Posted in Biography (Friday, July 4, 2008)
Written by Bill Harris. By Key Porter Books.
The regular list price is $14.95.
Sells new for $11.66.
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1 comments about Vince Carter.
- This was an awesome book, with many accurate pictures for this rising star. The book is very imformative.
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Posted in Biography (Friday, July 4, 2008)
Written by David Hyde. By Triumph Books (IL).
The regular list price is $14.95.
Sells new for $9.63.
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No comments about Wade's World: The Flash That Ignites the Heat.
Posted in Biography (Friday, July 4, 2008)
Written by Grant Hill. By Grand Central Publishing.
The regular list price is $12.99.
Sells new for $0.50.
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4 comments about Change the Game: One Athlete's Thoughts on Sports, Dreams, and Growing Up.
- This book is mainly about the life of Grant Hill and his basketball career. Grant Hill's Basketball career started in jr. high and went through high school. Grant Hill got his NBA scholarship in high school, and he now plays for the Pistons. He is not like any other basketball player. When Grant Hill does something good he doesn't rub it in the opponent's face, he just keeps playing. I think that Grant Hill is a very inspiring athlete to younger kids.
I think that Grant Hill would be a cool, and fun person to hangout with because he says in the book that he has a good personality and that he doesn't just thinks about himself or his money. He thinks about his family and his fans. Grant Hill has a very simple life outside of his basketball career. Besides all of his fans wanting autographs! When Grant Hill goes out to eat somewhere he can't eat in peace he always hast to sign autographs for someone. But other than that Grant Hill lives a simple life. Grant Hill is a very inspiring athlete to younger kids, and me!
- Overall I thought the book Change the Game was pretty good. One of the things I liked most about the book was that Grant never talked about all the money he made. I also liked how Grant expressed his feelings about problems kids face today. However, one thing I didn't like about the book was it was sort of short. Grant also moved from one topic to the next very quickly. Other than those things the book was good.
- This book is basically about Grant's ideals that he learned from his parents. It's a very quick read and if you like Grant Hill, then I would suggest you check this out. If you aren't much of a Grant Hill fan, then don't purchase this.
- Grant Hill's book was very enjoyable, and it was very to-the-point. This was the best basketball biography I've read yet. The only problem was that it was over too soon. I finished this book way too quickly.
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Posted in Biography (Friday, July 4, 2008)
Written by Don Barton and Bob Fulton. By Summerhouse Press.
There are some available for $75.00.
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No comments about Frank McGuire: The Life and Times of a Basketball Legend.
Posted in Biography (Friday, July 4, 2008)
Written by Bill Reynolds. By St. Martin's Press.
The regular list price is $22.95.
Sells new for $11.77.
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3 comments about Glory Days: On Sports, Men, and Dreams-That Don't Die.
- This is a book I have loaned to friends of mine and I highly recommend it. If you have played hoop, spent hours in pick-up games or shooting hoops to get better, you'll relate to this book. Reynolds does a great job at painting the picture for you. If you've been there, shared the experiences, you'll fly through this book. I particulary liked the parts where he talked in detail about biding his time on the bench as a young player, getting better, flying under the radar and then becoming an elite player.
- This is the second Bill Reynolds book that I have read. Loved them both. I found his descriptions taking me back to high school and the playground. It brought back a lot of memories and also made me think about how I prioritized basketball for so many years.
Non basketball junkies may call Bill's live experiences crazy. I dream of some of his experiences. Great book!
- Bill Reynolds is certainly one of America's finest sports journalists. "Glory Days" addsto that luster.While some may dismiss it as a purely personal account of one's growing up, it is a lot more. It is a book to be read and enjoyed by all former star athletes, high school or college, who realized at some subsequent point in their life that they had to move on but did not want to let go of the one thing that they had worked at while growing up A disclaimer: Bill was a fraternity brother of mine at Brown.
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Posted in Biography (Friday, July 4, 2008)
Written by Lawrence Funderburke. By Wetherby Press.
The regular list price is $15.00.
Sells new for $8.90.
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No comments about Hook Me Up, Playa!.
Posted in Biography (Friday, July 4, 2008)
Written by Ted, W. Jones. By Advantage Press.
The regular list price is $14.99.
Sells new for $10.68.
There are some available for $6.34.
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No comments about Springing Forward.
Posted in Biography (Friday, July 4, 2008)
Written by Beckett Publications Staff. By Beckett Pubns.
The regular list price is $29.95.
Sells new for $61.73.
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No comments about Michael Jordan: An Illustrated Tribute to the World's Greatest Athlete (Beckett Great Sports Heroes).
