Introduction
Chapter 1: The Decision for Munich
Chapter 2: “We Just Slid Into It”: Planning and Building for Munich
’72
Chapter 3: On the Eve of the Games
Chapter 4: Let the Games Begin
Chapter 5: Invasion of the Sanctuary
Chapter 6: Battlefield Fürstenfeldbruck
Chapter 7: The Games Go On
Epilogue
David Clay Large is professor of history at Montana State University. He has also taught at Berkeley, Smith College, and Yale University. He is the author of several acclaimed histories, including Nazi Games: The Olympics of 1936, Where Ghosts Walked: Munich’s Road to the Third Reich, and Berlin. An avid athlete, Large, when not writing, teaching, or parenting (he has a nine-year-old daughter), can often be found running the roads of Bozeman, Montana, and San Francisco, California, the two places he calls home.
David Clay Large's Munich 1972 is an almost ideal matching of
historian and subject. Mr. Large has written one excellent book
about Munich under the Nazis and another on the Berlin Olympics of
1936. Moreover, he was in Munich in 1972. In this superb chronicle,
Mr. Large evokes the febrile atmosphere of that time and place, as
the sporting festivities that were supposed to celebrate Germany's
return to the fellowship of democratic nations turned into a
nightmare: the ideology-driven murder of Jews on German soil. . . .
Many Germans still regard the Munich massacre as the darkest day in
the history of the Federal Republic, yet to date Germany has not
commemorated the victims properly. With the captivating Munich
1972, Mr. Large offers a memorial of sorts—and a reminder that,
long before 9/11, a war on Western civilization, emanating from the
Middle East, had already been declared.
*The Wall Street Journal*
Outstanding. . . . [A] meticulous reconstruction of the tragedy. .
. . Large has turned up fascinating material in archival research.
. . . Munich 1972 is a massively researched, eminently readable
history. Although his prose is calm and his approach evenhanded,
for most readers his book will evoke astonishment, exasperation,
and, finally, grief.
*Jewish Review of Books*
To commemorate the 40th anniversary of the 1972 Summer Olympics in
Munich, West Germany—where outstanding performances by U.S. swimmer
Mark Spitz and USSR gymnast Olga Korbut were overshadowed by the
slaying of 11 Israeli team members by Palestinian gunmen—Montana
State University history professor Large (Nazi Games: The Olympics
of 1936) provides a densely detailed look at what he calls
'history's first globally televised act of terrorism.' Using newly
released sources, he chronologically explores the political,
social, cultural, and athletic dimensions of the Games of the XX
Olympiad, focusing on the hostage crisis that began on Sept. 5 when
members of the Black September organization broke into the Olympic
Village's Israeli living quarters, claimed hostages, and demanded
the release of 236 Palestinian prisoners from Israeli jails. The
subsequent standoff and botched rescue attempt resulted in the
deaths of all the captives and most of their captors. Though the
deadly stalemate takes up the bulk of Large's book, and will
therefore make this comprehensive take on the games appeal
primarily to historians, the author doesn't forget his sports fans.
While the tragedy unfolded, the games continued on, and Large
devotes considerable attention to the many athletic feats and
conflicts.
*Publishers Weekly*
Large (history, Montana State Univ.; Nazi Games: The Olympics of
1936), a specialist on German history, here addresses the many
factors that resulted in the lax security at the 1972 Olympics,
thus facilitating the tragic assault on the Israeli athletes by the
Palestinian organization Black September. Large explores numerous
themes in his analysis, including economic costs, international
race relations, international and domestic security threats, and
pressures of the games themselves. Rather than losing the narrative
with so many themes, he writes with such depth and detail that each
element melds seamlessly with the others. VERDICT While seemingly a
daunting and complex subject, this is an encompassing, detailed,
and engaging account for serious readers not only of the Olympics
themselves and the Munich 1972 games, but of shifting international
pressures and the effects that historical and social conflicts can
apply to even declared apolitical events. Large’s emotions come
through in his judgment of lapses and of the terrorism we have
confronted over the years. Those interested in the multiple
shifting global influences on sports and politics will find this a
valuable addition to their collections.
