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The Muhammad Ali Reader

The Muhammad Ali Reader

List Price: $15.95
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Greatest
Review: "Maybe if there were a few cheers from the other side of the fence, and a little more tolerance, too, people would realize Cassius Clay is not as bad as he seems, and maybe then he would also return the favor once in a while and keep his mouth shut."
--Floyd Patterson (with Gay Talese), "In Defense of Cassius Clay," August 1966

"Boxing is a dialogue between bodies. Ignorant men, usually black, and usually next to illiterate, address one another in a set of "conversational" exchanges... It is just that they converse with their physiques." -Norman Mailer, "Ego," March 1971

This is an excellent book, not only for those interested in perhaps the greatest boxer of all time, but for people interested in the separate and combined effects of race, the 1960's, and the subjectivity of writing. For example, it appears that Patterson and Mailer held contradicting opinions about Ali's talking, and, much this book's fun is how Ali served as a projective test for the attitudes and values of others--Mailer in particular is a hoot.

Ali's larger-than-life persona draws such literary heavyweights as Amiri Baraka, the humorist and essayist A.J. Liebling, Mailer, Joyce Carol Oates, George Plimpton, Irwin Shaw, Gay Telese, Garry Wills, and Tom Wolfe. Ali is a symbol, yes, but an individual too, and the better essays show him as a multifaceted, intelligent, and controversial person. Three interviews ("Black Scholar," uncredited, June, 1970; "Playboy," uncredited, November 1975; "Sport," Joe Torres, December 1981) let the champ speak for himself.

The book is full of great writing (except for Hunter S. Thompson's annoying self-aggrandizing piece and Wills' non-illuminating intellectualism), and offer snapshots of Ali from 1962 through his post-Atlanta Olympics acclaim in the late 1990's. A blend of facts and iconography, the book is a fascinating look at Ali both inside and outside the ring. (Some pieces were edited for this book, but there is a bibliography on source material. With 16 pages of photos, no index, and an introductory essay by the editor.) Very highly recommended!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Truly Full & Satisfying Muhammad Ali Experience
Review: Fantastic - Truly the BEST book on Muhammad Ali out there - and I've read lots!

On a scale of 1 to 5 I give this a 16 - it's THE Best out there!

The book is divided by decades - and you're given insights and perspectives of Muhammad Ali from some pretty impressive folks.

You travel through time and space with each page, with each chapter - you go through the 60's, 70's, 80's and 90's with the Champ - it's incredible - I'm at a loss for words to describe what it's like to spend time here - you get this opportunity to travel 30 years with Muhammad Ali - to get different insights and looks at Muhammad Ali - you get to enjoy his youthful energy and watch him dance and you get to sit next to him and count the grays in his hair and watch his hands shake - and just when you even think of feeling sorry for him he levitates off the ground - or makes a hanky disappear -

Yes - a must have for any Ali fan - I have LONG been a fan and this book has been like several books combined and has given me a full experience - like nothing else out there - a truly full and satifying Muhammad Ali experience

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very much on Point Book on the Man
Review: Muhammad Ali is truly one of a Kind Person inside&outside The Ring.nobody like Him since.The Man took Sports to a whole different level.He took America&The World to a whole different view.this Book brings all that&more into view.a 3 Hour Movie can't do Him any true Justice.He captured so much that is still being felt to this day.a Must Read.


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