April 2016
Intermediate to advanced
240 pages
7h
English
Halfway up Heartbreak Hill—the most famous incline along the route of the world’s most prestigious footrace—a local resident held a handwritten sign that said, “Go Mary Wittenberg!”
While many of her fellow runners overlooked that particular encouragement, more than a few marathoners knew exactly who Mary was. As the director of the world’s largest marathon, Wittenberg was arguably the most famous recreational runner on that course.
Sometime in the late morning on April 21, 2014, Wittenberg crested Heartbreak Hill, looking forward to the last 10 kilometers of the Boston Marathon. She crossed the finish line at 3:32:55, in the top third of the field, the seventy-seventh woman in her age group. She learned that ...
Read now
Unlock full access