Used price: $2.00
Collectible price: $5.95
The book tells the story of the author's attempt to make a go of professional handicapping, but he spends a lot of time on the backstretch getting to know the people and the horses.
There is the backstretch as your trainer describes it to you ("well-oiled machine operating at peak efficiency"), and the backstretch as Barich paints it (loosely collected ragtag assortment of people and horses trying to stay afloat). Even though luck is hard to come by for many of the characters in the book, they have an earnest dignity as Bill Barich depicts them, and love and respect for the animals is predominant.
If you like racing you will like this book; if you don't like racing or are indifferent to it, you will probably like the book anyway.
Used price: $3.44
Buy one from zShops for: $10.18
Liebling is interested in everything and everyone, and nothing escapes his pen as he immerses the reader in whichever world he is illustrating with his mixture of scholarly observation and streetwise humor. At one point we arrive in Tunis, where one escapes from the oppressive heat into a museum and suddenly comes upon an ancient mosaic of a boxing match. It depicts one fighter knocking down the other. "The fellow on the receiving end", Liebling muses, "has an experienced disillusioned look, like that of a boy who has fought out of town before..." The Tunisian passion for prizefighting has deep roots, and seems hardly about to diminish, with the buildup to a local match nearly consuming the entire city.
Throughout these essays there is the sense of accompanying Liebling as he chats with the managers, watches the boxers train, pokes his head into training camps and interviews fighters and has a drink at The Neutral Corner, a New York bar and grill, to hash it all out. We sit with him near ringside where his smooth prose in no way interferes with his immediate and lively portrayal of the fights. We become acquainted with Floyd Patterson, a sensitive and intelligent fighter forever in search of his soul, the professorial Archie Moore, a very young Cassius Clay and another side of the habitually taciturn Sonny Liston.
Liebling's prose flows and some have remarked on its pyrotechnics, but is tight and descriptive, and his interests comprehensive. Each essay (originally printed in The New Yorker) builds an absorbing world of its own, though several are connected by common themes (for instance, Stillman's gym, Floyd Patterson's series of fights). This is a book for the die-hard boxing fan, for it there is little in it that does not pertain to boxing, its past and present. It can also be enjoyed by the general reader and lover of good writing, for it is a collecton of essays, each one lively and gracefully written, about the people, first and foremost, who make up the old and sometimes dark world of prizefighting.
Used price: $0.98
"That autumn, I went a little crazy for rivers," says Bill Barich at the beginning of this deceptively simple book. Fortunately, Barich went crazy for words many autumns ago; he can create deep pools of prose with catch phrases at the bottom which sparkle with insight when brought to the surface of our consciousness. In this paean to fishing, he takes us to rivers like the Bear, "...with a chilly wind blowing and bruised looking clouds bunched on the horizon;" Stuart Fork, where a "silvery little rainbow" leaped up, "...as hooked in the moment as I was;" or the Buffalo, which had "soul...and compensated for its shabbiness by serving up eager brook trout." Barich lures us steadily through these rivers to the autumn he went crazy, and the lessons he learns. With his evocative writing, Barich makes standing in the water and waving a stick a magic entry to a land we might like to visit, even if we don't like to fish. However, Barich casts his prose lines out for a bigger catch than just a good fish story. In his hands, the rod becomes the measure of his life; reel time is reflection time, as if the bait tossed into the water ripples through his consciousness. He discovers that an "ugly" river may deliver much better fishing than the prettiest of streams; he learns that standing longer where others have stood with less patience may produce results; and shortly after releasing a brown trout back into the North Yuba River, he has an epiphany: "It must all be catch and release in the end, I thought, all part of a flow whose essence we cannot grasp." In the short span of eighty pages, we watch Downieville(on the Downie River)change from a town full of old geezers selling gold flakes on plank sidewalks, to a trendy village where mountain bikers guzzle cappucino at a sidewalk café. We also experience the transformation of the young Barich, who "...had too much nervous energy to sit calmly on a bank," preferring "the wading and casting and stalking," into the older Barich, who "...imagined a day might come when I could sit by a stream without fishing at all, just meditating as the monks were said to do." Such peerless prose, with no pretensions, will make you crazy for Barich.
Used price: $0.79
Collectible price: $4.75
Used price: $1.73
Collectible price: $10.59
Buy one from zShops for: $9.00
List price: $24.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $6.24
Collectible price: $12.12
Buy one from zShops for: $5.99
Used price: $0.74
Collectible price: $2.85
Buy one from zShops for: $0.25
Used price: $24.48
Buy one from zShops for: $24.98
Used price: $2.24
Collectible price: $5.00
This is one of those books where every page brings insights so painful, or so beautiful, I shake my head in amazement. I'm reading it slowly, lovingly, and I'll tell all my friends about it.
I'm a writer, and have written a novel about horse racing. I've explored this same territory. I almost wish I'd written this book. It is filled with truth and sadness and many, many fine portraits of the people that hang around on the backside of the track.