Skip to content
Paperback The Runner: A True Account of the Amazing Lies and Fantastical Adventures of the Ivy League Impostor James Hogue Book

ISBN: 1582435049

ISBN13: 9781582435046

The Runner: A True Account of the Amazing Lies and Fantastical Adventures of the Ivy League Impostor James Hogue

Select Format

Select Condition ThriftBooks Help Icon

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: New

$14.21
Save $0.74!
List Price $14.95
Backordered
If the item is not restocked at the end of 90 days, we will cancel your backorder and issue you a refund.
Usually restocks within 90 days

Book Overview

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...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A New Nonfiction Classic

This book seems particularly relevant right now, with the literary world increasingly falling victim -- practically once a month -- to frauds, plagiarists and con artists. It's the true life story of a particularly colorful specimen. In his late 20's, basically a drifter living in Colorado, James Hogue decided to recreate himself as a charismatic genius and sports hero -- and he used his new identity to hustle his way into Princeton University as an undergrad. He was a complete fake, but as Samuels shows, that doesn't make him any less accomplished. His insane story tells you as much about our times, and about our elite institutions, as it does about the peculiar twists and turns of one individual's particular psyche. In America, the land of self-invention, the con man is often king, and this small book -- just about the same length as The Great Gatsby, one of Hogue's inspirations -- is a wonderful and strangely moving portrait of a true American original. David Samuels is well-known as an award-winning magazine journalist, and this, his first book, shows him at the top of his form. I recommend it highly.

A minor classic

Samuels has produced a minor classic of American journalism, a story too juicy and too much fun to be fiction. People spend their lives inventing themselves, and novelists can't compete with a self-invention like Hogue. "The Runner" captures him brilliantly.

Great book, fascinating subject

I couldn't put this book down, I finished it in one long sitting. It's an incredibly well-written & thoughtful look at a fascinating story, and a fascinating subject: the question of how sociopaths can pull off outrageous deceptions because they're simply not playing by the interpersonal rules that most of us assume are in effect.

The first book from one of our great writers

From his profile of Yasser Arafat to his recent article in the new Atlantic on paparazzi, David Samuels' great subject is the "comedian" - or, if you prefer, the conman; that is, that figure who recognizes our gullibility, sentimentality and ruthlessly takes advantage of it. James Hogue, the hero, or anti-hero, of Samuels' first book is in a sense the author's ur-comic, a con who pulled one over on one of the great and high institutions of American culture, Princeton. Hogue might not like how he turns out here, but thanks to Samuels he's been raised to the level of a literary legend, an American prototype - like Melville's Confidence Man, like the man who's going to represent the Dems in the 2008 election. This is a great book.

Great story, well told.

This is a totally fascinating book. People who have actually read this book love it. Ignore the one star reviews from the friends of the subject. David Samuels didn't get to be a writer for The New Yorker, Harpers, The Atlantic, etc by being a boring writer or a bad reporter. He sits squarely in the great tradition of new journalism pioneered by Joan Didion and Tom Wolfe. He is part of a dying breed of magazine journalists who bring craft and imagination to stories that lesser writers ream of. He writes beautifully. He tells a great story. This is book is smart, engaging, and insightful. What more could you ask for?
Copyright © 2023 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks® and the ThriftBooks® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured