Showing posts with label boxing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label boxing. Show all posts

Kings of the Ring: The History of Heavyweight Boxing Review

Kings of the Ring: The History of Heavyweight Boxing
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Kings of the Ring: The History of Heavyweight Boxing ReviewI must admit I picked up `Kings of the Ring' with a little trepidation. I like my sports books to be correct in every detail as well as sparkling and original, and I was concerned this might be coffee table fare - great on pictures but light on text. I found myself extremely pleasantly surprised.
The book is broken up into chapters on all the heavyweight champions and a few who never won universal recognition, from the bareknuckle days to the present, and yet it manages a seamlessly coherent narrative. In the early 20th century, for example, the theme is one of white (mainly Irish-American) men striving to the top while battling to keep African Americans out of the loop. This allows the author, Gavin Evans, to delve deeper than any other I have read into the lives of some of the great fighters who were frozen out of the title race (Peter Jackson, Sam Langford and Harry Wills) and also to look at the failings of the great champions with an unblinking eye.
He clearly admires many of these men and the way they fought, but he never allows that to blind him to their many faults. As he writes in his introduction, "In retrospect their flaws probably seem more remarkable than in their own airbrushed times: the extreme racism of most of the early white gloved champions, the violence against women and other men, the greed, the stupidity, the links with organised crime, the alcohol and the drugs." All of this is exposed without recourse to euphemism or, indeed, for hyperbole and in some cases the picture that emerges is genuinely shocking. For example, I was raised to think of Jack Dempsey as a sweetheart outside the ring as much as he was a killer inside the ropes, but, sadly, this book presents a very different picture of the man: a violent, racist, bully for much of his life. Jack Johnson, Joe Louis and even Rocky Marciano also emerge more flawed, or rather more rounded, than the bowdlerised versions of their lives I'd previously encountered.
Despite all this, Evans clearly adores the old heroes - as much for their flaws as for their assets - and he lovingly provides vivid details of their fights and their lives as champions. In the end, though, he emerges as something of a modernist, taking the view that boxing, like every other sport, has moved on. He ends by predicting, tongue presumably not too far from cheek, that in 50 years time we'll be saying: "Ah, Tyson, Holyfield, Lewis, Klitschko - they don't make them like that any more."
So, definitely worth a cover-to-cover read and on top of that the pictures are truly wonderful. I've been following boxing for many moons but most of the pictures of the old champions were ones I'd never seen before, and they include contemporary cartoons and other illustrations. Highly recommended. *****Kings of the Ring: The History of Heavyweight Boxing Overview

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The Best of the Ring: The Bible of Boxing Review

The Best of the Ring: The Bible of Boxing
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The Best of the Ring: The Bible of Boxing ReviewThis new expanded edition of the already marvelous book includes interesting articles on Mike Tyson's road to recovery. It includes photos of greats like: Ali, Frazier, Holmes, Duran, Hagler, Leonard, Pryor and Arguello. It chronicles some of the best fights in boxing history like Hagler-Leonard, Ali-Frazier I-III, Duran-Leonard, Hagler-Hearns and Leonard-Hearns I-II. This edition includes reviews articles reprinted from the classic issues of the Ring. This is one bible any sports fan should not be without.The Best of the Ring: The Bible of Boxing Overview

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The Boxer's Heart: Lessons from the Ring Review

The Boxer's Heart: Lessons from the Ring
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The Boxer's Heart: Lessons from the Ring ReviewI myself am a female boxer. It not only taught me things my trainer never did but also helped keep me going everytime a guy at the gym laughed at me or did something like tell me to get out of the ring when sparring. Very few people can make it in the sport of boxing especially women and I was so relieved to find out I'm not the only girl out there going through or who went through the pain, thrill, excitement, and struggle into the male dominated world of boxing.The Boxer's Heart: Lessons from the Ring Overview

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The Ring Review

The Ring
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The Ring ReviewI really enjoyed the Ring.
15yr old Mardie Wolfe is struggling to find her footing. The book opens with her being driven home by the police after being charged with drunk and disorderly conduct. While on punishment, Mardie is forced to go to the gym with her step mother, Amy. At the gym Mardie discovers boxing. On that first night she simply watched.
"On the drive home, I smiled in the dark, tapping my foot like a maniac. I loved the smell of sweat and leather in the training room. I loved the sound of the small hanging bag going bip-bip-bip, bip-bip-bip, and the dry slap aganist the floor." (From ARC)
Amy helps Mardie convince her dad its okay for girls to box. Mardie takes to the lessons but boxing isn't a sport that comes easy. Even though Mardie's discovered the ring, the chaos that is life doesn't stop. She still misses her mom who died in a car accident. Trying to do what she can to please her dad. Living in the shadow of her lacrosse star, older brother, Michael. A boyfriend who wants more then Mardie is willing to give. A bestfriend who won't return her phone calls. Those are only a few of the issues Mardie must deal with, and yes its a lot but somehow the author makes it work.
The transtions are smooth, the storylines uncluttered. There is something about Mardie I really liked. I could feel her frustrations and self doubt. Mardie is far from perfect, she outs her brother to their parents out of jealousy. Now the Wolfe family must adjust to this new truth. Mardie spent more time training, getting the technique down then in the ring. There was something very honest and fitting about that. I really enjoyed the time Mardie spent with Kitty the trainer and the other girls. All the training is leading up to a tournament in Denver. Mardie lost her first fight, there are somethings even training can't help.
"But Dad didn't think I was good enough to come watch. I felt like I was right back in the gym, that night when Ben and Sam saw me in the ring. Huge, stupid looking gloves hung at the end of long skinny arms. I looked like a freak" (from ARC)
I think a lot of girls will be able to relate to that feeling of not measuring up. It's not a new theme but the ring is, this book tells girls its okay to put on a pair of gloves. The action in the ring is very good. I loved the sparring Mardie did with the other girls in her gym. The author writing is good and she avoids stereotypical pitfalls. One of the other boxers, a latina, Shireen lives with her mother and younger siblings. When Shireen is asked about her dad, my first thought was uh-oh. Will he be in A) jail, B)dead or C)never in the picture. I was very happy to see it was D) none of the above. Shireen's dad in the reserves and was deployed for the second time.
Pyron truly committed to Mardie. By the end Mardie finds her rhythm inside and outside of the ring. She can stand up to the other girls in the ring and to the classmates who mocked her, without her knees buckling. This looks like the first book in a series and I hoping that is the case. There is much growth protential for Mardie Wolfe and all of Kitty's girls. I look forward to reading moreThe Ring Overview

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Ring of Hate: Joe Louis Vs. Max Schmeling: The Fight of the Century Review

Ring of Hate: Joe Louis Vs. Max Schmeling: The Fight of the Century
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Ring of Hate: Joe Louis Vs. Max Schmeling: The Fight of the Century ReviewAuthor, Patrick Myler, a great boxing historian, found himself a great subject: the second Joe Louis - Max Schmeling fight in 1938. Has there ever been a sporting event filled with such natural potential for drama? Max Scheming, the glowering "Black Ulan from the Rhine" promoted by non other that Nazi Propaganda Minister, Joseph Goebbels as the shinning example of racially pure German manhood, vs. Joe Louis, the poor black, sharecroppers son from Alabama. Add to this mix the fact the Schmeling had completely dominated Louis in a previous meeting, handing the Brown Bomber his only defeat on his seemingly unstoppable march to the heavyweight championship.
And what a fight it was. There has probably never been such fine destruction machine as was Joe Louis that night. Not even Iron Mike at his best could rival the ruthless savaging that Louis turned loose on the German. Watching a film of it this many years later, it still captures the viewer in a kind of primal terror. It looks for all the world like someone literally being beaten to death. The lack of sound only increases the horror, watching Schmeling screaming silently as Louis delivers body blows. By the end of the fight, Louis had literally broken his back as well as his spirit: Schmeling suffered three fractured vertebra.
The problem I have with the book is that Myler doesn't harness the natural drama of the event. The focus and pace of the book is all wrong, with the fight itself occupying a single chapter in the middle, with the bulk of the book describing the contrasting careers of the two fighters. The author, in fact, seems determined to tell his story without flare. In quoting the great sports writers of the day, like Grantland Rice and Henry Mclemore, Myler hopes to give us an example of the overheated prose of the day. "What such sensitive souls seemed to forget, or chose to ignore, was that Louis was simply doing a job, and doing it to the best of his ability," sniffs the author.
Louis just "doing a job"? Nonsense. Louis often said himself that by the time he climbed into the ring, he hated the German. Further, Louis admitted that Schmeling was the only man he had consciously wished to hurt during a fight. Louis was doing something much more than simply delivering a professional job of boxing. Watch the film of the fight if you ever get the chance. Joe wasn't simply trying to win a boxing contest. He was trying to punish the German as brutally as possible.
What Myler has forgotten in this book is something men like Grantland Rice lived by: readers love drama. Ironically enough, the passages from the old sports writing greats, while included dismissively, are the most passionate and exciting in the book.
So why give it four stars? Because Myler is an extremely worthwhile boxing historian, and he manages to give a very interesting portrait of the two combatants. By books end, Max Schmeling emerges as a man of great integrity and class. He risked much in Nazi Germany, using his status as national sports hero to save many Jewish friends from the death camps, even hiding two Jewish friends in his house during Kristallnacht. When pressed by Goebbels to fire his Jewish manager, Joe Jacobs, he flatly refused.
I learned much about Joe Louis as well. Myler describes all of Louis' well-known flaws: the womanizing, the utter failings as husband and father, the drug addiction, all told without flinching. Yet Myler manages to convey the thing about Joe Louis that was touching as well. He was always flatly honest, whether giving an opponent in the ring credit or admitting his own failings as a father, husband, and ultimately a man.
By the end of their lives, the two former foes were close friends. Schmeling always sent Louis money over the years, through all of Joe's business and tax troubles, and in fact seemed to genuinely love the man who had once broken his back in the ring. Myler missed the mark on the drama of the fight, but the lives of the two fighters he does up very nicely. -Mykal BantaRing of Hate: Joe Louis Vs. Max Schmeling: The Fight of the Century Overview

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Only the Ring Was Square Review

Only the Ring Was Square
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Only the Ring Was Square ReviewIf you're looking to kill a few hours reading an interesting guy give details about the boxing scene from 1960 to 1980, and about how the lopsided matches people wanted him to make were a problem back then, and how sleazy Don King is, this is a good book. A 'Why not?' for anyone who likes to read about fighting.Only the Ring Was Square Overview

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King of the Ring: How to Use Your Gym Equipment and Other Tricks of the Trade Review

King of the Ring: How to Use Your Gym Equipment and Other Tricks of the Trade
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King of the Ring: How to Use Your Gym Equipment and Other Tricks of the Trade ReviewThis book, written by martial arts legend Benny Urquidez, consists mainly of pictures of Benny using various boxing and martial arts equipment. But there is very little detail provided: a typical page might show, for instance, the author about to throw a side kick, and then a picture of him landing a side kick, but there is virtually no supporting text or pictures to tell a beginner what happens inbetween. In short, the book shows A and shows B, but nothing about how to get from A to B.
This would be a worthwhile book for someone who already has a firm knowledge of the basics and who is looking for some additional drills: I found that the section on using focus gloves and Thai pads was worth the price of the book.
The book ends with a longish description of Urquidez's extraordinary ring record.
A final note: the book is "blurbed" on the back page by virtually every significant American martial artist, all of whom positively gush in praise. It seems clear to me that none of them actually saw or read the book before "blurbing" it: it is very far from being "a guide to living" as one reviewer put it.King of the Ring: How to Use Your Gym Equipment and Other Tricks of the Trade Overview

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Battling Siki: A Tale of Ring Fixes, Race, and Murder in the 1920s Review

Battling Siki: A Tale of Ring Fixes, Race, and Murder in the 1920s
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Battling Siki: A Tale of Ring Fixes, Race, and Murder in the 1920s ReviewProfessor Peter Benson is a former boxer himself who came up the hard way, his father a Marine boxing coach who had his own son in the ring from the time he was a teen. "I dreaded those time when my dad would come home and suddenly sprung on me that some friend of his had a PAL or YMCA tournament lined up in a nearby town, and wouldn't I like to fill in for some kind who was sick (yeah, sick my @ss, I thought--try afraid)?" Stationed in Dakar (Senegal) on a Fulbright teaching gig, Benson noticed a pasteboard poster of a fierce African fighter, and learned that in Senegal they still idolize their homeboy, "Battling Siki," who had left Senegal and gone to Europe and beat Georges Charpentier, who was sort of the Maurice Chevalier of boxing.
This set Benson into asking himself why in the name of forgotten history had he never heard of Battling Siki, for he was a boy he grew up cutting his teeth on Bill Stern and his books for boys on famous boxing stories. When he returned to Stern's dog eared book he found out that, yes, Siki was in it for sure, but portrayed as a combination of a ninny and a savage. The present biography is a noble attempt to restore the real Battling Siki and to combat the legends and the misinformation inculcated around his name.
Nothing is too petty for Benson to dispute, for example, he launches immediately into refuting the idea that Siki was too ignorant to have heard of St. Patrick's Day. Benson shows us that racist promoters and an upset French boxing fraternity (aghast that their white boy had been beaten by an African athlete) had threatened to strip Siki of his precious boxing license, and that Dublin, on St. Patrick's Day, was the only place left to him to fight. He had indeed been backed into a corner. As we know from studying the career of Jack Johnson (whose reign preceded Siki's by perhaps 12-15 years), the white infrastructure of pugilism did not like seeing a black man smile in the ring.
And Siki, like Johnson, compounded his sins by marrying a white woman and in general carrying on as though he was the champion of the world. Benson compares his unsettling appearance to the "menace" claimed by many when Sonny Liston knocked out Floyd Patterson. And a "gangsta" image comparable to Mike Tyson's was foisted on him by the popular press. Benson puts it all in context, showing, for example, that his ownership of two cute little lion cubs was not all that unusual at the time, for it had become an affectation of many boxers, not just black ones, to parade unusual pets. (Siki's cute little cubs ate a dog during boxing practice one day at the ring. Oops!)
Benson is a vivid writer and brings you right back into the roaring twenties with a powerful wit and a knack for research that hits home every time. You'll learn not only about Siki but a whole host of other great personalities of the day, from Jack Dempsey to Kid Norfolk. And beyond the ring, you'll encounter the predominant culture from new angles. You'll see why some people of color preferred if at all possible to "pass," and you'll see the American South through the eyes of a king in slow motion decline. Even the sympathetic seemed to see Siki in terms of "gratuitous animal analogies: Siki as ape, Siki as peacock--creatures embodying rage, lust, sexual display." Funny to never have heard of a man, and then to find out that he was the key that opens up vast occluded regions of the early 20th Century. Good work, Professor Benson. It was worth it, all that early boxing training by your dad.Battling Siki: A Tale of Ring Fixes, Race, and Murder in the 1920s Overview

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Boxing Greats: An Illustrated History of the Legends of the Ring Review

Boxing Greats: An Illustrated History of the Legends of the Ring
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Boxing Greats: An Illustrated History of the Legends of the Ring ReviewHaving spent the majority of over 40 years in and around boxing, and having been an avid reader of boxing books since I first laid eyes on Nat Fleischers Pictorial History of Boxing back in 1959, I was simply blown away by this volume. Bunce and Mee have done a beautiful job, mixing scholarship with beautiful photographs. I especially enjoyed the British slant, since the American press (which hardly covers boxing anyway!)generally ignores any boxing outside its own borders. I run a boxing gym in Seattle, and I plan to post some of the best pics on the walls so my boxers will be able to share in them. Then I will buy my second copy and keep it on my coffee table to educate my non-boxing friends. Way to go. 5 stars.
Bo Brumble Seattle WA.Boxing Greats: An Illustrated History of the Legends of the Ring Overview

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Hitters, Dancers and Ring Magicians: Seven Boxers of the Golden Age and Their Challengers Review

