Voittamaton : Kertomus suomalaisesta sisusta olympialaisissa kisoissa by Kojo
"Voittamaton : Kertomus suomalaisesta sisusta olympialaisissa kisoissa" by Kojo is a novel written in the early 20th century. Set in post–civil war Finland, it follows farm boy Matti Lassila, whose relentless self-training and quiet sisu carry him from local meets toward the national stage and an Olympic marathon dream. The story pits genuine perseverance and humility against vanity and excuses, while a shy romance with a nurse humanizes his drive. The opening
of the novel traces Matti’s rise from a hardworking peasant’s son—stealing minutes to train, running hills at dawn, throwing between chores—despite family skepticism and village gossip. After serving as a brave scout in the civil war, he returns to competition, finds motivation in a boastful shopkeeper, and at a midsummer meet beats him on the track, sensing his own potential. Persuading his father to let him go to Helsinki by literally outrunning the family horse, he travels with two young athletes; at Eläintarha he places modestly in the pentathlon but surges to second in the 10,000 meters behind Nurmi, prompting Pihkala to hail him as a natural marathoner. A tentative bond with a wartime nurse flickers—letters fail, a chance reunion follows—while he doubles down on rigorous winter training through slush and snow, drawing amused reactions from townsfolk and police. As spring arrives, he launches a solo 40‑kilometer test run feeling light and strong, and the excerpt breaks off mid-race. (This is an automatically generated summary.)