Monday, July 16. 2007
by Dave Zirin
Pity the poor soul that sets to write a great sports novel. It can feel like trying to train a goldfish to fetch. Sisyphus might find pushing that rock up the hill a more fruitful task. What makes penning a sports novel such a perilous pursuit?
Continue reading "Book Review: 'Raider's Night,' by Robert Lipsyte"
Thursday, March 29. 2007
By Dave Zirin
There are more books about Muhammad Ali than Abe Lincoln: 300 titles in the children's section alone. You can also purchase The Muhammad Ali Reader, the Tao of Muhammad Ali, or the $10,000 G.O.A.T. - a massive coffee table book about all things Ali that is slightly larger than a typical coffee table. His is a history that has been repeatedly regurgitated for popular consumption. Despite - or maybe because of - this crisis of Ali overproduction, I felt compelled to write The Muhammad Ali Handbook.
Continue reading "Why I Wrote The Muhammad Ali Handbook"
Tuesday, February 13. 2007
By Dave Zirin
There are those in the world of sports who view ESPN as some sort of diabolical genetic splicing of the Illuminati, George Bush and something scraped from Chris Berman's loofah. (I personally believe that, not unlike the Bush family, ESPN's power, while disturbing, is vastly overestimated.) This view is being reasserted with the news that former NBA player John Amaechi has loudly and proudly let the world know that he is gay.
Continue reading "Out of the Closet and Onto the Court"
Tuesday, October 17. 2006
(Letter co-signed by: Jim Bouton, former Yankee pitcher and author of Ball Four; Ralph Nader, consumer advocate and author; Neil deMause, co-author of Field of Schemes; Dave Zirin, columnist for SLAM magazine and author of What's My Name, Fool?; Robert Weissman, director of Essential Action and co-author of Corporate Predators; and Shawn McCarthy, director of League of Fans.)
Council of the District of Columbia
Dear Council member:
The District baseball boondoggle is swirling out of control at an ever accelerating pace.
Continue reading "DC Council Urged to 'Stop the Hemorrhaging' of the Stadium Project"
Wednesday, August 9. 2006
William Rhoden of the New York Times -- one of our favorite sports columnists for his consistently provocative social commentary on the sports community and for his refusal to cheerlead (contrary to many in the sports pages) for the sports powers-that-be when undeserved -- is out with a new book that's sure to upset the sports establishment: Forty Million Dollar Slaves: The Rise, Fall, and Redemption of the Black Athlete.
Continue reading "'Forty Million Dollar Slaves,' by William C. Rhoden"
Friday, August 5. 2005
In the Public Interest
By Ralph Nader
Moving into bookstores across the country is a fresh historical account of American progressive resistance and political struggle. Focusing on the United States over the last century, the book connects past struggles with contemporary injustices, and calls on readers to challenge the militarism, homophobia, racism and sexism, the greed, myths, freeloading, cover-ups, censorships, and consumer and taxpayer gouging that continue to tarnish our country. And believe it or not, this is a book about sports.
Continue reading "Nader Book Review: 'What's My Name, Fool? Sports and Resistance in the United States'"
Thursday, July 14. 2005
By Dave Zirin (on why he wrote "What's My Name, Fool? Sports and Resistance in the United States")
In High School, I was a 5' 10" inch center for the fearsome Friends Seminary Quakers in New York City. It wasn't pretty, but I lived for it and didn't care if the opposing center could spit on my head. I just loved sports. My walls were shrines to Magic Johnson, Lawrence Taylor, and Keith Hernandez. Every stat, every record, and every rule existed only to be memorized. Weekends were for playing ball until sunset.
Continue reading "Storming the Castle: Why We Need To Know Our Radical Sports History"
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