Hitters, Dancers and Ring Magicians: Seven Boxers of the Golden Age and Their Challengers
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Hitters, Dancers and Ring Magicians: Seven Boxers of the Golden Age and Their Challengers ReviewKelly Richard Nicholson's new boxing book, HITTERS, DANCERS AND RING MAGICINAS: SEVEN BOXERS OF THE GOLDEN AGE AND THEIR CHALLENGERS, examines seven great turn of the century fighters - George "Kid" Lavigne (21 page chapter), Bob Fitzsimmons (39 pages), "Barbados" Joe Walcott (14 pages), Joe Gans (19 pages), "Terrible" Terry McGovern (19 pages), Sam Langford (21 pages), & Stanley Ketchel (33 pages) - who fought in the years after the transition from the bareknuckle era to the gloved one. The author starts off with a brief but informative chapter that outlines the evolution of prizefighting up to the aforementioned transition, then provides generally excellent chapter-long biographies of each of the above boxers (with profiles of their most noteworthy opponents), and winds up with a chapter regarding devvelopments in the sport since the "Golden Age", with the opinions of the author and those of past and present historians as to some of the merits of "old time" fighters relative to boxers of subsequent eras. On the whole, this is a good - albeit short - book, well written, insightful, entertaining, and well-researched.
There is, however, a major problem with Nicholson's work, which is that it shortchanges its (logical) primary audience/buyers: "hardcore" fight fans. One would think that boxing aficionados (those of us who are interested in all boxing eras, anyway) would have ALREADY read the available (full length) biographies of some of the magnificent seven Nicholson examines, such as International Boxing Research Organization (IBRO) member Clay Moyle's utterly superb SAM LANGFORD: BOXING'S GREATEST UNCROWNED CHAMPION (2007), Colleen Aycock and Mark Scott's excellent - albeit very biased - JOE GANS: A BIOGRAPHY OF THE FIRST AFRICAN-AMERICAN WORLD BOXING CHAMPION (2008), and any of the recently published and generally good bio's of "Freckled Bob" (though my favourite is still Gilbert Odd's THE FIGHTING BLACKSMITH: THE STORY OF BOB FITZSIMMONS [1976]), so one must wonder why he devoted (whole and, in the case of Fitz, long) chapters to Langford, Gans, and Fitzsimmons, especially since he imparts little, if any, new info about them. Surely, Nicholson would have better served hardcore boxing fans better if he had gone into greater depth regarding the lives (and fights!) of Lavigne, Walcott, and McGovern (I exclude Ketchel here because, while there hasn't been an in depth bio written of him lately - a good one, anyway - there are some good Ketchel profiles out there already, such as the chapters on the "Michigan Assassin" in Moyle's book and in Graeme Kent's THE GREAT WHITE HOPES: THE QUEST TO DEFEAT JACK JOHNSON [2005], and on IBRO member Monte Cox's website, coxscorner) AND providedlonger, more detailed profiles of the super seven's worthier opponents and other greats of that era, such as Young Griffo, George Dixon, "Young" Peter Jackson, "Mysterious" Billy Smith, Bobby Dobbs, Jack Blackburn, Dave Holly, "Nonpareil" Jack Dempsey, Kid McCoy, Tommy Ryan, etc (AND, perhaps, given a couple of them the full chapter treatment - indeed, if written with casual or new fans in mind, it might have been better to write full [but shorter] chapters on more than just these seven fighters).
Other quibbles with thisbook include a) its dearth of photos (just one or two of each of the seven pugilists); b) the lack of a chapter specifically addressing the different conditions (equipment, rules, etc) under which turn of the century boxers fought compared to other eras, which would have benefited the "casual" boxing fans who grabbed this work (while the author does mention old time conditions here and there in the first eight chapters and addresses some of the differences in the book's Afterword, he more or less elaborates those differences as "asides" or brief discussions rather than making a cohesive argument on a particualr facet of boxing; for example, Nicholson could have explained that fighters of the seven's era were/had to be MUCH more durable than, say, modern fighters because the conditions necessitated it, conditions such as fighting with smaller, less