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Book review: 'The Man Who Made History' is a feel-good biography of Olympics champion Neeraj Chopra

Veteran sports journalist Norris Pritam's book's release is well-timed as Chopra prepares to train ahead of the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris, where he will have to defend his title. The book is, however, not the first such account of his family and friends and there is a glaring omission.

December 03, 2023 / 16:27 IST
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Olympic champion Neeraj Chopra became the first Indian to win a gold in javelin throw at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021.

Veteran sports journalist Norris Pritam’s book The Man Who Made History: The Neeraj Chopra Story (Bloomsbury, 2023) is an informative, feel-good biography that fans of the reigning Olympic champion in javelin throw would take an instant liking to. The non-technical language would also appeal to readers who do not understand or follow the sport but are proud of the athlete for the glory he earned for India at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021.

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This book benefits greatly from the author’s professional experience spanning four decades. Though he missed being at Tokyo, where Chopra became the first Indian ever to win an individual gold medal in athletics, Pritam has covered six Olympic Games, from Atlanta in 1996 to Rio De Janeiro in 2016, as well as six Asian Games, Commonwealth Games and World Championships. The expertise translates into writing that exudes authority and ease.

Pritam’s passion for the subject also comes from his own “affair with athletics” that began in the late 1960s and “matured into a full-blown romance” over forty years. He reveals, “During the National Open Championship in Calicut in 1973-74, I ran the 3,000-metre steeplechase. Competing with other state-level champions, and the Indian national champion and 1974 Asian Games silver medallist Gurmej Singh, I ended up in sixth place.” Later, Pritam got a job as a supervisor at Telco. He was expected to perform on the track, and not in the office.