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The Runner
The Runner: A True Account of the Amazing Lies and Fantastical Adventures of the Ivy League Impostor | David Samuels
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The Runner tells the remarkable true story of a teenage drifter and petty thief named James Hogue who woke up one cold winter morning in a storage shed in Utah and decided to start his life anew. Re-imagining himself as a self-educated ranch hand named Alexi Indris-Santana who read Plato under the stars and could run a mile in under four minutes, Hogue applied and was accepted to Princeton University, where he excelled academically, made the track team, and became a member of the elite Ivy Club. Echoing both The Great Gatsby and The Talented Mr. Ripley, the story of Hogue’s life before and after he went to Princeton is both an immensely affecting portrait of a dreamer and a striking indictment of the Ivy League “meritocracy” to which Hogue wanted so badly to belong. Drawing elegant parallels between Hogue’s ambitions and the American myth of self-invention, while also examining his own uneasy identification with his troubled subject, David Samuels has fashioned a powerful metaphor for the corruptions of the American dream, revealing exceptional gifts as a reporter and literary stylist.
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Fascinating! True but hard to believe tale about the man who wasted his genius ability and his superior athletic ability by the curious decision of becoming an Ivy League imposter. How he managed to trick Princeton admissions and his dorm mates when he was so much older is incredible. The life of crime and how it came to light is riveting, if slightly slow during the first lap.