Posted in Biography (Friday, July 4, 2008)
Written by Stan Friedland. By Xlibris Corporation.
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1 comments about Play It Again Sam.
- Stan Friedland is a retired high school principal who had a highly successful and satisfying 34-year career in education with a doctoral degree from Columbia University. In 1998 he published, along with Phil Craft, "An Orphan Has Many Parents."
Since Stan, throughout his lifetime was interested and active in athletics and sports, it was not surprising that his next literary work would be a biography of a famous sports figure of the mid-20's through the mid-50's; i.e. Sam Schoenfeld--teacher, basketball player, coach, radio and TV commentator! What is interesting is how this new work came into being. Certainly, it was serendipitous to say the least.
Dr. Robert Schoenfel, Stan's personal physician of the past 15 years, following a physical exam in early 2003, asked Sam about the book he had co-authored. He learned that the orphanage was in the East NY/Brownsville section of Brooklyn; that Stan had attended Thomas Jefferson HS where Schoenfeld (Bob's father) had been the Phys.Ed. Director; that Friedland had him as a teacher; and when he majored in PE at Brooklyn College he came back to Jefferson to student teach, Sam Schoenfeld was one of his mentor-teachers!
When Friedland opined that it was unlikely Dr. Schoenfeld could be successful in his campaign to have his dad enshrined in the Jewish Sports Hall of Fame (alongside the likes of Nat Holman and other "Jewish Sports Greats")merely on the basis of his coaching career, Dr.Schoenfeld enlightened him of the wide spread of his dad's accomplishments--as teacher, basketball player, coach, collegiate basketball official, sports
commentator,etc.He revealed that he had over 700 news clippings about the career of Sam Schoenfeld and offered to lend them for Stan to peruse. When Friedland brought them back a week later, he observed that only a book could fulfill "the full magnitude of your dad's accomplishments." It was then that the book was born!
But Stan Friedland did not rely soley on 700 news clippings. In his Acknowledgements he writes; "A good biography requires ample documentation, authenticity and accuracy,plus a plentiful number of eye-witness sources to provide the human and colorful elements of a particular individual."
Friedland interviewed each of Sam Schoenfeld's three sons, Bob, Ed and Peter and "each is well represented in the book..." Sam's "kid-brother, Jack,83 years young, was a tremendous
historical resource" and "delighted to be part of this project that honored a brother." And other members of the family were like-wise contacted, had their recollections recorded and duly acknowledged.
"Then there was the vast contingent of alumni from Jefferson." The author either spoke to each of them in person or over the phone, but in any event "were they ever so impressive!"
So, there is no question that Stan Friedland did his homework and fulfilled his own description of what constitutes "A good biography." The work is decidely that--a good biography of a notable sports figure who died at too young an age ("not even 50 years old" as son Robert laments in his Foreword in the form of a "letter to his Dad" in which he further laments "I never knew about most of your achievments. You were always a modest man."
And while the focus is always on Sam Schoenfeld and his climb from obscurity to acclaim, Stan Friedland takes the time to describe Schoenfeld's milieu and the social forces at work at the time. My favorite is Chapter 7:"Basketball; The Jewish Sport--a Cultural Phenomenon." Perhaps because I personally was witness to much of what he was describing about the 20' to the 40's. I grew up during the fame of Nat Holman and the CCNY "Cinderella Teams."
If there is any criticism that might be levied at the work, it could be that, in his eagerness for "accuracy and veracity" Stan Friedland presents his readers with a surfeit of quotations from the news clippings attesting to the achievements and accomplishments of Sam Schoenfeld. And even though each such presentation is for a new set of achievements and accomplishments on the part of Mr. Schoenfeld, it creates for the reader a sense of redundancy. Still, one may well ask: "is the redundandcy in Sam Schoenfeld's accomplishments--or the reporting of them?"
Sam George Arcus 1-11-05
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Posted in Biography (Friday, July 4, 2008)
Written by Philip Raisor. By University of Missouri Press.
The regular list price is $24.95.
Sells new for $14.91.
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1 comments about Outside Shooter: A Memoir.
- Outside Shooter: A Memoir is the personal autobiography of professional basketball player Philip Raisor. The pressure of serving in a team sport in the 1950's is aptly recalled (especially since this was an era when American society first took steps toward integration in professional team sports), steps as hotly resisted in the area of athletic competition as anywhere else. Both Philip's physical struggles and difficulties of conscience are astutely and honestly detailed in superbly insightful work which is especially recommended to the attention of anyone interested in the history of basketball as seen through the eyes of a player on the front lines.
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