*Library Journal*
David Clay Large has written a captivating history of the 1972
Munich Olympics. Munich 1972 is both terrific sporting history and
a gripping chronicle of the Black September terror attack that took
the lives of eleven Israeli Olympians. It is a tale of human
frailty, incompetence, and unintended consequences. It will surely
stand as the definitive history of a turning point in the Olympic
saga.
*Kai Bird, Pulitzer Prize–winning biographer and author of Crossing
Mandelbaum Gate*
This fluent, measured, and thorough book is a worthy successor to
David Large's fine earlier study of the Nazi Games in Berlin. Once
more, Large uncovers surprising twists in an ultimately tragic
story and adeptly skewers the pretensions and hypocrisies of the
modern Olympic movement.
*Peter Hayes, Northwestern University*
Read this book! Munich 1972 is a sad, important, morally
complicated story with many unexpected details and shocking
revelations. What makes it a page-turner, as well as an elemental
bit of 20th-century history, is that its author is a real
writer—sometimes caustic, always humane—as well as an eminent
historian of modern Germany. David Large, the wry professor, has
done it again.
*David Quammen, author of The Song of the Dodo and Spillover*
A gripping account of the ‘Olympics of Terror,’ when the games went
on, despite the tragedy that arguably signaled the new challenges
and dangers of our world. Well-researched and crafted, Munich 1972
is an excellent, haunting book, one that matters even more now.
*John Merriman, Yale University*
Superb book. . . . Large, an American scholar of contemporary
Germany, adds to his impressive stack of books with a gripping,
finely researched chronicle of those Games set against the backdrop
of the tumultuous politics of the 1960s and 1970s.
*The National*
This timely book reminds readers that politics have always shaped
the Olympic Games. A respected authority on the Third Reich, Large
explains how the XX Olympic Games in Munich marked a turning point
in Olympic and sports history generally. He thoroughly details the
murder of Israeli athletes by pro-Palestine Black September
terrorists. The author's description is especially valuable because
he places the attack within the larger contexts of contemporary
international tensions (Cold War, Vietnam War protests, African
decolonization, Middle Eastern conflicts) and West Germany's
attempt to distance itself from the so-called ‘Nazi Olympics’ of
1936 Berlin. Munich 1972 also describes the first superexpensive
Olympic Games, complete with artist competitions, extravagant
ceremonies, and huge building projects. Large pays great attention
to the competition itself and writes vibrantly about many sports.
The book therefore nicely blends the work of scholar and fan. . . .
This thoughtful, readable piece on a major event of the modern era
will appeal to many people. Summing Up: Highly recommended.
*CHOICE*
Munich 1972: Tragedy, Terror, and Triumph at the Olympic Games is
by far the most comprehensive treatment of the Munich tragedy. Just
about every detail, personality, and emotion is given both a
caustic as well as humane treatment. Large’s exquisite and eloquent
literary style makes this book a very reader friendly book, a
page-turner from beginning to end; a joy to read, yet a somber and
sober literary experience to behold and remember.
*The Jewish Star*
This is a detailed account of the Games, focusing on the lax
security measures that lead to the attack on Israeli athletes.
Large provides a complete recounting of the games, from the
decision of the International Olympic Committee to select Munich as
a site to the closing ceremony. A German history specialist at
Montana State University, Large’s analysis is all encompassing
including both domestic and international terror information. This
highly detailed account is for anyone wanting an inside look at
what goes on behind the scenes at the Olympics.
*Pekin Daily Times*
The most scarring Olympics are covered in the exceedingly good
Munich 1972: Tragedy, Terror, and Triumph at the Olympic Games.
David Clay Large, a Montana State University history professor,
writes with bite, had access to new sources, and brings intense
context.
*Boston Globe*
A detailed and well-written history of the Munich Olympics. The
massacre naturally plays a central role but the book is much more
comprehensive . . . as a chronicle of a problematic Olympic era
where politics were central before, during, and after the Games.
Large succeeds by focusing on the sporting events rather than
politics, telling a compelling story from multiple perspectives. .
. . His book will hold great appeal not only for those who remember
the dramatic events of these Games, but also for those interested
in Olympic history from an organizational, economic, and political
perspective.
*Idrottsforum.org*
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