padded, less water-resistant gloves that had separate, unpadded thumbs, fighting without benefit of mouthguards, protective cups, and lubricants on the face, having to deal with referees who regularly turned a blind eye to all manner of fouls, having to occasionally fight opponents from higher weight classes to make ends meet when bouts with good boxers of one's own weight were hard to come by, having to often enter the ring for bouts while nursing serious injuries, etc, and the author could have pointed out that, although modern fighters use gloves with much more padding than in previous eras, engage in championship bouts that are of shorter duration than in previous eras, generallt fight much less often, and are reputed to be fitter and better conditioned than fighters of yesterday, they, nonetheless, tend to throw less punches per round than inany gloved era, save the "Golden Age" when fights were often of MUCH greater duration and the average fighter fought much more frequently ~ okay, okay, maybe TOO much detail here); c) given the brevity of the book (just 188 pages of "text") and its price, the author really ought to have included the sevne fighters' ring records or, at least, their measurements; d) Nicholson's erroneous statement that former heavyweight chasmpion Jim Jeffries was 6'2", which so many others have also claimed (this is a pet peeve of mine because in photos and film clips that show him standing next/close to the 5'11' or 11 1/2" or 11 3/4" Fitzsimmons or the 6'1" James J. Corbett, the "Boilermaker" seems to be about the same height as - if not shorter than - the former and definitely appears to be at least 2 inches shorter than the latter); e) the author's ridiculous assertion (while trying to illustrate the evolution of ring technique) that Gene Tunney's improved showings in subsequent bouts against Harry Greb after getting pummeled in their first encounter was a victory of "Gene's (improving) ring science" over Greb's (unorthodox) ring style (not only does Nicholson ignore the fact that the "Fighting Marine" grew from a "medium-sized" light heavyweight to a [small] heavyweight during the course of their five bout series whereas the "Pittsburgh Wildcat" remained a natural middleweight, that Tunney was young and edging toward his prime while Greb started to go "downhill" some time around their second or third bout, and that Greb's eyesight had been progressively deteriorating since BEFORE the first Tunney bout, but the author also doesn't seem to grasp the fact that "Greb's all-angles attack" WAS a demonstration of ring science in that positioning [and re-positioning) oneself at an angel to an opponent at which one can easily hit one's counterpart while he/she cannot easily land in return IS one of the most important skills in ring craftmanship - indeed, whenever Tunney spoke of his bouts with the "Human Windmill", he made a pointof saying that Greb rarely stood dirrectly in front of him and was always moving, either in and out on Gene or circling to the side); f) the lack of a more in depth account of the 1904 Walcott-Gans bout (the Aycock & Scott book also failed toprovide one and Nicholson should have known this because he states that he read their book, so it could have been something new for him to "bring to the table"); g) the lack of a citation concerning the weigh-in weights of Gans and Lanjgford for their 1903 mill (I only mention this because Nicholson's info contradicts the weights given by Aycock & Scott AND by Moyle, and NONE of the three books cite a source); and h) the fact that the chapter/endnotes and their "citation numbers" often do not correspond/align. (Perhaps, I am nitpicking on some points above, but one must assume that a HISTORIAN is probably writing for an informed audience, right? In addition, this book is pretty expensive relative to its length/size.)
STILL, this is, again, a good informative book, especially for casual or new boxing fans, but might not be worth the $30+ outlay to boxing fans who've already familiarized themselves with Lavigne, Fitz, Walcott, Gans, McGovern, Langford, and Ketchel via other sources. Incidentally, all of the books cited above are available here at Amazon.com and I highly recommend all of them.Hitters, Dancers and Ring Magicians: Seven Boxers of the Golden Age and Their Challengers Overview

