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October 26, 2006
SPORTS
Black and Blue, by Tom Adelman (Little, Brown)
"A look back at the 1966 World Series, in which the underdog Orioles swept the Dodgers." ..... To Hate Like This Is to Be Happy Forever, by Will Blythe (HarperCollins)
"A sort of Iliad for the Duke-North Carolina college basketball rivalry, written by the former literary editor of Esquire." ..... Jim Brown , by Mike Freeman (William Morrow)
"Jim Brown was, in the eyes of this biographer, 'the greatest pure football player the sport has ever known'—not to mention a civil-rights activist, the first black action-movie star, and the unwitting quarry of a hyperactive FBI." ..... The Blind Side, by Michael Lewis (Norton)
"The author of Moneyball turns his analytical gaze to football, and the sequence of events by which the left offensive tackle—once an anonymous outpost for oafish fat kids—has become the second-highest-paid position in the NFL." ..... Clemente, by David Maraniss (Simon & Schuster)
"A life of the virtuous and doomed slugger." ..... Man o' War, by Dorothy Ours (St. Martin's)
"A biography of Seabiscuit's grandfather." ..... Moving the Chains , by Charles P. Pierce (FSG)
"A Boston-based sportswriter chronicles a season in the life of New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady." ..... They Played the Game, by Stephen Randall (M Press)
"A collection of Playboy interviews conducted with sports stars, including Hank Aaron, O. J. Simpson, and Brett Favre." ..... Forty Million Dollar Slaves, by William C. Rhoden (Crown)
"A New York Times sports columnist examines the plight of the modern black athlete." ..... Ringside, by Budd Schulberg (Ivan R. Dee)
"In this anthology of boxing reportage, the veteran novelist and screenwriter casts his eye on the sweet science, from Tom Molineaux and Tom Cribb's marathon thirty-nine-round bare-knuckle brawl in 1810 to the more recent exploits of Lennox Lewis and Floyd Mayweather Jr." ..... Baseball, by George Vecsey (Modern Library)
"Although the aromas of Cracker Jack and cut grass hang heavy over the proceedings, Vecsey stops just short of intolerable sentimentality and convincingly portrays the game's reliable monotony as a source of constancy and national comfort."
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