories which will amuse and entertain even those, like me, who loathe sport in action. In the light of the preparations for the impending Chinese Olympics and all the brouhaha surrounding them, it is a delight to be reminded of how we dull stodgy Brits knew how to put on a good show despite all kinds of deprivation.
A wonderful revelation of the period.
What a great book. More a social commentary than a sports book, but a real lesson on what can be achieved given the political will - combined with genuine public support. Should be required reading for every member of the IOC and the British Government. Simply serves to highlight the obsenity of the 2012 proposals.



