Brian Donovan (2) (1941–2018)
Autor(a) de Hard Driving: The Wendell Scott Story
Para outros autores com o nome Brian Donovan, veja a página de desambiguação.
About the Author
Brian Donovan was a Newsday investigative reporter who won more than forty journalism awards, including two Pulitzer Prizes and Columbia University's Paul Tobenkin Award for reporting on racial and ethnic intolerance. Driving on the EMRA Vanderbilt Cup circuit, he won a season championship, as well mostrar mais as a track championship at Pennsylvania's Pocono Raceway and dozens of races from Canada to West Virginia. He gained exclusive access to Wendell Scott over the last fourteen months of Scott's life and interviewed more than two hundred individuals to capture this epic, previously untold American story. Brian died in 2018. Joe Posnanshi is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of six books, including Patero and The Secret of Golf. A longtime columnist for Sports Illustrated, NBC Sports, and The Kansas City Star, and currently senior writer for The Athletic, he was twice named the best sports columnist in America by the Associated Press Sports Editors. He lives in Charlotte, North Carolina, with his family. mostrar menos
Image credit: Brian Donovan
Obras de Brian Donovan
Etiquetado
Conhecimento Comum
- Data de nascimento
- 1941-03-11
- Data de falecimento
- 2018-06-20
- Sexo
- male
- Nacionalidade
- USA
- Local de nascimento
- Syracuse, New York, USA
- Causa da morte
- Alzheimer's disease
- Locais de residência
- Syracuse, New York, USA
Huntington, New York, USA - Educação
- Syracuse University (Bachelor's|Journalism)
- Ocupação
- journalist
racecar driver - Organizações
- Newsday (reporter)
- Premiações
- Pulitzer Prize (Investigative Reporting, 1995)
- Pequena biografia
- Was also part of the Newsday team that won the 1970 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service.
Membros
Resenhas
Estatísticas
- Obras
- 1
- Membros
- 41
- Popularidade
- #363,652
- Avaliação
- 4.0
- Resenhas
- 10
- ISBNs
- 20
Wendell Scott first raced in the lower levels of NASCAR in the early 1950's, shortly after Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier in Major League Baseball. But whereas Robinson had key support from major figures in MLB, Scott was pretty much on his own.
Pulitzer-Prize-winning journalist Brian Donovan presents a carefully-documented, balanced account of the career of the pioneering black NASCAR driver. He explores the complex social, political, and financial issues that surrounded the fortunes and misfortunes of Scott's racing career. We see bigoted villains; some heroes of fair play; a lot of people who simply followed the winds of their own financial and political self-interests; and many whose motivations and intentions are impossible to know for certain, and who may have deceived themselves about the fairness of Scott's treatment. Certainly the rural southern roots of NASCAR played a part in the pervasive difficulties Scott encountered -- even white drivers from outside the South often encountered a certain bias in those days, though not nearly to the degree and intensity that Scott experienced.
Donovan also chronicles aspects of Scott and his family away from the track, including his son Wendell, Jr.'s struggle with drug addiction; and Scott's disillusioning encounter with Hollywood. (The movie Greased Lightning was loosely -- and I mean very loosely -- based on his career.) And he attempts to analyze what Scott accomplished in his career:
He had established his niche in history as the racial pioneer who broke a tough sport's color barrier in a hostile time. He had become a favorite of many thousands of fans. He had won respect and affection from colleagues who included some of the world's best racers. He remains the only black driver ever to win at NASCAR's top level. And while he didn't go into racing for political or racial reasons, the bravery, hard work, and uncompromising grit he displayed over twenty-one years as a racer certainly helped to soften many people's prejudices in an era when American values stood at a decisive turning point.… (mais)