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Shadow Box: An Amateur in the Ring Review

Shadow Box: An Amateur in the Ring
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Shadow Box: An Amateur in the Ring ReviewThis is, for my money, Plimpton's best book. Informative, funny, philosophical (there's a long section on the deaths of authors-- how they died, and how they'd _like_ to die), historical-- somehow it fits together beautifully, and amuses on every page. I've recommended this to many friends, some of whom don't care for boxing; they share my enthusiasm for it. Plimpton seems to be living to a ripe old age-- he deserves many more years of happiness for all the good writing he's done, especially here.Shadow Box: An Amateur in the Ring Overview

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In the Ring With Bob Fitzsimmons Review

In the Ring With Bob Fitzsimmons
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In the Ring With Bob Fitzsimmons ReviewAdam J Pollack is in the midst of an ambitious project in writing a historical record of the Heavyweight Champions and Championship.
After writing a book about John L Sullivan, the first universally recognized heavyweight champ, he has turned his sights on Bob Fitzsimmons, the third Champion.
He fills a great void in the scholarly assessment of boxing linear Heavyweight Champs, as little has been written about Fitzsimmons, and he has been relegated to historical obscurity.
This is a shame, because his is a great story, and it was a fascinating time in the embryonic development of what boxing was to become.
This cannot be mistaken for a biography, as Pollack never really delves deeply into Fitzsimmons' personality, and never really takes us into his life over and above boxing.
But as a historical boxing chronicle, it is scrupulously researched and factually documented. It takes us from the start of his career to his ascension to the first triple championship in boxing.
Boxing in the 1890's was a rogue sport, and not condoned by the general public or public officers. Yet thousands of people would attend a prizefight, and betting was both common and the amount of money bet was prodigious.
Especially well written was the chapter dealing with the fight for the Heavyweight title between Fitzsimmons' and James J Corbett. This chapter detailed two fistic giants who brought out the absolute best in each other, in one of the most skillful fights ever fought in this division.
At the end of this book, the author promises a book on James Jeffries, the fourth linear Heavyweight Champ. I will be in line to read this, as well.In the Ring With Bob Fitzsimmons Overview

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Beyond the Ring: THE ROLE OF BOXING IN AMERICAN SOCIETY (Sport and Society) Review

Beyond the Ring: THE ROLE OF BOXING IN AMERICAN SOCIETY (Sport and Society)
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Beyond the Ring: THE ROLE OF BOXING IN AMERICAN SOCIETY (Sport and Society) ReviewJeffrey Sammons offers any serious student of boxing and its history a marvellous introduction to information that otherwise might takes months -or even years- to find and assemble. From his first question: "Crime or Sport?" to one of his final conclusions that "like a weed shooting up through a crack in the sidewalk, (boxing) is firmly planted in the foundation of our highly advanced society" Sammons examines the implications and underbelly of what is for many of us, the most exciting of all sporting spectacles. That Sammons may be harder on boxing and boxers than some of the rest of us does not detract from the scholarship and effort so evident in this careful history. In five years of my own study I have found almost no inaccuracies in Sammons' text and have used his text and footnotes to follow such fascinating subjects as the career of Joe Louis, his relationship to Mike Jacobs and later the IBC, the hold that Frankie Carbo managed to exert on boxing in the forties and fifties, the rise of television and how it affected the lives of most boxers, and the international role that Muhammad Ali played both in and out of the ring. Boxers are, and deserve to be, the greatest of sports heroes,not just because they risk and offer more than other athletes but because their sport itself has put up so many barriers and hurdles they must overcome to succeed. Sammons examines those obstacles and ends up, like the rest of us, wondering about the world of boxing but at the same time recognizing just how difficult it is for boxers to achieve the greatness of which they, and we, dream. While I may quarrel with some of Sammons' conclusions, I continue to admire his scholarship. No serious fan or student of boxing can consider his ring education complete until he reads and rereads BEYOND THE RING.Beyond the Ring: THE ROLE OF BOXING IN AMERICAN SOCIETY (Sport and Society) Overview

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One Ring Circus: Dispatches from the World of Boxing Review

One Ring Circus: Dispatches from the World of Boxing
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One Ring Circus: Dispatches from the World of Boxing ReviewKatherine Dunn is a boxer's writer. Unlike many literary types who pursue the sport as a overwrought metaphor, titillation, or slumming with the lower classes, Dunn truly understands and appreciates boxing. She has spent decades learning the sport, from the coaches to the fighters themselves. She sees the gentleness that can exist behind the gloves, the contractions of the ring, and the uncertainty of a sport that remains entrenched in another time. To have a writer of her skill translate such a sport is a rare experience.One Ring Circus: Dispatches from the World of Boxing Overview

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Life in the Ring: Lessons and Inspiration from the Sport of Boxing Including Muhammad Ali, Oscar de la Hoya, Jake LaMotta, George Foreman, Floyd Patterson, and Rocky Marciano Review

