Posts Tagged ‘w.c. heinz’

Read any good boxing books lately? (Part 2)

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

Last week, I put out the word that I was in the market for a good boxing book – despite the fact that my reading list is constantly beating me into submission. Great comments and emails followed from some of the most respected boxing voices online (Bill Dwyre (LA Times), Bryan Brennan (Bry Guy Boxing), Ryan from Fightlinker, and the guys from the fantastic No Mas). In the interest of not just moving on to the next one, I decided to post a follow-up and crowdsource the ultimate purchase decision.

I included all the suggestions that were put forth, plus W.C. Heinz’s The Professional because from what I hear it at least deserves to be in the final conversation. Hit the poll, and I will quite simply buy and read one of these tales from the ring.

The Great Prize Fight, by Alan Lloyd

Atlas: From the Streets to the Ring, by Teddy Atlas

Ghosts of Manila, by Mark Kram

The Harder They Fall, by Budd Schulberg


Read any good boxing books lately?

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

Maybe it’s because I’ve been reading a lot of deranged fiction lately (Bret Easton Ellis), and need to get the aggression out, or maybe it’s because I just really like boxing. Either way, I haven’t read a good sports book in awhile (about two months; read When March Went Mad during March Madness), and I’m interested in reading a great book about boxing. Looking for suggestions.

Here are eight I pulled off Amazon. Leave insights in the comments, fellow fans of pugilist lit.

The Greatest Boxing Stories Ever Told: Thirty-Six Incredible Tales from the Ring, edited by Jeff Silverman


The Sweet Science, by A.J. Liebling


My View from the Corner: A Life in Boxing, by Angelo Dundee


Sweet Thunder: The Life and Times of Sugar Ray Robinson, by Wil Haygood


The Professional, by W.C. Heinz


The Arc of Boxing: The Rise and Decline of the Sweet Science, by Mike Silver


Sound and Fury: Two Powerful Lives, One Fateful Friendship, by Dave Kindred


Four Kings: Leonard, Hagler, Hearns, Duran and the Last Great Era of Boxing, by George Kimball