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Karl Drlica

Author and Molecular Biologist

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Drlica author photo

New Release

Bitten by the Rowing Bug

Bitten by the Rowing Bug is about a rowing program on an untamed Oregon river that taught self-reliance to college students during the mid-twentieth century. It is also about a legally blind jack-of-all-trades who drove that program forward for more than thirty years.
Initially, rowing was offered only to male students, because society frowned on women sweating and fiercely competing. Rowing eroded that attitude and brought equality to team sports. The characters and events that shaped this era of American history reflect a time when self-sufficiency was highly valued: a rowing program challenged by the river taught practical skills, and competing as a team inspired students to achieve collectively. After several decades of effort, varsity status was achieved for both men and women, despite attempts by some University administrators to terminate the largely volunteer program and repurpose the dozen or so buildings at the river. 
Gleaned from interviews, personal experience, and a rich archive, Bitten by the Rowing Bug gives the reader a sense of the thrill and challenge of using human power to skim over the water surface—all with the added demand of doing it faster than someone else. 

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ISBN: 979-8886793406

Publisher: Luminare Press

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 A turbulent river, a dearth of funding, makeshift equipment—these were just a few of the challenges faced by Oregon State crew as it struggled to emerge as one of the earliest West Coast rowing programs. Karl Drlica draws on numerous interviews and troves of original documents, including the diary of his coach-father, to write the definitive history of Oregon State rowing —a fascinating read filled with untold stories of creativity and grit.

Dotty Brown, author of Boathouse Row, Waves of Change in the Birthplace of American Rowing

Praise & Reviews

As a member of the second iteration of Cal Women’s Crew in the 1970s, I found the history and anecdotes which Coach Karl Drlica tells of the pioneering efforts at establishing a women’s crew at Cal in the 1960s fascinating!  With no precedents, Art Sachs and Drlica had to figure out how to coach women as well as how to acquire equipment, a boathouse, get the crew to races, etc. all on a non-existent budget and outright animosity from the rowing and academic establishments.  The coaches weren’t the only ones to have huge obstacles to overcome.  The brave, pioneering women who took on this challenge speak for themselves in quotes from several members of the team about their largely unsupported journey to becoming athletes in a difficult sport and time.  Throughout this section of the book, Drlica also blends in stories of those politically turbulent times and other aspects of life on the Berkeley campus, making a very interesting read for all, rowers and non-rowers alike.

Jane Toro
Cal Women’s Crew 1974-76

This is a fine and comprehensive book that not only tells a story of persistence, courage and fortitude, but expresses a love for the sport that is the epitome of teamwork: rowing.  Coach Karl Drlica is legendary, and deservedly so.  It is fair to say that without him, generations of students would not have rowed and many of their parents would not have also become rowers.  As someone who has benefitted richly from his legacy, I commend this book to rowers and non-rowers alike.  

John Frohnmayer, Chairman Emeritus, National Endowment for the Arts and author of the Lara Cole Adventure Series.

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About Karl Drlica

Karl Drlica is a molecular biologist who has written three science books for the general public, most notably Understanding DNA and Gene Cloning: A Guide for the Curious. He has been named an Alumni Fellow at Oregon State University where he learned to row. He also coached a women’s crew at the University of California. He now sculls as a member of the Berkeley Paddling and Rowing Club. The richness of an archive he inherited compelled him to write Bitten by the Rowing Bug.  He and his wife, Ilene Wagner, who also rowed, live in Northern California; they have two adult sons. 

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