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Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Jenkins hits the spot again Review: Anyone who cares about the old Southwest Conference and its legendary sports heroes---or, for that matter, cares anything about the game of football, will love this wise, funny look atthe past, told by hangabouts at the He's Not Here bar---a place only Jenkins would think of....
Rating: ![3 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-3-0.gif) Summary: Disappointing, but then I'm not aboard the Jenkins bandwagon Review: Get ready to have some fun! This great book is a love song to 1930s football, filled with outstanding photos and a superb text. In addition, it's a riot! This book is about as politically incorrect as it's possible to be, yet hardly anyone could be truly offended because it's all done in such high spirits. It's a wonderful reference book for football fanatics, an insightful look at what's "wrong" with today's world and a tremendous read. It may be the best football book of all time. As Jenkins himself would say: "I could be wrong. But I'm not."
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: IF YOU CAN READ THIS (SHE) FELL OFF! Review: Get ready to have some fun! This great book is a love song to 1930s football, filled with outstanding photos and a superb text. In addition, it's a riot! This book is about as politically incorrect as it's possible to be, yet hardly anyone could be truly offended because it's all done in such high spirits. It's a wonderful reference book for football fanatics, an insightful look at what's "wrong" with today's world and a tremendous read. It may be the best football book of all time. As Jenkins himself would say: "I could be wrong. But I'm not."
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: I Love College Football, too Review: I found this book to be enjoyable and I agree with many of Mr. Jenkins observations. Being an avid arkansas razorback fan, i especially enjoyed his part of the book about the great arkansas-texas rivalry in the 60's and 70's. I remember my grandfather talking about the 1969 arkansas-texas shootout and his heartbreak at the hogs losing in the minutes of the game.Mr. Jenkins talks about the end of the SWC and I can feel his sadness at the passing of what was once a great conference. i think that arkansas' leaving was the final death knell brought on by probation, poor attendance. I especially liked his section about why college football is better than pro. I like pro football, but it is no contest at all. Despite some bad press from time to time, college football is greatest, most pure team sport. Just ask any diehard longhorn, aggie, razorback, crimson tide , volunteer, etc fan. The spirit and the emotion are unmatched. I feel sorry for people who don't get it. Mr. Jenkins like myself knows how addictive and wonderful college football is with its traditions (hook em horns, woooo pig sooie,) and strange mascots (horned frogs?. Nothing else can touch it. Thank you for a terrific book.
Rating: ![3 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-3-0.gif) Summary: Disappointing, but then I'm not aboard the Jenkins bandwagon Review: I was surprised at how little narrative was in this book. I'm not a big Dan Jenkins fan but was expecting him to give us a fairly comprehensive history of SWC college football. Instead, we get a lot of press articles of the big games compiled at the time (by legendary sportswriters, admittedly, but written for a different purpose) intertwined with fictional conversations in a very non-PC bar (I don't find Jenkins' use of phrases like "chinks" and "towel-heads" to describe people who don't look like he does particularly endearing). There's not a lot of nostalgia, no real insight, and quite a lot of filler (the ten greatest games, who should have won the Heisman, etc.). And the book itself isn't very long. For me, the only thing which redeems the book are the photographs, most of which I'd never seen before. I think I'll give Jenkins' next book (whatever it is) a miss.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: PERFECT for my dad Review: It took me a while to figure out what Jenkins was trying to do with this book. I guess you could say that this is "real fiction" because fictional characters from his previous books talk about their favorite real topic -- college football. If you love college football and Dan Jenkins, then you will fall head-over-heels in love with this book.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Jenkins Review by a youngster Review: Mr. Jenkins' lastest work delves into his love, passion, and fondness for the now defunct Southwest Conference in big-time college football. His book starts with the birth of the Southwest Conference as a national powerhouse in the 1930's to its death in 1995. This book also covers the fifty greatest games in all of college football history (note: authors preference), best college fight songs, "Poll Bowls", All-American lists, and other interesting tidbits from some of his familiar "fictional" cohorts in crime (Billy Clyde, T.J., Tommy Earl). This book reminds the reader of when college football was played for school, city, and state pride instead of having the chance to do the cabbage-patch-dump-shuffle in the endzone with your helmet off so your four girlfriends and five kids could see you on national TV.
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