Holiday book gift guide: Sports
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Big Book of Sports Quotes
Compiled by Eric Zweig and Chris McDonell
Firefly, $29.95
Here’s one of the 1,000 here, from (who else?) Yogi Berra: “So I’m ugly. So what? I never saw anyone hit with his face.”
The Book of Basketball
The NBA According to the Sports Guy
Bill Simmons
ESPN Books/Ballantine, $18 paper
ESPN.com’s “the Sports Guy” offers his irreverent take on NBA history while also commenting on the league’s best.
Carry the Rock
Race, Football, and the Soul of an American City
Jay Jennings
Rodale, $25.99
A portrait of race relations in the South half a century after the Little Rock Nine and the integration of Central High School, seen through the prism of that school’s football team.
Fifty-Nine in ’84
Old Hoss Radbourn, Barehanded Baseball and the Greatest Season a Pitcher Ever Had
Edward Achorn
Smithsonian/Harper Collins, $25.99
In 1884, Old Hoss Radbourn won 59 games for the Providence Grays, a record that has never come close to being broken. A detailed look at a bygone era in baseball.
The Games That Changed the Game
The Evolution of the NFL in Seven Sundays
Ron Jaworski with Greg Cosell and David Plaut
ESPN Books/Ballantine, $26
Jaworski, a former NFL MVP and now an ESPN analyst, looks at the evolution of the game through seven key games and the coaching decisions that changed NFL strategy.
The Gipper
George Gipp, Knute Rockne and the Dramatic Rise of Notre Dame Football
Jack Cavanaugh
Skyhorse, $24.95
Eight decades after his death, they’re still talking about the school’s first football star and his enduring legacy on Notre Dame’s rise to national prominence.
How Lucky You Can Be
The Story of Coach Don Meyer
Buster Olney
ESPN Books/Ballantine, $25
After being seriously injured in a car accident and then learning he had terminal cancer, Northern State University men’s basketball coach Don Meyer mined a deep pool of spiritual resolve to transform his workaholic life. Olney, a senior writer at ESPN the Magazine, has written more than a mere sports memoir here.
Jerry West
The Life and Legend of a Basketball Icon
Roland Lazenby
ESPN, $28
A first-rate piece of narrative nonfiction on one of the most complicated and compelling stars in American sports during the last half-century.
Joe Louis
Hard Times Man
Randy Roberts
Yale University Press, $27.50
The first full biography in a generation of the heavyweight boxing legend who defended his title 25 times and was once the most famous man in the world.
Laker Girl
Jeanie Buss with Steve Springer
Triumph, $24.95
Dr. Buss’ daughter, and Coach Phil Jackson’s girlfriend, details her rise to the top in the purple-and-gold empire.
The Last Boy
Mickey Mantle and the End of America’s Childhood
Jane Leavy
Harper, $27.99
He was one of the greatest players in baseball history and the Great White Hope to many fans during the early years of the sport’s integration. He also was a womanizer and alcoholic. Leavy does a masterful job in weaving the many threads of Mantle’s life.
The Last Hero
A Life of Henry Aaron
Howard Bryant
Pantheon, $29.95
A full-throated biography of the vastly gifted but underappreciated Henry Aaron, the man who broke Babe Ruth’s career home-run mark.
Native American Son
The Life and Sporting Legend of Jim Thorpe
Kate Buford
Alfred A. Knopf, $35
Voted the finest male athlete of the first half of the 20th century, Thorpe helped define professional football and helped to create what would become the National Football League. But he endured years of hardship when his Olympic medals were stripped from him after he played minor league baseball. A comprehensive telling of the life of a singular American athlete.
PacMan
Behind the Scenes with Manny Pacquaio, the Greatest Pound-for-Pound Fighter in the World
Gary Andrew Poole
Da Capo, $25
The life story of Manny Pacquaio, who dominated the bigger boxer Antonio Margarito last month to win the WBC’s 154-pound title, the eighth weight class that he’s conquered.
Play Their Hearts Out
A Coach, His Star Recruit, and the Youth Basketball Machine
George Dohrmann
Ballantine, $26
Greed, blind ambition and the exploitation of kids. Welcome to the harsh realties of youth basketball as told by Dohrmann, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist.
Rise of a Dynasty
The ’57 Celtics, the First Banner, and the Dawning of a New America
Bill Reynolds
New American Library, $24.95
The seventh game of the 1957 NBA championship series between Boston and the then-St. Louis Hawks was a key moment in the history of the fabled Celtics.
The Silent Season of a Hero
The Sports Writing of Gay Talese
Edited by Michael Rosenwald
Walker & Co., $16 paper
A collection of lyrical sports pieces from Talese, a bastion of the New Journalism that changed the face of storytelling in America.
Steinbrenner
The Last Lion of Baseball
Bill Madden
Harper, $26.99
He bought the Yankees for $10 million in 1973 and the team is now worth more than $1 billion. The life and times of the most controversial owner in modern baseball history.
Underdawgs
How Brad Stevens and the Butler Bulldogs Marched Their Way to the Brink of College Basketball’s National Championship
David Woods
Scribner, $24
The book’s subtitle just about says it all, doesn’t it?
Willie Mays
The Life, the Legend
James S. Hirsch, authorized by Willie Mays
Scribner, $30
A transcendent figure in modern baseball, Mays was one of the first five-tool players, some say the greatest player to ever don a uniform. He made baseball look easy.
Zero Regrets
Be Greater Than Yesterday
Apolo Ohno with Alan Abrahamson
Atria, $26
Apolo Ohno is the most decorated American Winter Olympics athlete of all time. He explains how a rebellious child raised by a single father got there in this concise autobiography.
More to Read
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