Life in the Ring: Lessons and Inspiration from the Sport of Boxing Including Muhammad Ali, Oscar de la Hoya, Jake LaMotta, George Foreman, Floyd Patterson, and Rocky Marciano
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Life in the Ring: Lessons and Inspiration from the Sport of Boxing Including Muhammad Ali, Oscar de la Hoya, Jake LaMotta, George Foreman, Floyd Patterson, and Rocky Marciano ReviewI have always enjoyed reading about boxing legends, as my father was intimately involved in the boxing world, but have found most boxing books lose me as they offer few lessons from the legends of boxing. I initially thought this book was a historical account of a few boxers but once I picked it up I could not put it down. The book is highly entertaining and well written, with concise chapters, sparing me the tedious details often found in profiles of successful people. The author demonstrates how the world of boxing parallels the paths to success, as boxing is one of the few sports where an individual has to rely on himself. It offers a blueprint for success that can be applied in any field or endeavor. For example, all of the boxers profiled in the book share one common thread. They never gave up, continually improved themselves, challenged themselves by fighting superior boxers and conquered their own fears to become champions. Whenever I find myself feeling that adversity is knocking me down I think about the stories of perseverance found in this book. Anybody who is interested in how to achieve lasting success should read this book.Life in the Ring: Lessons and Inspiration from the Sport of Boxing Including Muhammad Ali, Oscar de la Hoya, Jake LaMotta, George Foreman, Floyd Patterson, and Rocky Marciano Overview

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The Boxer's Heart: How I Fell in Love with the Ring Review

The Boxer's Heart: How I Fell in Love with the Ring
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The Boxer's Heart: How I Fell in Love with the Ring ReviewAfter reading great reviews about this book, I got a copy even though boxing--let alone women's boxing!--isn't my thing. But then, this book isn't about boxing: it's about life, love, mastering fear and pain, themes that this amazing writer ties together by means of boxing & conflict as a metaphor for life. (Still, there are many fascinating details about real, 'non-metaphorical' boxing too--the first chapter, about the author's preparations for her first professional bout, is so suspenseful and well-told that I couldn't put the book down until I'd gotten to the end when Ms. Sekules tells us the outcome, after detouring through other fascinating territory about her life, the history of women in boxing, and many other issues.) Ms. Sekules does a dazzling job here of intertwining the gripping descriptions of her life in boxing with those issues that that 'the ring' is meant (I think) to represent here: the difficulties of loving (loving oneself not least of all), of coming to terms with one's fears about life and self-worth, of realizing one's limitations--and, in the end, also one's strengths. It's a moving journey.
Also, the author's narrative voice is unlike any I've ever come across: strong, clear, very idiosyncratic, and, in the end, totally winning. It reminded me of the first time I read "Catcher in the Rye"--it's that personal and quirky and astute. I hope there are many more Sekules books in the pipeline. This is clearly a major new author.The Boxer's Heart: How I Fell in Love with the Ring Overview

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The Greatest Boxing Stories Ever Told: Thirty-Six Incredible Tales from the Ring Review

The Greatest Boxing Stories Ever Told: Thirty-Six Incredible Tales from the Ring
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The Greatest Boxing Stories Ever Told: Thirty-Six Incredible Tales from the Ring ReviewThere is so much good writing on boxing that it's hard to know where to start picking the best, but Jeff Silverman did an amazing job of putting together a collection that honors the old warhorses and still comes up with new surprises. Some of the great writers of the 20th century are represented with their short stories -- Ring Lardner, Damon Runyon, Dashiell Hammett, Irwin Shaw and Jack London. It was fun to find that writers like O. Henry and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle wrote about boxing, too. In the non-fiction corner, selections by Frank Deford, Norman Mailer, George Plimpton, James Baldwin and Robert Lipsyte were all first rate, and some of the really old writing from the 18th and 19th century was lively and entertaining. With its sweep of boxing history and literature, it's a must for every boxing fan's bookshelf.The Greatest Boxing Stories Ever Told: Thirty-Six Incredible Tales from the Ring Overview

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Atlas: From the Streets to the Ring: A Son's Struggle to Become a Man Review

Atlas: From the Streets to the Ring: A Son's Struggle to Become a Man
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Atlas: From the Streets to the Ring: A Son's Struggle to Become a Man ReviewTeddy Atlas wrote the ideal book for men struggling to find the truth about fear, loyalty, friendship, honor, commitment and even forgiveness. Being a "stand-up" guy has never been easy and most have gone the easy route by acting tough, instead of honestly confronting and over coming one's fears. Atlas isn't a preachy lightweight, because every chapter smacks the reader in the head with the powerful truth that we all have our fears and look for the easy way out of difficult situations. His advice comes not from some pinhead with a psychology PhD, but from a life full of terrible irony.
This book should be required reading for every young guy embarking on life's dangerous journey.Atlas: From the Streets to the Ring: A Son's Struggle to Become a Man Overview

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