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3+ obres 226 Membres 7 Ressenyes

Obres de Wright Thompson

Obres associades

Best Food Writing 2010 (2010) — Col·laborador — 102 exemplars
The Best American Sports Writing 2009 (2009) — Col·laborador — 54 exemplars
The Best American Sports Writing 2010 (2010) — Col·laborador — 43 exemplars
Best Food Writing 2012 (2012) — Col·laborador — 43 exemplars
The Best American Magazine Writing 2014 (2014) — Col·laborador — 26 exemplars

Etiquetat

Coneixement comú

Data de naixement
1976-09-09
Gènere
male
Nacionalitat
USA
Lloc de naixement
Clarksdale, Mississippi, USA
Llocs de residència
Oxford, Mississippi, USA
Educació
University of Missouri, Columbia (BA|Journalism)
Organitzacions
ESPN

Membres

Ressenyes

This book is falsely advertised. It’s not a book about the infamous Pappy Van Winkle as the description suggests. It’s about all things Kentucky; bourbon, horses, rolling fields, and the history of the state. Okay, some background or build up to main attraction is fine. However, that’s not how that information is used; it’s repeated several times throughout the book as it lacks organization and structure. The book is also about Wright Thompson’s life, which I have no F’s to give. I wanted to read this book to learn more about the business and life of the Van Winkle family, not for the author to pontificate about his father, uncle, and having a child. The author also annoyingly brags about his relationship with Julian Van Winkle. It’s as if the writing of this book was just used as an excuse to develop a friendship with Julian and get free bourbon. The author comes off as pompous and pretentious. At the beginning of the book, Thompson explains some difficulty getting the book idea sold to publishers because there was no interest in a book only about Pappy. Which makes sense, because there apparently isn’t much to learn. So it seems in order to sell this book, Thompson threw anything he could think of into it. There are so many insignificant and uninteresting antidotes throughout this book, which appear to be there just to fill pages. If you want to learn anything about PVW in this book, don’t blink because you might miss it!… (més)
 
Marcat
NatalieRiley | Hi ha 3 ressenyes més | Jun 17, 2023 |
What I thought the book was about , Pappy Van Winkle bourbon turned out to be about so much more. Family, tradition and things that last made this book so insightful and inspiring to read. If this book had only been about the bourbon, the family, or Julian Van Winkle's journey any one of those items would have made this an interesting read. To have all of it combined made it great.
 
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foof2you | Hi ha 3 ressenyes més | May 16, 2022 |
I started thinking seriously about journalism as a career in eighth grade. I wanted to be a sportswriter, thanks to a discounted subscription to Sports Illustrated courtesy of the Publisher’s Clearinghouse Sweepstakes. I always read it from cover to cover, even the articles about sports I didn’t care about or people I didn’t know. That was how I learned to pay attention to bylines; whenever I found myself absorbed by a story I didn’t expect to be interested in, I figured the writer must be someone worth paying attention to.

Frank Deford, Gary Smith, William Nack — I pored over everything they published, absorbing each of their stylistic quirks and the way they structured their stories. The routine morning-after game recap was not the bailiwick of these professionals. They focused on exploring the human elements of sports that happen off the field. You don’t have to be a sports fan to find their work compelling. You just have to be interested in the human condition.

Someone a couple of decades younger than me could easily substitute _ESPN The Magazine_ and _Wright Thompson_ into the previous paragraphs and tell the same origin story. Thompson started writing for ESPN in 2006 after an early career in newspapers and quickly made a name for himself as a master storyteller capable of revealing more about his subjects than they perhaps intended. But not in a malicious or mean-spirited way — Thompson doesn’t reveal what’s hidden so we can point and laugh, but rather so we can all nod in shared understanding.

Which brings us to [The Cost of These Dreams: Sports Stories and Other Serious Business], his recent collection of some of his most memorable articles from ESPN The Magazine (spanning 2007 to 2017). Glancing down the table of contents (a full list of the essays is at the end of this review) showed me some familiar names from the sports world: Michael Jordan, Bear Bryant, Muhammad Ali. But it also touched on some sports and athletes who I knew little about, like soccer legend Lionel Messi and college basketball star Tony Harris. Just like in the good old days, I read it from cover to cover, over a period of several weeks. While I found each of them compelling in their own way, some standouts for me were the profiles of Jordan and Messi — one man I thought I already knew a great deal about, and one who I barely knew at all. At the end of each, I’d learned something new about them and about the power of ambition and home.

As I mentioned, not all the essays are personality profiles. Some of the best use sports as a touchpoint to explore a larger or more nuanced subject. In “Shadow Boxing,” the focus is not on Ali but rather on the only one of the 50 fighters he faced in the ring who has seemingly disappeared off the face of the earth. And its not about boxing; it's more about the kinds of people who are considered disposable in our society. Thompson spent months in Miami trying to find him among a community of forgotten souls who are just trying to get by, day by day.

“Ghosts of Mississippi” uses college football to explore the tumultuous year of 1962 at the University of Mississippi, where a football team vying for the national championship clashed with the violent resistance to James Meredith’s enrollment as the first black student at Ole Miss. Thompson used his familiarity with the culture (he grew up just down the road from Oxford) to look at the mass of contradictions that still exist in that place.

If you’re a sports fan, you’ll enjoy this collection tremendously. But don’t think you need to be an athletic supporter to find something to love inside these covers.

Table of Contents
  • Michael Jordan Has Not Left the Building: What does a GOAT do at 50, when the competitive spirit is still willing but the flesh is weak? (2013)

  • The Last Days of Tony Harris: What drove the former college basketball star to his death in the Brazilian jungle? (2008)

  • Ghosts of Mississippi: In 1962, the Ole Miss campus erupted in violence over integration and swelled with pride over a powerful football team. That tumultuous fall still grips the state. (2010)

  • Shadow Boxing: Muhammad Ali fought 50 men, but only one disappeared. (2009)

  • Here and Gone: The strange relationship between Lionel Messi and his hometown in Argentina. (2012)

  • The Last Ride of Bear and Billy: 30 years after Coach Bryant’s last season, the man who knew him best struggles to remember. (2012)

  • Urban Meyer Will Be Home for Dinner: A football coach tries to balance the kind of man he wants to be with the kind of man he is. (2012)

  • The Losses of Dan Gable: Wrestling’s most famous winner is taking on one final battle: to save his sport and all he’s ever been. (2013)

  • Beyond the Breach: A summer in search of saints, sinners, and lost souls in the New Orleans that Katrina left behind. (2015)

  • The Greatest Hitter Who Ever Lived On: Ted Williams’ ambitions shaped his legacy but wrecked his relationships. (2015)

  • The Secret History of Tiger Woods: The death of his father set a battle raging inside the world’s greatest golfer. (2016)

  • In Chicago, the Final Wait For a Cubs Win Mixes Joy and Sorrow: A city has waited 108 years. Now it must wait one day more. (2016)

  • Pat Riley’s Final Test: This was the NBA legend’s most difficult season in 50 years. So why, after nine championships, doesn’t he just walk away? If only it were that easy. (2017)

  • Holy Ground: Walter Wright Thompson died before he could fulfill his dream of walking Augusta National during the Masters. His son took that walk for him. (2007)

… (més)
½
 
Marcat
rosalita | Jun 4, 2021 |

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Estadístiques

Obres
3
També de
5
Membres
226
Popularitat
#99,470
Valoració
½ 3.6
Ressenyes
7
ISBN
15
Llengües
1

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